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Whats the point of Roth IRA? : r personalfinance - Reddit Roth accounts are a hedge against future tax hikes and tax rate insecurity There’s a reason Roth accounts are always subject to elimination every few years, tax revenue from Roth users is far less than from traditional
Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA? : r personalfinance - Reddit Total value of Roth IRA and post-tax brokerage account: 97,540 If he puts the $6000 in a traditional IRA, puts the tax savings in a brokerage account, and keeps both there for 40 years: His 2021 income was $30,000 He deducts the standard deduction and his $6000 contribution His total taxable income is $11,450
401K. . . . Pre-Tax, After Tax, and or Roth??? : r personalfinance - Reddit Essentially you need to look at effective tax rates vs top marginal Roth contributions (and thus withdrawals) are taxed at your top marginal tax rate (so 24% for your income) because all post-tax money is fungible Traditional contributions are tax-free, but all withdrawals are taxed at your income tax rate
I have a stock in Roth IRA that I want to sell. If it’s a . . . - Reddit The IRS mandates that Roth IRA distributions be taken in this order: First, from regular contributions, not subject to tax or penalties Second, from conversion contributions, on a first-in, first-out (FIFO) basis Last, from earnings, generally taxable as ordinary income
Whats the difference between a Roth Basic and a Roth Bonus . . . - Reddit Roth basic: your normal paycheck Roth bonus: any annual year-end bonus paycheck you get You’d usually do just the basic unless you’re not able to max out with your normal paycheck and want to direct a portion of your bonus to the 401k Depending on your income, traditional 401k is likely better for you tax-wise than a Roth 401k is
Can someone explain 401k, Roth 401k and a Roth IRA to me like . . . - Reddit In a roth or a tradition ira 401k its on taxed once (either when you earn it for roth or when you cash it out for traditional) Ex-$1000 Traditional IRA- no tax, leave it for a long time, grows to 5k, withdraw it and pay income tax on 5k, netting you like 3500-4k depending on tax bracket
Is Fidelity really that great for a Roth IRA account? - Reddit Is Fidelity really all that great? The no fees, no minimums, max of $6k a year sounds great for someone who is low-income as a recent grad For anyone with experience in opening maintaining a Roth IRA through Fidelity, what do you like and dislike about it? Thanks! Archived post New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast