Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saved for retirement in a Roth IRA during my PhD, but I could only do that the years I was a TA, worked on the side, or was given a fellowship as W-2 income. If you don't get a W-2 you still owe income tax (a big misunderstanding among some fellow students!), but it doesn't count as "wages" toward retirement contributions or the child care tax credit. THAT sucks.
Has that been officially decided by the IRS or a tax court?
There was a Nature article in the 2000s that said fellowship stipends for full time students as well as tuition subsidies were in an unclear tax situation.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know a single person who ever received a PhD that began saving for retirement IN the PhD program. 529 can pay for room and board. So, you're probably looking at $15k per year in potential 529 distributions for room and board. Don't be an idiot and save for retirement. PhD sucks. You need to socialize and try to live a decently comfortable life despite being impoverished. Create networks with your friends who may become future coauthors. Engage in as much relaxation as possible when you're not working. You'll barely pay any taxes anyway because you are poor. Getting a tax preparer would be a terrible idea. Just use one of the online filing services. You will be able to declare your fellowship income, your 529 distributions, and you'll likely be taking the standard deduction. So, your taxes are quite simple.
Anonymous wrote:I saved for retirement in a Roth IRA during my PhD, but I could only do that the years I was a TA, worked on the side, or was given a fellowship as W-2 income. If you don't get a W-2 you still owe income tax (a big misunderstanding among some fellow students!), but it doesn't count as "wages" toward retirement contributions or the child care tax credit. THAT sucks.
Anonymous wrote:I saved for retirement in a Roth IRA during my PhD, but I could only do that the years I was a TA, worked on the side, or was given a fellowship as W-2 income. If you don't get a W-2 you still owe income tax (a big misunderstanding among some fellow students!), but it doesn't count as "wages" toward retirement contributions or the child care tax credit. THAT sucks.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with poster above who asked Why save now? Do things to help you best reach your goal of actually finishing your PhD. Take breaks, trips, go to the gym, go to conferences, lead a balanced life so you can finish and move forward.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know a single person who ever received a PhD that began saving for retirement IN the PhD program. 529 can pay for room and board. So, you're probably looking at $15k per year in potential 529 distributions for room and board. Don't be an idiot and save for retirement. PhD sucks. You need to socialize and try to live a decently comfortable life despite being impoverished. Create networks with your friends who may become future coauthors. Engage in as much relaxation as possible when you're not working. You'll barely pay any taxes anyway because you are poor. Getting a tax preparer would be a terrible idea. Just use one of the online filing services. You will be able to declare your fellowship income, your 529 distributions, and you'll likely be taking the standard deduction. So, your taxes are quite simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny. My son is making 300k/yr at FAANG while pursuing his PhD
I think that poster was talking about full time doctoral students, not workers who are getting their PhD part-time. Obviously, that is a different story, since your employer is probably contributing to your retirement. Don't be so smug!
+ many. What a jacka$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny. My son is making 300k/yr at FAANG while pursuing his PhD
I think that poster was talking about full time doctoral students, not workers who are getting their PhD part-time. Obviously, that is a different story, since your employer is probably contributing to your retirement. Don't be so smug!
Anonymous wrote:Funny. My son is making 300k/yr at FAANG while pursuing his PhD