Hi all,
I am just starting out as an attending and am thinking that I need to to a backdoor Roth IRA. I would prefer to make contributions to all my investments monthly. It seems that when doing a backdoor Roth IRA, most people do a lump sum at the end of the year then convert it the next day and invest everything. I feel like the problem with this is that I have certain assets allocated in my Backdoor Roth and different ones in my individual 401k and HSA accounts. So doing my HSA and Solo 401K contributions monthly and my Backdoor Roth yearly would mess up my asset allocation throughout the year. I suppose I could just do lump investments in my HSA and 401K with the Backdoor Roth but I would lose out on a years worth of compounding if I did that each year. I've always read that its better to invest when you have the money and not let it sit in a savings account with low interest.
So my question is, does anyone use the traditional IRA and make monthly contributions to certain investment funds and let it grow throughout the year then convert the sum at the end of the year to a Roth? I understand I would probably pay tax on my earnings but wouldn't it be worth it if that money were in investments and growing throughout the year and not sitting in a money market? Is it even possible to do the backdoor IRA this way? Or would this completely screw things up? Does anyone do multiple conversions throughout the year so that they are making monthly contributions? Any info would help. Thanks.
I am just starting out as an attending and am thinking that I need to to a backdoor Roth IRA. I would prefer to make contributions to all my investments monthly. It seems that when doing a backdoor Roth IRA, most people do a lump sum at the end of the year then convert it the next day and invest everything. I feel like the problem with this is that I have certain assets allocated in my Backdoor Roth and different ones in my individual 401k and HSA accounts. So doing my HSA and Solo 401K contributions monthly and my Backdoor Roth yearly would mess up my asset allocation throughout the year. I suppose I could just do lump investments in my HSA and 401K with the Backdoor Roth but I would lose out on a years worth of compounding if I did that each year. I've always read that its better to invest when you have the money and not let it sit in a savings account with low interest.
So my question is, does anyone use the traditional IRA and make monthly contributions to certain investment funds and let it grow throughout the year then convert the sum at the end of the year to a Roth? I understand I would probably pay tax on my earnings but wouldn't it be worth it if that money were in investments and growing throughout the year and not sitting in a money market? Is it even possible to do the backdoor IRA this way? Or would this completely screw things up? Does anyone do multiple conversions throughout the year so that they are making monthly contributions? Any info would help. Thanks.
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