One For The Money

Listen to hear Jonny break down the tips, tricks, and strategies he uses to help clients retire early. This is the "easy button" when it comes to early retirement because everything you want and need to know is right here. Jonny will lay it all out in plain English so you can get the details on the actions you can do to put yourself on the best path to early retirement. He'll also interview top real estate, tax, and estate planning and other professionals to provide a comprehensive approach to your retirement planning. Nobody builds wealth by accident. Listen to find out how you can do it on purpose.

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episode 59: Tax Advantaged Investment Accounts


Tax Advantaged Investment Accounts, Ep #59

It’s April and taxes are on the forefront of everyone’s mind. An essential part of building wealth is to not pay more taxes than you have to. In this episode, I will be getting back to the basics and provide and overview of tax-advantaged investment accounts.  

In this episode...
  • Pre-tax account strategies  [4:03]
  • After-tax account strategies  [6:11]
  • How young adults can benefit from HSA accounts   [12:26]

Taxes can be incredibly confusing regarding how they work and the terminology does not help. Terms such as Gross Income, Adjusted Gross Income, Modified Adjusted Gross Income, above-the-line deductions, below-the-line deductions, tax credits, tax deductions, and Marginal tax rate vs effective tax rate are all important to understand how taxes work and how to implement tax saving strategies. If you want to learn more about these terms consider listening to Episode 8 and Episode 9 of this podcast. 

In this episode, I’ll provide a more basic understanding of tax-advantaged investment accounts and how these accounts can help you save on taxes. More specifically, how different investment accounts are taxed because knowing the differences can help a person decide when it is to their advantage to pay taxes.  This is an important topic because I often see individuals and families paying way more taxes than they need to because they don’t understand the differences between tax-advantaged investment accounts and how they allow tax optimization.

There are 3 different types of tax-advantaged accounts we will discuss each one below.

Pre-tax Accounts - Also known as traditional retirement accounts. Most know these as their 401(k) or IRA. In these accounts, you contribute a portion of your salary before you pay taxes. You will still have to pay taxes on this money but you will pay it later, when you take the money out of the account. These types of accounts make the most sense when you are in your highest earning income years. Deciding to pay taxes on the money put into these accounts during retirement when your income is lower can save you a significant amount of money in taxes. 

After-tax Accounts -After-tax accounts are when you pay taxes on the money before you make contributions to the account. These are commonly recognized as Roth 401k or Roth IRA retirement accounts. 529 accounts are also after-tax accounts. The advantage to these accounts is you never have to pay taxes again on the money contributed if you follow the distribution rules. This type of tax-advantaged account makes a lot of sense in your lowest and lower earning income years. By deciding to pay taxes when your income is lower you can save a significant amount in taxes. 

HSA Accounts -HSA accounts are the only accounts that are considered triple tax-free. With these types of accounts, you don’t pay taxes on the contributions or distributions or anytime in between. The contributions are tax-deductible, and both the growth, and distributions (if used for a qualifying medical expense) are tax-free.  As long as you follow the rules with HSAs you will pay ZERO taxes on them. Only people with a qualifying high-deductible medical plan are eligible to invest in HSAs. Contributions to HSAs are limited to an annual amount. For 2024 the limits are as follows: Individual $4,150, and Family $8,300. For those 55 and older you can contribute an additional $1,000. 

You may use funds in an HSA at any time for medical expenses. If you do not use all of the money inside of an HSA it will essentially become a traditional IRA and be taxed at ordinary income rates. HSAs can be so beneficial because the average retired couple will spend, on average, over $315,000 on medical expenses during retirement. 

Tips, Tricks, and Strategies - Young adults between the ages of 18-26 can benefit strongly from HSAs. Young adults can remain on their parents' health plan until age 26 and if their parents have a high deductible health plan they can contribute to their own HSA account. 

References

How to plan for rising health care costs

Maximizing HSA Tax Benefits With Adult Children

401(k)s Will Be Gone Within a Decade

Connect with Jonny West
  • https://BetterPlanningBetterLife.com 
  • Connect with Jonny on LinkedIn

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