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  1. What's the point of Roth IRA? : r/personalfinance - Reddit

    Roth accounts are a hedge against future tax hikes and tax rate insecurity. There’s a reason Roth accounts are always subject to elimination every few years, tax revenue from Roth users is far …

  2. What funds should I invest in for my Roth IRA account? : r ...

    Sep 17, 2023 · Roth IRA Contribution Limits Since you mentioned opening an Individual Brokerage account for investing in mutual funds and index funds, I do want to make sure …

  3. What is your strategy for Roth IRA? : r/investing - Reddit

    If that's in my Roth or similar tax advantaged account, I still can't access it until 65 without incurring a tax penalty. Set up a foundation in your retirement accounts, and use the rest in …

  4. Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA? : r/personalfinance - Reddit

    Mar 20, 2022 · Total value of Roth IRA and post-tax brokerage account: 97,540 If he puts the $6000 in a traditional IRA, puts the tax savings in a brokerage account, and keeps both there …

  5. What to invest in? Roth IRA : r/personalfinance - Reddit

    Feb 22, 2023 · I’m planning on opening a ROTH IRA with vanguard. I’m overwhelmed at choosing what to invest my money in. Help! Any and all advice is appreciated.

  6. 401K....Pre-Tax, After Tax, and/or Roth??? : r/personalfinance - Reddit

    Nov 28, 2022 · Roth is almost never the correct answer, outside of some outlier situations. Essentially you need to look at effective tax rates vs top marginal. Roth contributions (and thus …

  7. 401k Pre-Tax or 401k Roth? : r/personalfinance - Reddit

    Aug 1, 2021 · After that, then go roth, or max the 401k and then roth after if that's your jam. That extra 20% you can put in because it's pre-tax can grow in the next 45 years.

  8. absolute beginner - roth IRA advice? : r/fidelityinvestments - Reddit

    A Roth IRA is a tax-advantaged retirement account where you make after-tax contributions and can withdraw those contributions tax-free and penalty-free at any time and for any reason.

  9. Roth 401K vs Traditional 401K : r/FinancialPlanning - Reddit

    The main difference between a Roth 401K and a Traditional 401K is when you pay taxes. A Roth 401K is funded with after-tax money, but you can withdraw it tax-free in retirement.

  10. Is Fidelity really that great for a Roth IRA account? - Reddit

    Is Fidelity really all that great? The no fees, no minimums, max of $6k a year sounds great for someone who is low-income as a recent grad. For anyone with experience in …