Anonymous wrote:1) maximum amount in 401(k) ($23,500 per person)
2) max out Roth IRA ($7k)
3) Mutual funds or total stock index funds (whatever amount of slush money you have after the first 2 options, make deposits automatic if you can)
4) 529 contributions
5) any cash you are holding (like an emergency fund of 6 months expenses)
should be in a HYSA.
It doesn't have to be complicated. Do these things and just get used to putting your extra money in the market and you'll do pretty well.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have an account with vanguard or fidelity? If not start there? Start small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) maximum amount in 401(k) ($23,500 per person)
2) max out Roth IRA ($7k)
3) Mutual funds or total stock index funds (whatever amount of slush money you have after the first 2 options, make deposits automatic if you can)
4) 529 contributions
5) any cash you are holding (like an emergency fund of 6 months expenses)
should be in a HYSA.
It doesn't have to be complicated. Do these things and just get used to putting your extra money in the market and you'll do pretty well.
I’m PP and generally agree with this person. My response was more detailed though. 529s don’t grow as fast as other investments so that is up to you.
Anonymous wrote:1) maximum amount in 401(k) ($23,500 per person)
2) max out Roth IRA ($7k)
3) Mutual funds or total stock index funds (whatever amount of slush money you have after the first 2 options, make deposits automatic if you can)
4) 529 contributions
5) any cash you are holding (like an emergency fund of 6 months expenses)
should be in a HYSA.
It doesn't have to be complicated. Do these things and just get used to putting your extra money in the market and you'll do pretty well.
Anonymous wrote:If you did 401k and 529, you have lost a lot of money because of fees, rules, bad service, their lousy investment options, and the fact that you learned nothing holding them. You still have many rules to follow and RMD.
Since you make decent money, you will be fine.
Open an account with Fidelity, buy 5-8 stocks and keep buying. The best if you could do it inside of a Roth.
I bought my stocks inside of a Roth on low income. I learned to buy low and sell high. I make 100% a year easily tax free.
This came about exactly because 401k wasn't available to me ever and because I followed a few stocks for years.
Youtube will show you how to buy a stock with Fidelity or call them.
If you have 18+ kids, then Robinhood account for them also. RH gives them info and services and other banks don't. RH also allows buying stocks and crypto other banks don't allow.
Do your homework into stocks. If your stocks happens to go down, you buy more as you are getting a discount now. Don't forget that you don't lose money until you sell. Don't sell. Buy the stocks for 20 years.
granted at first most people should max out their 401k or Roth 401k at work to save for retirement. And then supplement that with a Roth IRA account. After that, building wealth over time in taxable accts is also a good idea. With the recent tax changes, taxable accts for the long term have some advantages for estate planning. Heirs to taxable accts get a stepped up cost basis on the investments, so no tax due on transfer to heirs. Which is different for the beneficiares of traditional IRAs or 401-ks. All of those proceeds are taxable.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you did 401k and 529, you have lost a lot of money because of fees, rules, bad service, their lousy investment options, and the fact that you learned nothing holding them. You still have many rules to follow and RMD.
Since you make decent money, you will be fine.
Open an account with Fidelity, buy 5-8 stocks and keep buying. The best if you could do it inside of a Roth.
I bought my stocks inside of a Roth on low income. I learned to buy low and sell high. I make 100% a year easily tax free.
This came about exactly because 401k wasn't available to me ever and because I followed a few stocks for years.
Youtube will show you how to buy a stock with Fidelity or call them.
If you have 18+ kids, then Robinhood account for them also. RH gives them info and services and other banks don't. RH also allows buying stocks and crypto other banks don't allow.
Do your homework into stocks. If your stocks happens to go down, you buy more as you are getting a discount now. Don't forget that you don't lose money until you sell. Don't sell. Buy the stocks for 20 years.
I’m confused. First you advocate buying low and selling high, and then you advocate buying and holding for 20 years.
Which is it?
Just ignore that person. Terrible advice overall
Yes, and s/he posts on every single investment thread. Always advocates investing in only post-tax accounts, which for most people who have a workplace 401k with company matching is really dumb. It’s almost copy-and-paste identical each time.