Financial Feminist - 16. Roth IRA or 401K?
Episode Date: May 5, 2022If you don’t invest, you likely won’t be able to retire…ever. This feels harsh because it is. The good news is that the best day to start investing is today and it’s never too late to start. ...It’s also not as complicated as the finance gatekeepers want you to think it is. In this episode, host Tori Dunlap walks you through the different retirement account options and perks, including Roth IRAs, 401ks, self-employed retirement options, and more. Make sure to check out our show notes for more resources, and episodes 5 and 9 from season one for a primer on investing and the financial steps you need to take to get started. Pre-Order “Financial Feminist: Overcome the Patriarchy’s Bullsh*t to Master Your Money and Build a Life You Love”: https://bit.ly/3PpHvlC Our HYSA recommendation [affiliate]: http://sofi.com/herfirst100k Join our one of a kind investing community, Treasury: https://treasury.app/herfirst100k/investing-101-workshop Check out the show notes for this episode for more resources: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/ Follow us on YouTube for behind the scenes and extras: https://www.youtube.com/c/HerFirst100K/featured Need to roll over an old 401K? We recommend Capitalize! https://capitalize.sjv.io/herfirst100k Follow Financial Feminist on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financialfeministpodcast/ Follow Her First $100K on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/herfirst100k/ Looking for more actionable money advice? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://treasury.app/herfirst100k/money-journey-quiz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello, financial feminists. Welcome back to the show. In case you're wondering what I'm
currently up to, a little fun fact about me is I have been living in New York for a little
over two weeks now. It was 10-year-old me's dream to live in New York City.
I went to New York when I was 10, and I loved the city very much and loved the energy and
the pulse of the city.
If you've ever lived in New York slash visited New York, you know this feeling very well.
And then I got older, and I realized how expensive New York City was.
And I realized it was a little too big for me and I didn't want to get swallowed up in
the city. And so I visited many times since then and thought like, okay, how do I honor 10-year-old
me's dream of living in New York while also realizing I don't want to do this full time?
So I have been in an Airbnb in Brooklyn for the last two and a half weeks and I'll be here for
a total of six weeks, which I feel like is a beautiful amount of time. And weirdly, what's happened is I'm like, okay, I couldn't live in Manhattan. But I really like Brooklyn.
And I really like the neighborhood I'm in. And it's making me reevaluate all my choices.
But as you probably know, I'm a theater nerd and a theater major. And the big thing that I do when
I come to New York, especially when I was only here for like five days or a week, is I would just see as many shows as I could on Broadway. And if you have ever wanted to
see more shows on Broadway or coming to New York to visit, or if you live in New York, a lot of my
friends weirdly have lived in New York for years, but like don't go to shows. And one of the common
things I hear is like, oh my God, it's so expensive. And it is. It's very expensive. However, I can't tell you the last time that I saw a show and spent more
than $50 on my ticket. So I'm going to give you, this is not related to retirement accounts at all,
but I'm going to give you like the hack to end all hacks. And if you are a theater person who
lives in New York, you probably know this hack and you're like, well, everybody knows this.
theater person who lives in New York, you probably know this hack and you're like, well, everybody knows this. They actually don't. So just bear with me. So what happens is very rarely do shows
sell out, right? Very rarely do Broadway shows completely sell all of their tickets.
Maybe the popular ones do, right? Like Hamilton, especially pre-pandemic, right? Like you couldn't
get a ticket to Hamilton very easily. But a lot of shows that are just as great and just as amazing are not going to completely sell out.
And they know this, right? So what people tend to do, especially like I see a lot of older people
do this because they want to pick their seat and they want to like know exactly which show they're
going to is they'll go up to the box office and they'll spend $150, $200, $400 on
a seat, right? And like row N. And you can do this, but that's very expensive.
The hack that a lot of people know is you'll go to what's called the TKTS booth in Times Square
and you'll buy tickets typically to like a long running musical or a family musical. So you'll
buy a ticket to Phantom of the Opera and the sticker price on that ticket will be $200, but you'll spend 80 and you're like,
oh my gosh, that's a great deal. It's a better deal than the box office. However, I have an even
better deal for you. As long as you're not super picky on what show you see, and if you do the
slightest bit of research, there is what's called rush
tickets for most shows. Rush tickets are day of tickets where again, they know, okay, we're not
going to sell out the show. So we're going to offer discounted tickets to people who show up
on the day of. So I literally saw two days ago, American Buffalo with Sam Rockwell and Darren Criss. I had incredible seats
that were like $150, $200 seats, and I got them for $45. And I've done this with so many shows.
I can't even... Kinky Boots. Oh, hello, with John Mulaney and Nick Kroll. Oh, hello. I've seen...
I saw Company last night with Patti LuPone for $50, which is still one of the best shows I've seen I saw company last night with Patti LuPone for $50 which is one of still one of the
best shows I've ever seen and you can also figure out what shows have rush they also have what's
called lottery tickets it's exactly how it sounds you enter like a digital lottery and if your name
gets chosen you get to go right and sometimes these seats again are like front row seats that
are very expensive but that you can win you can literally just go to playbill.com. We'll link it in the show notes
and see the rush policies, the lottery policies for every single show on Broadway.
So that's what I do, guys. When I come to New York, I've literally, I've been here two and a
half weeks. I've seen three shows. Last time I was in New York, I was there for five days. I think I
saw four shows, maybe five shows. This is like all I do when I come to New York, I was there for five days. I think I saw four shows, maybe
five shows. This is like all I do when I come to New York. And it's not only, of course, so
entertaining, great way to support Broadway, especially as it comes back from the pandemic,
but also a way to do it on a budget. So again, you can check rush policies, lottery policies,
and it's really, really easy to get tickets at a very discounted price, especially
if you're not picky. But again, there's rush seats for things like The Lion King. There's
lotteries, very famous lotteries for shows like Hamilton. There are so many ways that you can
access both shows you might not have heard of that are amazing and also shows you've heard of
that are amazing for a discounted rate. So that's what I've been up to the last two and a half weeks in New York. I'm so excited to tackle this week's topic.
We're talking about retirement accounts. I know that sounds boring. I promise you,
I will not let it be boring. But first up, we've got a voicemail to share with you from one of our
listeners. I just want to thank Her First 100K and Tori for helping me set up my financial foundation.
This past year, I was able to set up my HYSA, my Roth IRA, a 403B.
This podcast has really actually changed my life and I've sent it to a few friends and
they've all become Tori fans as well.
I just want to thank you from the bottom of my heart to giving me the tools to success and using money as a tool to help build my future.
That one made me so happy. I love getting voicemails like this from our community.
There is something so incredible about hearing wins in your voice. And we'd love to keep sharing
these to inspire others. So if you want to leave us a voicemail, head over to speakpipe.com slash financial feminist. We'll also link it in the show notes
and leave us a message with either a question you'd like us to answer on an episode or a win
you'd like to share with our community. And we just can't wait to hear from you.
And what a great voice message that was for today because it perfectly leads into our topic,
retirement accounts. Today, I'm going to break down retirement accounts, the TLDR on the most popular ones, ones I recommend and use myself,
and then a few options you probably have never heard of. I'm also recommending that you listen
back to episodes five and nine from season one as a precursor to this conversation.
So in episode five, I go through the financial game plan, which gives you a sort of order of operations on exactly when you should start investing for retirement.
So if you haven't listened to that one, please, please do. That episode especially is one that
you will keep coming back to for literally the rest of your life. That financial game plan works
regardless of your age, regardless of where you're at in your financial journey.
And in episode nine, I explain more in depth what investing is, the kind of rules of twos around investing and how to actually get started.
So these episodes will give you a very good primer on everything we're diving into today.
When we talk about retirement, I think the most common question I get is,
why do I need to save for retirement? Or specifically, really, why do I need to invest
for retirement? I work with a, why do I need to invest for
retirement? I work with a lot of women in their 20s and 30s. So regardless of your age, you might
be asking this. But specifically, if you're a millennial or Gen Z, you might be going, why do
I need to save for retirement? There's many answers to this question. The first is that
retirement is the biggest expense of your life. It's the biggest expense of your life.
It is more costly than going to college, than buying a home, than sending your children to
college. It is the most costly expense of your life. And that sounds harsh, but it's an actual
fact. When we consider the idea that we're probably
going to work from maybe around ages like 22 to 65, which is traditional retirement age,
that's about 40 years. That's a little over 40 years. You are working typically eight hours a
day, five days a week for 40-ish years in order to sustain yourself for you to not work for at least another 30.
We hope we get another 30 years, right? So you are working 40 hours a week for 40 years
to hopefully never work again. That's going to be really expensive. In addition,
that's going to be really expensive. In addition, these years are also typically the most expensive years of your life. If you think about people in your life who are over the age of 65,
they're probably spending a lot of money on things like healthcare costs. And if you're listening and
are based in the United States of America, you know our healthcare system is pretty fucked up. And you know that it's pretty expensive to be sick.
And unfortunately, of course, we know as you age, you're more likely to have health issues.
So not only, of course, are you working for that period of time in order to hopefully give yourself
a kick-ass retirement, you're also trying to give yourself a kick-ass retirement knowing that it's
going to be even more expensive than your current expenses right now. So that's one reason we need
to save for retirement. The second is that even if you're young, time is more important than the
amount of money. We talked about this briefly in episode nine, but it bears repeating yet again.
Time is more important than the amount
of money. One of the misconceptions I hear about investing is that you need a bunch of money to
get started, right? And, oh, I'll just wait until I'm older and wait until I have more money to
start investing. But the truth is, is that you can start with a smaller amount of money the sooner
you start. You don't need thousands of dollars. You need like $100. Even if you can only do $100 once,
that is better than waiting because of this lovely thing called compound interest.
Compound interest is simply when your interest earns interest. It's why debt sucks so hard,
but why investing is so amazing. Because compound interest does a lot of the legwork for you.
Because if you're thinking, wow, retirement sounds really expensive, you're fucking right. But in addition, compound interest is there to help you. It's there
to assist you. And compound interest only works if you're investing. So why do you need to stay
for retirement? Because it's expensive. Why do you need to stay for retirement now? Because
it's the best time. I always joke that the day you start investing is the best day because you didn't wait to
start tomorrow.
You don't get time back.
One of the other concerns I hear of why would I invest for retirement if the world is going
to burn?
Why would I spend all this time and energy putting away money that I'm not even going
to get to use because the apocalypse is coming,
because global warming sucks, and there's not going to be a world for us to live in,
and also World War III, and also lack of clean water. All of these fears are completely valid.
I have the same fears. But I would rather bank and hope that I see retirement with a lot of money than get to retirement age and have
nothing because I thought that the world might not exist. And if you do save all this money,
if you do invest all this money, and the world is ceasing to exist, you're going to have way
more problems than your status of your retirement accounts. If zombies are walking
outside of your door, that is your primary concern. Not, God, I wish I hadn't saved all that money.
You're worried about protecting your brain from getting eaten, right? So when you're thinking,
why would I do all this heavy lifting? Why would I do all this work? I would rather you be protected than not be protected, right?
I would rather you be safe than sorry.
Also, I've been wondering, because I don't know enough about science fiction, why zombies
eat brains.
And if you know, please leave us a review.
Tweet at us.
Tell us.
Tell us why they eat brains specifically, because I don't know.
Like, what part about the brain is the most appetizing part to a zombie? I don't know. What part about the brain is the
most appetizing part to a zombie? I don't understand. I don't get it. If you know, tell me.
I'll spend a couple minutes Googling after this episode.
Okay, let's break down some retirement accounts. All of the accounts I'm mentioning today
are what's called tax-advantaged accounts, meaning that the government is incentivizing you
to save slash really invest for retirement by offering you tax breaks. They are dangling the
carrot. They're saying, if you invest for your own retirement, typically you'll then be cheaper
to us as a government. And so we're going to give you tax breaks for doing so. If you just generally
invest, you're probably investing through what's
called a brokerage account. Now, brokerage accounts have more flexibility, but they are
not offering you those tax breaks. Retirement accounts are specifically used most likely for
retirement funds. So if you're trying to take a vacation next year, your money should not go in
a retirement account for that vacation. This is for retirement,
but you're getting those sweet, sweet tax breaks. And the government gives us very little in terms
of benefits. So please, please take advantage of these to their fullest extent. Okay. What are the
most common retirement accounts? First, 401ks. You've probably heard of a 401k or a 403b.
You've probably heard of a 401k or a 403b. A 403b is like the public sector version of a 401k.
401ks are for private companies. 403bs are for typically like if you're a 401k or a 403b, your workplace, again,
is incentivizing you to save for retirement by giving you this as a benefit. So in addition to
your salary, in addition maybe to healthcare, they're giving you a 401k or a 403b
as an option for you to start investing for retirement. The maximum you can contribute to
a 401k is $20,500 as of 2022. However, you don't need to contribute the maximum in order to
contribute to a 401k. That's a common misconception. You're like, I either have to go full $20,500 or I
don't contribute at all. You can contribute anything up to the maximum. And anything you do contribute
up to the maximum is amazing and great. So if you can only contribute $500, great. If you can
only contribute $10,000, great. Now, a really cool thing that often happens with a 401k or a 403b
is you'll have what's called an employer match. Employer matches are free
fucking money. So if you're at your workplace and they offer, let's say a 401k, and they say,
we offer you a 3% match. What that means is that if you contribute 3% of your salary,
they will match that 3%. So if you contribute 3% of your salary, they will double it for you
automatically. They have doubled your money and you've only contributed half of the effort.
Please take advantage of this. If all you can contribute to your 401k is just up to the match,
that is massive. Do everything you can to contribute at least up to the match because,
again, it's free money. There's no other place in the world that's going to guarantee you
doubling your money. So that is a 401k. 401k, again, a workplace-sponsored retirement program.
It's offered through your work. It is, again, tax-advantaged as all of the accounts are that
we'll discuss today. And if you get an employer match, please take advantage of it. Okay, let's talk about an IRA. IRA stands for Individual Retirement Account.
An IRA is not tied to your employer. It's an individual account. You open it as an individual.
And although there are some income restrictions, pretty much most people, let's say most people,
can contribute to an IRA.
Again, with an IRA, you're responsible for opening it yourself. But a couple of cool things with the IRA. One, as opposed to a maximum of $20,500, your maximum is $6,000 a year. However, this is where
things get fun. Stay with me. A little complicated, but I'll try to explain this in the easiest way possible. Your $6,000 maximum contribution, you actually have 15 months to hit that maximum.
So if it is January 2022, you have from January of 2022 to December of 2022 to hit that 6K,
of 2022 to hit that 6K plus January of 2023 to tax day of 2023 to hit that 6K. So if you've contributed like $4,000 in that calendar year, you have a couple extra months to play catch up.
Again, you can contribute anything up to that 6K. You just have more time to contribute.
So again, to recap, IRA, individual account, it's not tied to your employer.
And in addition, you have 15 months to contribute that maximum of $6,000.
Now, 401ks and IRAs come in two different flavors, traditional and Roth. The difference is in how
they are taxed. Traditional means that you are paying the tax when you withdraw the money, aka when you
retire. So rather than paying the tax now, you are delaying that and paying the tax when you withdraw
the money. As you might imagine, a Roth IRA or a Roth 401k means you pay the tax now. You're not
paying the tax later, You're paying the tax now
because Uncle Sam's got to get his tax money in some way, right? Now, ultimately, you need to do
your research. You need to figure out what's right for you. I personally like the Roth IRA for two
basic reasons. One, it's like giving 65-year-old me a little gift. It's like, hey, here's this lump sum of money that younger you
already paid taxes on. Go crazy. Go take this money to Capri and drink Chardonnay with lunch
and go on dates with your much younger Pilates instructor named Luca. My real life retirement
plan. Second reason I like the Roth IRA. I have no idea what the fuck taxes are going to be when I retire. I have no idea. None of us know. And although taxes could go down,
they probably won't. They will probably go up. And I'd rather at least pay the tax now because
I know what it is now than leave it up to chance later. So again, two flavors,
traditional 401k or traditional IRA or Roth 401k or Roth IRA. Now, you can have a 401k
and an IRA in either flavor, in both flavors, but you cannot contribute more than the maximum. So
let's say you opened a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. You can't contribute $6,000 to one and $6,000
to another. The total has to be $6,000. My self-employed babies, I did not forget
you. Let's talk about two basic options that you have. Also, if you do run your own business,
please hire an accountant. A good accountant will talk you through what would be personally
your best option. And again, accountants are always great. I've never done my own taxes,
guys. Accountants, 10 out of 10. Okay, First option, solo 401k. Exactly what it sounds like. It's a 401k offered through
your employer, except you're your own employer. Same maximum contribution limit, $20,500.
And again, you're your own sponsor because you're your own employer. So if you want a solo 401k,
you're going to open it up yourself because you run your own company.
Now, you cannot have a solo 401k and this next option, what's called a SEP IRA. You have to
pick one or the other. A SEP IRA is just like a traditional IRA in the way that it's taxed.
There is no Roth option. However, that maximum contribution limit is sweet. $56,000 a year or up to 25% of your income,
whichever comes first. Again, $56,000 a year or up to 25% of your income, whichever comes first.
Now, if you are a side hustler, if you have a nine to five and you run a side hustle on the side,
you can open up a SEP IRA as well.
You can't open a solo 401k unless you're a full-time self-employed person,
but you can have a SEP IRA. This is part of the reason I hit my 100k as quickly as I did
because I had a 401k through my work. I had an IRA. And then I also had a SEP IRA through my
business. I was like crazy maxing out my retirement
accounts. I was getting mad tax breaks. Not really. These are very moderate tax breaks.
These are not Jeff Bezos tax breaks. But I was doing the best that I could to, again,
not only contribute to my own retirement, invest for my own retirement, allow compound interest
to work for me, but was also getting every tax break that was offered to me with these retirement accounts. Again, you can either have a solo 401k
or a SEP IRA if you're a full-time self-employed person. And if you're a side hustler, you can only
have that SEP IRA. But you can kind of mix and match. Again, you could have, if you're a side
hustler, a 401k through your 9 to 5, an IRA in either flavor, traditional and or Roth,
and a SEP IRA. One caveat as well is that in addition to your self-employed options like a
401k or a SEP IRA, you do have to pick one or the other, again, with those two, but you can also
have traditional and or Roth IRAs. That's not just limited to a nine
to five employee. It's not just limited to people who have W-2 jobs. That is also available if you
are a self-employed person full-time. Okay, to wrap up the episode, something that's so, so,
so crucial and so important that we talked about in episode nine, a reminder that you have not
actually invested your money until you have not
only deposited money into an investing account, but have gone and purchased your investments.
A Roth IRA, a 401k, a SEP IRA, a solo 401k, any of these accounts, these are not investments.
These are the accounts that hold your investments. I want to repeat that. When you say,
oh, I'm investing in a Roth IRA, technically it is, but you're investing within a Roth IRA. You
are not putting your money into an investment called Roth IRA. The Roth IRA is the account
that holds the investments. So when you go to open, let's say an IRA, and you deposit money
into one of these accounts, again, you have not actually invested your money until you have done
step two, until you have actually chosen your investments. Now choosing your investments,
everybody would like to tell you is incredibly complicated. But as we talked about in episode
nine, you have two basic options, stocks and bonds, right? Those are your two basic options. And through Treasury,
which is our investing education app, we talk about things like ETFs, mutual funds, index funds,
my favorite things to invest in, and personal finance experts' favorite thing to invest in.
So we talk about not only, again, how to make sure that you're setting up your accounts in the correct way, but we're telling you how to actually make those first investments.
We're teaching you how to research investments and then how to actually make your first investment in terms of purchasing.
So Treasury is available to anybody.
We're specially geared towards women.
We're a non-shaming, non-judgmental investing education platform. And the reason we built Treasury was because, unfortunately,
the other investing platforms are typically either super jargony and confusing, or they're
geared towards Wall Street finance bros. And if you know me, that's not my shit.
So Treasury is linked in the show notes. You can also go to treasury.app.
Your experience starts
with an hour live workshop with me. We guide you through again, all of the things I just mentioned,
how to think about investing, how to set up your investing account, how to actually make your
first investment. People literally make investments live on the workshop. Like this most recent
workshop we did, which it's going to be fun, hopefully to listen to this in a couple months
and that this number has gone crazy. But literally, live on the workshop, our workshop attendees invested over $100,000.
And more than 80% of those investors were first-time investors. So it makes me so happy.
We're literally changing the statistics and making something that is unfortunately very
fearful and scary and intimidating, something that's super accessible. So treasury.app or you can visit the link in our show notes.
And again, we're teaching you, okay, if you have a Roth IRA, amazing. Here's what you actually
invest in. And here's how to stay the course to be a long-term consistent investor.
We also have so many more episodes about investing coming. It's something that you
guys have requested and asked for. So we're going to continue talking about investing. We're going to continue talking
about various kinds of investments that you have questions about. And again, I remind you,
I've said this before, I'll say it again. One of the narratives that gets perpetuated is that
investing is complicated. We are told investing is intimidating and scary and risky, so you
shouldn't do it. And that is another
patriarchal narrative meant to keep you underpaid, overworked, and frankly, financially unstable.
So one of the most powerful forms of protest you have is not only getting your financial
shit together, but actually starting investing. Recent stats say that only 26% of women who are
able to invest actually do. And through Financial Feminist, through our
podcast platform, and also through Treasury, we are actively working to change that statistic.
And if you have more questions about investing, please leave us a voicemail.
You can go again to the link in our show notes to do that. As always, we so appreciate you being
here. Feel free to tag us in your biggest takeaways, Financial Feminist
Podcast on Instagram. Leave us a review. Always helps us, helps more people discover the show.
And if you want more information about retirement accounts, about investing, about treasury,
about how all of this works, my team and I spend so many hours on the show notes.
So please go ahead and check those out. As always, thanks for being here. Thank you for
being Financial Feminists, and I will catch you next week. Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist,
a Her First 100K podcast. Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen
Fields, marketing and administration by Karina Patel, Olivia Koning, Sharice Wade, Alina Hilzer,
Paulina Isaac, Sophia Cohen, Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning,
and Ana Alexandra. Research by Arielle Johnson. Audio engineering by Austin Fields. Promotional
graphics by Mary Stratton. Photography by Sarah Wolf. And theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound.
A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show.
For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, episode show notes, and our upcoming book,
also titled Financial Feminist, visit herfirst100k.com.