401(k), IRA, or Both?
To adequately prepare for retirement, many financial experts recommend you fully fund your 401(k) or 403(b) plan, then deposit the maximum possible in an IRA. A 401(k) plan is a retirement vehicle sponsored by employers. Employees make pre-tax contributions into the plan. The employer matches a portion of the employee’s contribution – usually 50% to 100% – up to a percentage of the employee’s salary. The match often represents a significant portion of the investment’s growth. Tax laws limit the amount of contributions employees can make.
Distributions are taxed upon withdrawal. Generally, the employer contributions are subject to vesting. This means the employee must be in the plan for a pre-set period of time before the contributions totally belong to the employee – even if they change jobs.
When someone leaves an employer, they often get a distribution from their 401(k) and possibly a pension plan. The proceeds of these distributions can be rolled directly into a Traditional IRA (see below) without any taxes or penalties.
Talk to your employer to see if a 401(k) or 403(b) plan is available to you and how to contribute to it. If your employer does not have a plan, opening an IRA is even more essential to your comfortable retirement.
Tags: 401(k), 403(b), IRA, Roth IRA