We have separate IRAs. SAHspouses are allowed to contribute to their own IRAs using household income. We use our household income to fund both our IRAs. It is not a ton, $5k max until next year when I am 50, the max goes up. We consider our household income to be both of ours. In our 19 years marraige, we have both worked, I have worked and DH has worked. Whatever the income is both of ours so it contributes to both of our IRAs. |
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I am a SAHM. I worked full-time for 12 years before I went very part-time for 5 years and then became a full-time SAHM. During my working years, I maxed out my 401k. I have $200K in there at age 46. I also contributed to an IRA and still do (can do $5500 per year even if you don't work). My balance there is $125K.
It sucks to see my retirement savings slow down, but I feel good that I at least thought ahead and have a somewhat decent nest egg. My husband who started saving for retirement way after I did, but doesn't have a break in work has surpassed me in savings for retirement and will continue to do so. I do somewhat regret stopping working because now that my kids are a bit older it's hard to find work. My kids are still in school, so I just want part-time and that seems even more difficult. I don't worry about getting divorced or my husband screwing me over if we did. I actually take care of the finances, so he'd be hard- pressed to even know what we have, even though I try to get him interested; he is not. We both have life insurance. Note: If you are a SAHM with a small part-time business working from home, you can contribute to a SEP-IRA. |
Love this post ! |
| post divorce, if you were married for >10 years and don't remarry, you are entitled to a percentage of your spouse's Social Security benefit (assuming it's greater than your own - eg you were a SAH spouse). |