The Roth 401K and Meal Planning Made Easy | EP 289

by | Jan 5, 2023 | 401k | 34 comments




Learn all about the Roth 401K from Sean Mullaney (The Fi Tax Guy), and teach your kids how to meal plan in a fun and interactive way through Dani’s curriculum!

Listen to the episode here:

Enjoy the video? Consider subscribing to our channel, it really helps us out! And it’ll make sure you never miss another video 😉

SUBSCRIBE:

WATCH NEXT
► Popular Videos:

FAVORITE VIDEOS ON CHOOSEFI TV:
►MOST POPULAR VIDEOS:
► Other PLAYLIST:
► ANOTHER PLAYLIST:

The Financial Resilience Toolkit:

►Earn $600 on Cashback:

Save On Existing Loans
►Slash Your Student Loan APR:
►Refinance Your Mortgage:
►Consolidate Your Debt:

Save on Living Expenses
►Lower Your Cell Phone Bill:
►Save on Home Insurance:
►Save on Auto Insurance:

Save & Invest
►Open a High Yield Account with CIT:
►Dollar Cost Average with M1 Finance:
►Open an HSA Account:

Financial Emergency Prep
►Open an Emergency Fund:
►Get Your Documents Ready For Emergencies:
►Get More for Less on Term Life Insurance:

Free Financial Learning Center
►Financial Resilience Digital Download:
►Financial Independence Made Simple Digital Download:
►Financial Independence 101 Course:
►Downloadable Resource for Accidental Homeschoolers:
►K-12 Financial Literacy Curriculum for Educators:
►Free FI Audiobook trial with Audiobook.com:

More resources:

►Our Podcast:
►Financial Resilience Daily Show:
►Blog:

About us:
Everything we do, we do to help you slash your expenses, crush debt, and build ways to earn a living remotely by starting online businesses. Then we help you invest in the safest way we know how, despite the ups and downs of the stock market.

Every video is packed with content and actionable tips, and we get you from how to wow in 3 minutes. That’s right – give us 3 minutes, and you’ll get the step-by-step inside scoop on how to make and save more money, then make that new money go to work for you.

See also  The Power of An Inherited IRA! - Herb Dorn

We take the hits, so you don’t have to, because ultimately, we want you to become financially resilient during these trying times, and get you started on the path towards Financial Independence.

CONNECT:
►OUR WEBSITE:
►BUSINESS EMAIL: feedback@choosefi.com
JOIN THE COMMUNITY:
►FACEBOOK:
FOLLOW US:
►FACEBOOK:
►TWITTER:
►INSTAGRAM:
►PINTEREST: …(read more)


LEARN MORE ABOUT: 401k Plans

REVEALED: Best Investment During Inflation

HOW TO INVEST IN GOLD: Gold IRA Investing

HOW TO INVEST IN SILVER: Silver IRA Investing


Gold IRA Advantages for Baby Boomers Nearing Retirement
You May Also Like

Unlock the secrets to maximizing your retirement savings with our comprehensive guide to your...

34 Comments

  1. Reversion to the mean

    We will be rolling over the spouse's Roth 401k into her ROTH IRA for two reasons. 1. intent to leave much of it for children and 2. not leaving it with an insurance company disguised as an investment company

  2. AK North

    I view roth contributions as a forced savings plan. It basically a way to mentally trick yourself into contributing more than you think you are. So for example if you have a 3% contribution and you contribute 100 dollars you have to pay taxes on that 100 dollars so 115 has been removed from your pay( just assuming 15%) so actually you contributed 115/3333= 3.5% of course you could just contribute more traditional to match the increase roth amount but finances aren't all math humans are emotional creatures and not robots

  3. Nick Goodwin

    401ks are exempt from civil lawsuits.. IRAs are not.

  4. I don't want a channel I'm just commenting

    Does money going into a 401(k) count towards earnings for ssi during the 35 year look back, or do they count later in life when you convert? Should someone in their 20s planning on taking ssi at 65 put money in a 401k and do a conversion during early retirement to boost earning during that lookback period?

  5. Mr J-Charles

    Dishonest group of folks trying to promote political topics.

  6. Derek

    love the roth. ER match and their contributions are traditional so even doing all roth personally I still get tax diversification by default

  7. John B

    listen to just past 5 minutes and still nothing about the subject, so i moved on

  8. jjoven1225

    Roth 401k is for people who doesn't want the RE part or someone that will get pension. (Some people actually love their job and dont want to retire). There are still people who will get pension. With Pension + SS + 401k, you're looking at a disaster if all you have is all pretax. There's nothing wrong having both. But If your intension is to RE, pretax all the way. you just figure out the insurance part if you're in the US.

  9. Moonie Bo

    I like ROTH 401K because there are no required minimum distributions.

  10. Moonie Bo

    ROTH 401K is good for coasting fire people.

  11. Lisa Kelly

    I'm in a 457b deferred comp (government employee) with also a defined benefit pension plan and chose the Roth option. I just thought it was better than dealing with the aftermath.

  12. amafid

    R

  13. amafid

    A

  14. amafid

    N

  15. amafid

    D

  16. amafid

    O

  17. amafid

    M

  18. amafid

    .

  19. amafid

    A

  20. amafid

    L

  21. amafid

    G

  22. amafid

    0

  23. amafid

    R

  24. amafid

    Y

  25. amafid

    T

  26. amafid

    H

  27. amafid

    M

  28. amafid

    .

  29. amafid

    C

  30. amafid

    O

  31. amafid

    M

  32. amafid

    M

  33. amafid

    E

  34. amafid

    N

U.S. National Debt

The current U.S. national debt:
$34,552,930,923,742

Source

ben stein recessions & depressions

Retirement Age Calculator

  Original Size