I've got growing anxiety that I'm not doing everything I can be to maximize my retirement savings opportunities. Here's my scenario that I'd love your advice on. This board is full of wisdom and I have always enjoyed learning from the POVs here.
Liquid assets:
- Sizable amount set aside in a high yield savings account for a house down payment (I have no actual real estate to my name and this pains me more and more with each passing day)
- Separate 3 months worth of emergency savings balance
- Cushion in checking
- Small, taxable brokerage account
Illiquid/less liquid assets:
- My 401K that is maxed out yearly
- Spouse's 401K that is maxed out yearly
- Roth IRA I can no longer contribute to
- Traditional IRA from an old 401K balance that I rolled over after leaving my first job. Been contributing $6K/yr but don't want to mess with backdoor conversion because the majority of that balance is pretax and don't want to pay taxes on that now.
- Old 401K from a previous employer that I haven't rolled over. Just letting it ride.
- HSA that I don't currently max out
Questions:
- I want to start building that taxable brokerage account, but is there anything I can do to do backdoor roth contributions with my current 401K after I max out the annual pretax contribution? I feel like putting a lot of contribution into the taxable brokerage account is a dumb move, but frankly I don't know where to start on trying to backdoor Roth my current 401K. Taxable realized gains are better than watching my liquid cushion sit in a savings account.
- HSA: This is another area where I'm ignorant. I don't max this out, but feel like I should to build up a balance for when we're retired and have insanely expensive insurance premium or need to use for a medical emergency. My HSA operates like a savings account and my employer contributes to it. What's this I hear about others investing their HSAs in what I presume are low cost index funds and saving medical receipts to withdraw the money at a later time (vs today? Didn't know you could do that)
- Life insurance: term life. Do I really need supplemental coverage here? My spouse is well equipped to prosper financially if I were to pass. Perhaps this becomes an issue if we become parents.
Here's my current approach:
1. Buy real estate within next 2 years
2. Continue maximizing pretax 401Ks
2. Figure out how to backdoor Roth my current 401K after maxing. How do I go about figuring that out? What are the right questions to ask so I don't foul this up?
3. Contribute more to the taxable brokerage account
4. Contribute more to HSA/figure out how to invest this balance through my company's sponsored plan.
Spouse and I have many years of working left, God willing, so I'm willing to be more aggressive in investment approach.
No children currently, but potentially one in the next few years.
Would you change the approach above?
Thank you
Liquid assets:
- Sizable amount set aside in a high yield savings account for a house down payment (I have no actual real estate to my name and this pains me more and more with each passing day)
- Separate 3 months worth of emergency savings balance
- Cushion in checking
- Small, taxable brokerage account
Illiquid/less liquid assets:
- My 401K that is maxed out yearly
- Spouse's 401K that is maxed out yearly
- Roth IRA I can no longer contribute to
- Traditional IRA from an old 401K balance that I rolled over after leaving my first job. Been contributing $6K/yr but don't want to mess with backdoor conversion because the majority of that balance is pretax and don't want to pay taxes on that now.
- Old 401K from a previous employer that I haven't rolled over. Just letting it ride.
- HSA that I don't currently max out
Questions:
- I want to start building that taxable brokerage account, but is there anything I can do to do backdoor roth contributions with my current 401K after I max out the annual pretax contribution? I feel like putting a lot of contribution into the taxable brokerage account is a dumb move, but frankly I don't know where to start on trying to backdoor Roth my current 401K. Taxable realized gains are better than watching my liquid cushion sit in a savings account.
- HSA: This is another area where I'm ignorant. I don't max this out, but feel like I should to build up a balance for when we're retired and have insanely expensive insurance premium or need to use for a medical emergency. My HSA operates like a savings account and my employer contributes to it. What's this I hear about others investing their HSAs in what I presume are low cost index funds and saving medical receipts to withdraw the money at a later time (vs today? Didn't know you could do that)
- Life insurance: term life. Do I really need supplemental coverage here? My spouse is well equipped to prosper financially if I were to pass. Perhaps this becomes an issue if we become parents.
Here's my current approach:
1. Buy real estate within next 2 years
2. Continue maximizing pretax 401Ks
2. Figure out how to backdoor Roth my current 401K after maxing. How do I go about figuring that out? What are the right questions to ask so I don't foul this up?
3. Contribute more to the taxable brokerage account
4. Contribute more to HSA/figure out how to invest this balance through my company's sponsored plan.
Spouse and I have many years of working left, God willing, so I'm willing to be more aggressive in investment approach.
No children currently, but potentially one in the next few years.
Would you change the approach above?
Thank you