I do think they're earning some money. Would it be better to move them all into a single rollover IRA account? Would this account still earn money?
Have several 401k accounts from separate employers… Best options?
byu/GroovyWithIt inpersonalfinance
Posted by GroovyWithIt
8 Comments
Yes move them. They will increase in value if you invest that money.
401k programs almost always rely on mutual funds, which can be expensive. That’s OK while still an employee since the typical company match dwarfs the mutual fund expense. That matching benefit goes away once you are no longer an employee.
Moving them to an IRA allows you to select low cost ETFs, which often perform better than mutual funds. Plus a single consolidated IRA account is easier to manage than multiple 401k accounts.
> Would it be better to move them all into a single rollover IRA account?
You can if you want to. There will possibly be better investment options in the IRA, and it’s sometimes easier to just have it all in one place.
> Would this account still earn money?
As long as you actually pick an investment(s) once the money hits the account, sure. It can also of course decrease in value, but over a period of decades, there will be ups, and there will be downs. Try not to panic over every little market fluctuation.
Combining them all into an IRA is the way to go unless you do backdoor Roth IRA contributions, in which case it would be better to roll all the 401k’s into your current employer’s 401k if it has low fees and good investment options or to leave all of the 401k’s where they are if they’re better than your current 401k.
If you want the ability to do a backdoor Roth IRA, do not do this. And instead, consider keeping things as-is, if everything is invested in decent funds, or move it all to your current employer 401k.
If a backdoor Roth IRA is not a consideration, then yes, you can move it all into a single IRA account and invest in a fund or funds of your choice.
Accounts don’t earn the money, the funds within them do. So if you invest in similar funds, yes, they will still earn money. It doesn’t matter how many accounts you have, 10 isn’t better than 1.
Usually its best to consolidate old 401ks into your current one. Do you have a current one? That allows rollovers?
Otherwise you can rollover to an IRA:
Traditional 401k> Traditional IRA
Roth 401k> Roth IRA
BUT… keep in mind, if you need to do the backdoor Roth (if your income is over $150k)
Then you do not want any money across Traditional IRAs. So it would absolutely be best to leave these alone, or roll into the current one
Usually, yeah, rolling the old 401(k)s from separate employers into one rollover IRA makes life alot easier, less account clutter, often lower fees, and better fund choices
The IRA itself doesnt earn anything, the investments inside it do, so you still need to pick the funds after the money lands
One caveat: if backdoor Roth is on your radar later, dont dump pre-tax 401(k) money into an IRA without thinking about the pro-rata tax mess first
If you like the investment options you can keep them, otherwise it’s easier to roll them all into an IRA or your current employer’s 401k account for ease of management. Also keep in mind that some 401k accounts charge a fee to have the account open.