Anonymous wrote:So I’m I over 50 and have been doing makeup contributions but now that’s not going to happen anymore and I need to
Put that money in ROTH? Can someone explain this more?
Anonymous wrote:It keeps getting delayed. They just announced that it will begin at the very end of 2026 rather than the beginning. So one more year to contribute everything to traditional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a revenue raiser to me. Make people pay tax at the highest rates of their peak earning years.
They should shut down Roths though. Terrible tax policy. But those are generally most beneficial for those who save in them when young, when their marginal rates are lower.
Few people have marginal rates higher in retirement than their peak earning years. I doubt this is beneficial to most.
Aren't you prohibited from contributing to Roths once your taxable income crosses over 200,000 or something?
Or is it different for each spouse?
Like spouse 1 makes 250,000 can't contribute, but spouse 2 makes 70,000 so they can still contribute?
Anonymous wrote:It keeps getting delayed. They just announced that it will begin at the very end of 2026 rather than the beginning. So one more year to contribute everything to traditional.
Anonymous wrote:Roth is just a wealth transfer tool for high income/high net worth families. Most people maximizing Roth have no plans to use the Roth money in their lifetime.
Anonymous wrote:Bombshell is quite dramatic. It’s been well publicized and delayed, so not really a surprise. Basically it’s just a change in the tax code
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a revenue raiser to me. Make people pay tax at the highest rates of their peak earning years.
They should shut down Roths though. Terrible tax policy. But those are generally most beneficial for those who save in them when young, when their marginal rates are lower.
Few people have marginal rates higher in retirement than their peak earning years. I doubt this is beneficial to most.
Aren't you prohibited from contributing to Roths once your taxable income crosses over 200,000 or something?
Or is it different for each spouse?
Like spouse 1 makes 250,000 can't contribute, but spouse 2 makes 70,000 so they can still contribute?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a revenue raiser to me. Make people pay tax at the highest rates of their peak earning years.
They should shut down Roths though. Terrible tax policy. But those are generally most beneficial for those who save in them when young, when their marginal rates are lower.
Few people have marginal rates higher in retirement than their peak earning years. I doubt this is beneficial to most.
Anonymous wrote:Invest in bitcoin.