Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found this excerpt from an article in Business Insider:
"In fact, according to data from Vanguard, just 4% of people earning below $50,000 a year max out their 401(k) at the current limits, and 11% of people who make between $50,000 and $100,000 do. People making over $100,000 are the most likely to max out their 401(k), perhaps unsurprisingly, with 32% making the highest allowable contribution."
Anyone else find these numbers much higher than expected? These numbers seem way too high to me.
Anonymous wrote:I've always rented cheap apartments so I could max it out. Even when I made 60k I put the 18k in.
Dh doesn't like to and I can't change his number so through his work so he only puts 10k in. It is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found this excerpt from an article in Business Insider:
"In fact, according to data from Vanguard, just 4% of people earning below $50,000 a year max out their 401(k) at the current limits, and 11% of people who make between $50,000 and $100,000 do. People making over $100,000 are the most likely to max out their 401(k), perhaps unsurprisingly, with 32% making the highest allowable contribution."
Anyone else find these numbers much higher than expected? These numbers seem way too high to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really that inconceivable that not everyone's budgets allow them to max out their 401k every year?
I think a better question would have been to direct that at high income people. Obviously someone making 100k or less might not be able to contribute max, but what baffles me is upper income people making 150k+ not contributing the full amount, or even worse those in the 250k range.
I don’t know why you would be baffled when you don’t know what people’s expenses are. We have two kids in private school, which eats up $50K plus a year. No, public school is not an option. We have a second home I inherited that we are trying to sell because it’s too expensive to maintain with tuition costs and having to pay for college for twins in a few years. So, you are really ignorant and uninformed.
Anonymous wrote:I found this excerpt from an article in Business Insider:
"In fact, according to data from Vanguard, just 4% of people earning below $50,000 a year max out their 401(k) at the current limits, and 11% of people who make between $50,000 and $100,000 do. People making over $100,000 are the most likely to max out their 401(k), perhaps unsurprisingly, with 32% making the highest allowable contribution."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really that inconceivable that not everyone's budgets allow them to max out their 401k every year?
I think a better question would have been to direct that at high income people. Obviously someone making 100k or less might not be able to contribute max, but what baffles me is upper income people making 150k+ not contributing the full amount, or even worse those in the 250k range.