Submitted by gadorg t3_10pgkze in personalfinance
plowt-kirn t1_j6kaich wrote
What matters is your current tax rate vs. your expected tax rate in retirement.
See: https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/rothortraditional
gadorg OP t1_j6kcqva wrote
Oh, gotcha. Well, retirement is still a ways off (10+ years) but I'm going to guess our (married) tax rate will be lower in retirement.
plowt-kirn t1_j6kd820 wrote
This is the situation for most people.
Very generally speaking, Roth is best in your low earning years early in your career. Traditional is best in your peak earning years.
Some tax diversification is good. If you are not currently contributing to a Roth IRA, that is something you should consider.
gadorg OP t1_j6keyfn wrote
Our combined AGI precludes us from contributing to a Roth IRA, unfortunately, however, both my spouse and I have Roth contribution options within our employer plans, so we contribute way. We could do a backdoor Roth, however, it's a little complicated in my case to do so, which I won't bore everything with in this thread!
alwayslookingout t1_j6kqg04 wrote
If you’re making too much for a Roth IRA then you’re probably better off going traditional 401K 403b as well.
gadorg OP t1_j6kr5ho wrote
Are you saying I should just increase my 403b contribution or open up a traditional 401k account and contribute to that?
alwayslookingout t1_j6krm8s wrote
Sorry. I just realized you said you have a 403b. It’s functionally the same as a 401K. You can’t just open a 401K unless you own a business.
Contribute to the trad 403b, not Roth 403b. Do a backdoor Roth IRA if you want to do Roth.
gadorg OP t1_j6kzsko wrote
When you say traditional 403b, is that my existing 403b through my employer? Or a completely separate one I would open through a provider (Vanguard, Fidelity, etc)?
alwayslookingout t1_j6l20uh wrote
Your employer’s. It’s the same thing as the 401K. You can’t just open a 403b/401K on your own unless you own a business.
gadorg OP t1_j6l6kn0 wrote
Okay, that's what I thought you meant. Thanks, I'll go ahead and increase my existing contribution to my employer 403b. Is there a reason why that's a better way to go than increasing my contribution to my employer Roth 403b (after tax money)?
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