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SconiGrower t1_j2ay447 wrote

I use Fidelity for my HSA and it's pretty good. I also have my taxable and retirement investments with Schwab and my emergency fund split between Ally and Treasury Direct, so I know how you feel about too many accounts. I think the tax benefit to an HSA is great enough to be worth the extra login information and monitoring demand. You could consider moving your investments from Vanguard to Fidelity, but you will still have to manage additional account statements and tax forms either way.

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Available_Market9123 OP t1_j2b0o4r wrote

Thanks for the feedback! 2 questions:

  1. I didn't know that it was possible to migrate funds from vanguard to fidelity--can yoh manage this without cashing out/incurring taxes (its a taxable account)

  2. Ive never used treasury direct, what is the advantage? I bonds?

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SconiGrower t1_j2b2n7f wrote

You can see if an ACATS transfer is an option. If you are holding publicly traded stocks, bonds, ETFs, and some mutual funds then everything would transfer without incurring taxes. But proprietary mutual funds might not be able to be transferred or might incur significant transaction fees at your new firm. I think I remember Schwab had an ACATS request form that allowed the user to check what would transfer and what would have to be liquidated before the request was actually submitted. Fidelity might have a similar tool, but otherwise that information should be similar between any pair of institutions. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/acat.asp

Yes, TreasuryDirect is for I bonds, that interest rate has been too good to ignore. But don't consider it an essential account everyone must have.

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