I'm 28 and a PR consultant earning 106,000 after taxes and deductions, and I'm completely new to investing. Would a Roth IRA or a traditional IRA be better? Are there any specific index funds I should consider? I'm exploring ways to multiply the income I already make.
investments – roth ira vs traditonal ira?
byu/pierrearchive228 inpersonalfinance
Posted by pierrearchive228
3 Comments
Do you have a 401k?
If so, you can’t deduct from the Traditional IRA anyway, so you’d want to go Roth just based on that.
Also, do you expect to earn $150k+ throughout your career? If so, you’ll end up needing to do the backdoor Roth, so having money in a Traditional will bite you.
So its usually best to have a Roth IRA.
If you don’t have a 401k through work, if you’re SE/1099, open a Solo 401k.
As for funds. Follow the 3-fund portfolio: total US + total international + bonds (which come later in life).
VTI + VXUS, or combined with VT.
I make about the same as you and live in a state with no income tax. Right now I am doing Roth because any difference in the long run would I fell would be minimal. I also keep my 401k in VOO.
Contribute up to match on your 401K, then max out ROTH IRA, then max out HSA if you’re on an eligible HDP (but treat this as a retirement account you wont touch for 30+ years), then max out 401K, then contribute to taxable brokerage account. Your ROTH IRA and HSA account investments should me your most aggressive since the withdrawals will also be tax free and your 401K contributions can be more “balanced” since you will be paying taxes on these contributions when you withdraw.