Anonymous wrote:We've recently had a few big salary jumps (for us) and now are at $400k HHI. I'm not sure I'm making the most out of our money available for savings and investments. For example, we're funding 529s above the amount that is annually tax deductible in Maryland - is there a better way to save that money?
No-- the main advantage of a 529 is the tax-free treatment on gains, not the state tax deduction for contributions. However, you might compare plans and find a plan in another state (like Utah) which has as good or better investment options and lower fees and either roll your current 529 over to them or make contributions above the MD tax deductible limit to the out of state 529
Should we be doing a backdoor Roth with additional savings?
Yes, unless you have existing traditional IRAs
What about bonds? Right now I'm just putting anything extra into a vanguard brokerage account.
You need to decide on an asset allocation (bonds vs cash vs stocks) for these savings, based on your risk tolerance and timeline for when you might need these funds. Vanguard has an online questionnaire that might help (https://investor.vanguard.com/tools-calculators/investor-questionnaire) or you can try to figure it out. I would say, assuming you have a decent stash in a HYSA, that half in ibonds and half in a low cost stock index fund wouldn't be a bad place to start (but again this is a very personal decision).
Generally, it feels like we have enough income that I could be maximizing our savings and investments a bit more but perhaps those savings/gains would not be enough to offset the cost of a financial planner. I'd appreciate feedback from folks who might be in similar situations!