5 Roth IRA Benefits You MUST Know

by | Jul 31, 2022 | Roth IRA | 40 comments

5 Roth IRA Benefits You MUST Know




In this video, I share 5 benefits of a Roth IRA that you must know about!

A Roth IRA is a retirement account where you contribute after-tax money to invest in assets that grow tax-free.

The amount you can contribute in 2020 is $6,000 in total. However, you are eligible for a catch-up contribution to the Roth IRA of $1,000 per year if you are 50 or older.

At age 59.5 you can take out all the money in the Roth IRA tax-free and penalty-free. Meaning, whatever is in that account is yours to keep, without any penalties or taxes of any kind!

Please watch the entire video to understand the full benefits of a Roth IRA!

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40 Comments

  1. AmyX

    I wish Roth didn’t have a ceiling! And also, that I knew it existed at age 15 when I started working! 14 years of growth wasted

  2. PapaPickett

    Marko, killing it again. Im becoming such an old man watching your videos but Im loving it.

  3. OTR Melo806

    Let's say you gross 100k
    But your net income is 55k
    So let's u owe irs 13k
    In now with the same income u putting 6k year into roth how much will you save??

    So I believe that 49k in net that u have to pay in taxes ?

  4. Jorge Almeyda

    thank you brother. Answered so many questions.

  5. Beloved Cheryl

    What type of stocks do you put in different types of acct. Roth, traditional, etc.

  6. Davis J. Miller

    THE SECRETE TO MAKING MILLIONS IS SAVING FOR A BETTER INVESTMENT. I ALWAYS TOLD MYSELF
    I DON'T NEED A NEW MASERATI OR AN EXPENSIVE VACATION JUST YET. THAT SINGLE MINDSET
    HELPED ME TO MAKE MORE MONEY INVESTING. I MAKE STEADY WEEKLY PROFIT BY
    INVESTING THROUGH A PORTFOLIO MANAGER, SUZANNE STEPHENS ELLIS.
    IT IS GOOD TO HAVE MORE THAN ONE STREAM OF INCOME.

  7. Yaya P

    Hmmmm

  8. Progressive101

    Nice! Can a 401K plan be rolled over to an Roth IRA?

  9. Desiree Segari

    wait, is there a way to have more than one roth ira or is that illegal?

  10. Cliff DaRiff

    since I am over 59.5, how long must I wait (after depositing), to withdraw dividend payouts from a Roth IRA, without a tax hit?

  11. Stephanie Oropeza

    Hi, is there a certain amount required to open a Roth IRA?

  12. jonathan Stafford

    If you have monthly dividends as your Ira portfolio with automated reinvestment going through the Roth until the 6k point and then…?

  13. Nav

    Great info thanks for sharing

  14. Rashid Shaik

    Thank you very much. Your explanation of IRA and Roth IRA is excellent and very easy to understand for a beginner in investing,

  15. Alvaro Vargas

    Great Video!!! Simple and easy to understand.. Mt biggest question is why most people don't invest in their IRA? Is it lack of funds or? Realistically what can u loose long term 30 years plus?

  16. KennyTrace

    So i just put money on the account every month and it will grow or do i need to pick a stock or something to make it grow?

  17. Tony Harris

    This was such a nice explanation of an IRA. Thank you!

  18. Raymond Tang

    Question right, so the $6000 i put in every year do i need to do my own stocks and investments or is that automatic?

  19. roz McGhee

    I interested a Roth IRA…however with my last employer they matched at 6% I want to roll over should it be with my now new Employer’s 401k or should I put it in a Roth IRA. I am interested in info for M1

  20. Cesar A. Conrado

    Great video. This is all assuming you make less than 125k annually(single) for you to even contribute the full 6k a year.

  21. Nicolas

    Don’t forget income limits on contributions

  22. wolfy edits

    Helpful interesting and so important

  23. Dapper Bowtique

    Great advice Marko! I got a Roth IRA when I was 21 with T.Rowe Price. I’m 36 now and still contributing.

  24. Matthew Mitchell

    But I want to master my wealth and build my money…

  25. maverick5785

    I was told by my financial advisor that if you make over a certain amount you can’t contribute to a Roth. I was a nurse and had opened one in my hospital I use to work for. Now I’m a nurse practitioner and I am making a lot more and combined house house hold is around 200k. I would like to keep contributing.

  26. Shanta Barnes

    Off subject but ppl keep saying we didn’t learn this in high school but I did and it was public schooling

  27. Arlen Balagot

    I’m wondering if I should switch from my 401k to Roth IRA

  28. David Harraway

    Can I roll my 401k into a Roth I. R.A? If so, how…

  29. Jennifer Brown

    I’m on my credit unions website it is asking me about withholding for a Roth IRA not sure if I understand since it’s tax free

  30. Me Gook

    Gee. the US govt lets people keep their own $$ THEYRE SO NICE!! ^^

  31. hanging on

    Dude you have lit a fire underneath me and I am going to make some huge changes in my spending habits. Thank you so much man.

  32. Daktari

    Does the IRS considered it income when you withdraw from your Roth IRA?

  33. CraigHaskins19

    Does the 6k a year max include a company match? ?

  34. JayJay Murdino

    Brother an excel sheet on this would be grand

  35. Tyler Funnier

    can you still have a roth IRA if you contribute to employers roth 401k?

  36. jms_ wttrs

    Roth IRA eligibility laws stink. Married and filing separately can't make over 10K AGI. That's ridiculous. How can a person invest and not get sucker punched by the stinking government?! I pay taxes as a single person, not married. I file taxes as a single person – pay the same stinking tax rates as a single person and only get the same deductible ($12K, single filing).

  37. B Z

    I like the fact that you mentioned using Roth IRA as a hybrid emergency fund. I've always treated my Roth IRA like this, but I've never heard of anyone else mentioning this as a benefit of a Roth IRA instead of a Roth 401(k). Even before the current low interest environment, it didn't make sense to have a huge chunk of money sitting in a savings account or even a CD at a bank for emergencies, earning less interest than the inflation rate. I'm 42 now, and I still haven't had a need to tap into my Roth for emergencies, so it stays there earning much higher rates than in a bank.

  38. Thomas M

    I was worried Marko wouldn't write on the whiteboard – keep bringing that financial ASMR!

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