Could a conversion of a 401(k) to a Roth IRA early (relatively) in a career be more tax efficient in the long term, at least to the point where it would be worth doing?
Here's some context for why I ask the question:
I am 32, early in my career and currently make about $240k/year (gross), full time in primary care. I have an employer sponsored 401(k) with matching through Fidelity that I am maxing yearly, as well as maxing (or nearly) a 457(b), non-gov plan. Payout of 457(b) at retirement/severance is immediate vs deferrable lump sum or a 5 year plan with annual installments. I also have a backdoor Roth set up and maxed for both my spouse and myself yearly. I am generally investing on a 3 fund portfolio strategy. I may develop some passive income streams during my career that would continue into retirement, but plan on practicing medicine being the lion's share of my income until retirement (at least at this point). I am starting to wonder if my tax rate could be higher in retirement than it is now (my effective rate for 2 years running ~15%), and if so, could converting a 401 (k) to a Roth be more tax efficient. Or are there too many variables to confidently predict my retirement tax bracket?
I am not worried about being financially sound in retirement, more curious if other medical professionals are finding themselves in higher tax brackets in retirement and wishing they had converted to a Roth, especially early in a career where they can enjoy decades of tax free growth and withdrawals once the initial tax burden of conversion is borne.
Hopefully I have applied the proper attributes to each account type above, please offer corrections if I am not thinking this through properly.
Here's some context for why I ask the question:
I am 32, early in my career and currently make about $240k/year (gross), full time in primary care. I have an employer sponsored 401(k) with matching through Fidelity that I am maxing yearly, as well as maxing (or nearly) a 457(b), non-gov plan. Payout of 457(b) at retirement/severance is immediate vs deferrable lump sum or a 5 year plan with annual installments. I also have a backdoor Roth set up and maxed for both my spouse and myself yearly. I am generally investing on a 3 fund portfolio strategy. I may develop some passive income streams during my career that would continue into retirement, but plan on practicing medicine being the lion's share of my income until retirement (at least at this point). I am starting to wonder if my tax rate could be higher in retirement than it is now (my effective rate for 2 years running ~15%), and if so, could converting a 401 (k) to a Roth be more tax efficient. Or are there too many variables to confidently predict my retirement tax bracket?
I am not worried about being financially sound in retirement, more curious if other medical professionals are finding themselves in higher tax brackets in retirement and wishing they had converted to a Roth, especially early in a career where they can enjoy decades of tax free growth and withdrawals once the initial tax burden of conversion is borne.
Hopefully I have applied the proper attributes to each account type above, please offer corrections if I am not thinking this through properly.
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