Hoosier John
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2010
- Messages
- 2,751
mgarbowski has good points. I questioned a couple of his points, but this Investopedia article backs him up.
There will be benefits to you in the future with some Roth 401k, but in my mind I think adding more Roth IRA would be easiest (but not at the expense of losing company 401k match). Then ask your HR department about how you would roll your Roth 401k into a Roth IRA at retirement.
Gifting your unneeded Roth IRAs to heirs (I think?) is far better than gifting traditional IRAs, because there will be no tax on the Roth NOR its earnings which will have maybe 3 decades of growth to go. Gifting to charity can be done with traditional IRAs, because they face no tax implications.
All this is my current understanding, and I am far from an expert.
ETA: I think most agree that we are currently paying lower taxes now than historically. And with recent increased spending, I expect taxes in the future will begin to increase. If both are true, paying taxes now (in either/both Roth accounts) is a good deal. Also the Investopedia link above mentions that in retirement people typically lose some of the deductions that currently reduce their tax bracket (traditional 401k, for instance), possibly making your future taxes higher.
There will be benefits to you in the future with some Roth 401k, but in my mind I think adding more Roth IRA would be easiest (but not at the expense of losing company 401k match). Then ask your HR department about how you would roll your Roth 401k into a Roth IRA at retirement.
Gifting your unneeded Roth IRAs to heirs (I think?) is far better than gifting traditional IRAs, because there will be no tax on the Roth NOR its earnings which will have maybe 3 decades of growth to go. Gifting to charity can be done with traditional IRAs, because they face no tax implications.
All this is my current understanding, and I am far from an expert.
ETA: I think most agree that we are currently paying lower taxes now than historically. And with recent increased spending, I expect taxes in the future will begin to increase. If both are true, paying taxes now (in either/both Roth accounts) is a good deal. Also the Investopedia link above mentions that in retirement people typically lose some of the deductions that currently reduce their tax bracket (traditional 401k, for instance), possibly making your future taxes higher.
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