Guest joshuaj Posted March 1, 1999 Posted March 1, 1999 Ok, I have two questions. 1) I'm graduating in May and starting my new job on May 17th. My company's 401(k) matches $.50 for the first $1500 I contribute, not matter how much I contribute. I was planning on contributing 15% to my 401(k), but since their matching is so low, I decided to do it this way: First, I'll contribute $1500 to 401(k). Then, I'll save $2000 to put in a Roth IRA. Last, I would contribute the rest back to the 401(k) plan. For example, if 15% of my salary was $15,000 (it's not), I would contribute $13000 to my 401(k) ($1500 + $11500) and then the other $2000 to the Roth. Does this seem like a good idea? 2) If I get paid 15 times at my new job (once in May, twice a month in June through December) and I save $268 each month, I'll have the $2000 to put in to the Roth. What I don't understand is this: Can I open up a Roth with nothing in it and make monthly contributions of $268 (up to $2000) or do I have to open and/or contribute to a Roth between Jan. 1 and April 15th? That I guess is what is confusing me. Thanks for any info.
Guest HIPAAdrome Posted March 1, 1999 Posted March 1, 1999 Keep in mind that the law limits how much you can defer to a 401(k). The limit this year is $10,000. It is indexed for inflation, so it may change in future years. In the recent past the limit was $9,500. So even if the plan allows you to defer up to 15%, if 15% is over $10,000, you actually have a lower percentage limit that other employees.
Guest 401k rollover Posted March 5, 1999 Posted March 5, 1999 With regard to question #2, my under- standing is that there is no specific limitation with regard to WHEN it per- missible to open a Roth IRA. The minimum amount needed to open a Roth IRA depends on the institution which is handling your account. You will need to ask them directly about this. If you open up a Roth and have $2000 up front to contribute, do so. If you open it with a smaller amount, do NOT wait until you reach your $2000 balance before contributing more funds. If you can contribute incrementally (i.e.; monthly), this will result in more rapid growth of your account, as there will be more principal money available to accrue interest and profit. If you wait until you have a full $2000 before contributing to the account, you miss out on the extra interest/profit you would have accrued had you con- tributed on an incremental basis. Hope this helps!
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