Submitted by cheejiburga t3_1004djv in personalfinance
Hello! I'm 19 years old and I currently work full time as a front desk agent. I've been looking into investing and retirement plans for a few months but everything is still so confusing to me. I'm getting a headache reading 20 different answers and all these options and IRA's and everything. I hope this subreddit could give me some advice and answer some questions I have. I'm new to all this and I haven't placed any money anywhere yet.
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So I opened an account with Betterment, since I saw good reviews for them. I was going to use them to save up for a trip to see my bf in December, save some money to help my parents when they're older, and then one for general investing in the future. Like for a house, new car, etc. I've looked at their IRA's for retirement and I have no idea what I'm looking at even though it's been explained to me 20 times. My employer doesn't have a 401k plan (that I've been told of, I'll ask her tomorrow), so I heard it's best in that case to open an IRA account. Is that true? And if so, my bank (Regions) has investing options as well, could I use my bank? Is it better to use my bank or something like Betterment?
Now, I don't bring a lot of money in monthly. Most of it goes to bills, and paying my car monthly, and helping my family out, so I didn't want to put in a lot but just little by little to get me started. For Betterment I was thinking of putting $5 in to each account bi-weekly. Would that be a good start?
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I know it's all up to me in the end where I want to put my money, but before I did anything drastic I want to hear from people who are more experienced in the world of finance than I am. Any advice?
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Edit: I'm so appreciative of everyone trying to help me understand how this all works. It looks like girlbossing my finances this year will not be easy lol
MarcableFluke t1_j2fhhx3 wrote
Start here: www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/w/commontopics