Submitted by david12795 t3_11cz027 in personalfinance
We have Charles Schwab. So my employer is offering this for their 401K:
"We match 125% of contributions up to 6% of an employee's annual gross pay."
Apparently, this is considered generous? So what I did was I am contributing this 7 pre tax. Should I do more, or go down to 6 percent since they said they go up to 6 percent?
The company has also mentioned this: 100% vesting in company matching contributions after two years of service. You're always 100 percent vest in your contributions . What does this mean in laymen's terms? I was hired 12/19/22. I am not sure if I will be there for two years to be honest. Does this get taken away if I leave before two years?
The company has also said this: For associates hired after January 1, 2023, you must complete 1 year of service before you become eligible in the company matching contributions. The company will match 125% on the first 6% of your pre-tax contributions, Roth contributions, and catch-up contributions that do not, in the aggregate, exceed 6% of your eligible compensation. Rollover contributions, Roth rollover contributions, and Roth conversion contributions are not matched. Looks like I lucked out
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Currently, I am putting 7 percent all into Schwab Index Return Trust 2055 IV (SX455). This was what it was defaulted to. I am notsure if i should keep as is, or try to diversify.
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Any advice would be great!!
DaemonTargaryen2024 t1_ja5vmay wrote
>"We match 125% of contributions up to 6% of an employee's annual gross pay."
For every $1.00 you contribute, employer will put in $1.25. They'll match you up to your 6% contribution, but won't give any more match if you do 7% or higher. 125% of 6% is 7.5% so the employer match is effectively 7.5% as long as you do 6%.
You should do at least the 6%, but ideally higher up to 10 or 15% if you can afford it
>100% vesting in company matching contributions after two years of service.
Employer contributions will be put in regularly and you can see them in your account. But it's not actually yours if you leave the company too soon. If you leave before 2 years, you get none of the employer match. If you stay at least 2 years, all the employer match is yours when you leave.
You still want to contribute, (1) because you still need to save for retirement regardless of match, (2) because you don't want to end up staying 2 years and look back on all the free money you turned down
> You're always 100 percent vest in your contributions
Just means what you contribute is always yours, there's no vesting period for your own money.
>For associates hired after January 1, 2023, you must complete 1 year of service before you become eligible in the company matching contributions
Company won't give any employer match until you've worked there 1 year. But you lucked out, you were hired before then, so you got in before they made the match worse (by requiring a 1 year anniversary). Any new hires miss out on 1 years's worth of match (basically a 6% pay cut as far as I'm concerned)
>Rollover contributions, Roth rollover contributions, and Roth conversion contributions are not matched.
Just means if you rollover an old employer plan into this one, employer doesn't match any of it. They only match your current contributions.