Doctor Detroit
Please remove your headgear
I've been going back and forth with my traditional vs Roth 401k contributions the last two months. I had 6% Roth and 2% traditional, then 5/3, 4/4. 1/6, 3/5, and 2/6 the last five pay cycles. I figure I will never make more in retirement than I make while I am working, so the traditional makes more sense according to the rules. A lot of people have math on Roth vs Traditional but generally the numbers in the end will be similar. I think if you're in your 20s, pile on the Roth. If you are making a ton of $$$, Roth is good. Since you have to take distributions on a Roth 401k at 70.5, it's hard to predict how that might benefit you tax wise. So much can change in 20, 30 or 50 years.
One way I like to look at it is this. If I die before I retire I would have paid a lot more tax investing in the Roth, and I'm never gonna see that money. Might be a bit selfish but that extra money I take home now seems more important to my day to day life, and I think I'm going to bring in 75-80% of my final earnings in retirement. That's going to be more than I need, and I'm likely going to end up giving a lot of my money away (actually hope to do this). Not giving it away to family, but giving it to great charities and to institutions of higher learning.
One way I like to look at it is this. If I die before I retire I would have paid a lot more tax investing in the Roth, and I'm never gonna see that money. Might be a bit selfish but that extra money I take home now seems more important to my day to day life, and I think I'm going to bring in 75-80% of my final earnings in retirement. That's going to be more than I need, and I'm likely going to end up giving a lot of my money away (actually hope to do this). Not giving it away to family, but giving it to great charities and to institutions of higher learning.
Saving in a non-optimal way is better than not saving. This is basically the same reason why I got a 15 year mortgage and will be dumping more money toward my house than getting a 30 year and 'investing' the difference. I don't trust myself.