Money Matters
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What is the difference between....... (retirement fund related)
A Roth 401K and a Roth IRA?
Re: What is the difference between....... (retirement fund related)
Looking forward to this thread!
A Roth 401k or IRA is an alternative to a traditional 401k or IRA. When you use a traditional 401k or IRA, you invest your money pre-tax, meaning that you don't pay taxes on it in the year you earn it, but you then do have to pay taxes on your contributions and the interest they have earned when it is time to withdraw. A Roth 401k or IRA allows you to contribute post-tax, so you do pay taxes on the income in the year you earn it, but you do not pay taxes on either your contribution or the interest when you withdraw (assuming laws don't change and you don't withdraw early). In general, people recommend Roths for people who are younger because the money you invest has the potential to grow a lot and none of that interest will be taxed.
While you usually have the option whether to open a Roth or traditional IRA (caveat being that there are income restrictions), it is entirely up to your employer whether there is a Roth 401k option. My experience is that there generally is not.
Ok, I saw this where I am able to change my percetages and I figured it was a Roth IRA that they mean, but when I was clicking on different articles they sometimes said Roth401K so I got confused. I just got my raise so I'm calling them tonight to open a Roth IRA if I can. So since my company matches 5%, I'm going to put the 2% into the Roth and another another 1-2% for now if that's the way I should be doing it..
Also, depending which bank / company it is moved to, do I have any choice to move it elsewhere? What kinds of places service IRAs?
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