No-Match Roth 401(k) or Taxable Brokerage?
My wife and I max-out each of our Roth 401(k)s, our Roth IRAs, and still have some funds left after bills to put into a taxable account. She gets a match from her employer into her 401(k) (pre-tax of course). I do not.
But I used to get a match. When the match ended, I figured “oh well, it was nice while it lasted”. But recently, after seeing the fees and lack of performance in my employer’s plan, I started wondering if my Roth 401(k) contributions are better off in my taxable account, or maybe funneled into the pre-tax 401(k), or left as-is.
Saving $17500 on my MAGI doesn’t bring me and my wife down to a lower tax bracket today. I don’t know the future of tax rates, but I don’t think my marginal tax rate will be smaller in the future than it is now. And though the fees and performance suck now, I may be able to convince the employer to offer better options (at least they seemed willing to talk) and/or I could change jobs, allowing me an immediate rollover to a Roth IRA with better options.
But… what about the taxable account? I know most would probably balk, but does it make any sense, especially if in the near-term I cannot get the employer to add better options or I don’t change jobs for years? I’m potentially losing performance to fees (over 1% per fund). And seeing that it is after-tax money already, in that sense it is the same as the taxable account right? So the analysis of what is better is on the back-end I figured.
And in that way, I was trying to compare what 30 years of contributions and growth looked like in a Roth 401(k) with 1% fees and no back-end taxes versus the same 30 years of contributions and growth in a taxable account with much smaller fees (under 0.20%) but taxed. But then my brain box exploded.
Does anyone have any suggestions if I’m even go about such an analysis the right way? Does a no-match Roth 401(k) continue to make sense? Should I switch to a pre-tax 401(k)? Take the funds homes to a taxable account?
Permalink Submitted by Amar Patel on Thu, 2014-11-27 04:02
I wonder if this was the right forum for this post? If not, can someone direct me to other resources on the Net?Thanks!
Permalink Submitted by Bruce Steiner on Fri, 2014-11-28 03:03
Permalink Submitted by Amar Patel on Fri, 2014-11-28 20:32