should we take the lower marginal tax rates and pay the taxes now?
were there any changes to roth 401k?
thanks
were there any changes to roth 401k?
thanks
I asked this question recently too. From what I’ve been reading it sounds like it still wouldn’t make a lot of sense for high earners to contribute to a roth 401k over a traditional because it would like result in you still paying higher taxes on money now than what you could pay in retirement.
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Too many variables that will differ from person to person to make anything close to a blanket statement, but I would say there are some factors that make it a bit more favorable now than before.
For example, if you’re going to be in the 24% bracket as I expect to be, that’s not a terrible rate at which to pay the tax to have Roth money. If you are retiring soon to an even lower tax bracket, it might not make sense. But if you already have a 7-figure traditional 401(k) and won’t be retired for at least eight years after which the tax cuts could expire or be altered by a different party in charge, Roth might be a great option now.
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I can’t imagine I’ll be paying a 20% effective tax rate for the bulk of my career like I will under this bill.
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i’m still going back and forth on this.
i’m expecting to be in highest tax bracket in retirement due to combination of (fortunate) factors.
my financial guy hates the roth 401 option because the thought of losing 1/3 of investing money off the bat hurts too much, but really at this point the biggest feature i’m considering is lack of rmd and perceived opportunity to take a slightly lower tax bite temporarily. i guess if i’m in the highest bracket no matter what i do, it doesn’t matter and i can always convert to roth in retirement if estate planning is a focus.
i think hanging out here is making me crazy. ? or at least making my craziness worse. i’m letting the tax tail wag the investment dog.
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