Good point PP. They should not put 100% into a Roth IRA,but should put in something. It’s part of learning how to save and budget. And if they need the money, they can withdraw the principal without penalty. |
| Can you open the Roth for them, with the $1,500 from the teen's earned income, and add parental matching? Is the parental contribution allowed if it's not the teen's "earned income"? (This is assuming the teen made $1,500). |
Parent cannot match. Child must earn money, although obviously hard to prove. My 14 year old has a Fidelity youth account and Roth IRA (I am custodian). She has a debit card for youth account. We just opened the Roth and she put 500 in so far. |
Love this! Good financial planning |
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Capital One has youth checking and savings accounts, with an associated debit card.
My kids earned their money, then we funded their Roths over a few years until we reached 7000$ in their earned income that we gifted into the Roths. So they have the Roths but still had their spending money. Both kids have some investments in Fidelity that they picked as well. |
+1. This is basically what we do with our kid’s hustles. He puts the money in his Roth, we give him an equal amount in cash. He splits all of his earnings into spend, save (savings account), give. |
I’m not saying just have a checking account…but rather just have a taxable investment account that can be accessed if needed. |
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My kid has a taxable investment account and mainly owns growth stocks/etfs that don’t pay dividends.
We talked about a Roth, but he doesn’t want the restrictions and figured if it grows to millions then what’s the big deal if he pays 15% LT capital gains in the future. |
| Silly me. I thought fully funding my kid’s college was more than enough but now I also need to match what they earn so they can put their summer earnings in a Roth instead of their own savings account? Jesus. |
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The child can get all their money. The parent can fund a Roth in that amount. It doesn’t have to be the same dollars, just no more than what your child made. |
Of course you don’t have to, but why not do it if you can? We expect to be spending about 36k per year for DC’s college, what’s another couple thousand? |
This. Money is fungible and I can afford it. If you can't afford it, than don't do it. Also, you can simultaneously teach your child about budgeting with the money they can access and teach them about long-term, tax advantaged investing with the Roth money |
I haven't been on this forum long, but ive quickly found it demoralizing for those who aren't wealthy. |
None of us are as wealthy as the billionaires who run the country, so we’re trying to sock away as much as we can for our kids using available resources. Who knows how effective it will be in the face of AI related job displacement and growing inequality in the future. |