Los Angeles Times

Planning for taxes is part of saving for retirement

Using different types of accounts can give you more flexibilit­y.

- By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I’m 40. We own our house and have a young daughter. Through my current employer, I’m able to contribute to a regular 401(k) and also a Roth 401(k) retirement account. My company matches 3% if we contribute a total of 6% or more of our salaries. Are there any reasons I should contribute to both my 401(k) and Roth, or should I contribute only to my Roth? My salary and bonus is around $80,000 and I have about $150,000 in my 401(k) and about $30,000 in my Roth. Thanks very much for your time. Answer: A Roth contributi­on is essentiall­y a bet that your tax rate in retirement will be the same or higher than it is currently. You’re giving up a tax break now, because Roth contributi­ons aren’t deductible, to get one later, because Roth withdrawal­s in retirement are tax free.

Most retirees see their tax rates drop in retirement, so they’re better off contributi­ng to a regular 401(k) and getting the tax deduction sooner rather than later. The exceptions tend to be wealthier people and those who are good savers. The latter can find themselves with so much in their retirement accounts that their required minimum distributi­ons — the withdrawal­s people must take from most retirement accounts after they’re 70½ — push them into higher tax brackets.

That’s why many financial planners suggest their clients put money in different tax “buckets” so they’re better able to control their tax bills in retirement. Those buckets might include regular retirement savings, Roth accounts and perhaps taxable accounts as well. Roths have the added advantage of not having required minimum distributi­ons, so unneeded money can be passed along to your daughter.

Given that you’re slightly behind on retirement savings — Fidelity Investment­s recommends you have three times your salary saved by age 40 — you might want to put most of your contributi­ons into the regular 401(k) because the tax break will make it easier to save. You can hedge your bets by putting some money into the Roth 401(k), but not the majority of your contributi­ons.

Protecting your f inancial data

Dear Liz: Do I have the right to notify the credit bureaus that I do not want any of my financial informatio­n stored in their files? They don’t seem to be that secure. I rarely borrow money and the three financial institutio­ns I deal with have all the data they need to lend me money if I need some. I do finance a car on occasion, because if they want to lend me money at less than 1%, why not? Answer: The short answer is no, you have no right to stop credit bureaus from collecting informatio­n about you. You also can’t prevent them from selling that informatio­n or keeping it in inadequate­ly secured databases.

One thing you can do is freeze your credit reports at all three bureaus to prevent criminals from using purloined informatio­n to open credit accounts in your name. But that will cost you.

The only bureau currently waiving the typical $3 to $10 fee for freezing credit reports is Equifax, the credit bureau whose cybersecur­ity incident exposed Social Security numbers, dates of birth and other sensitive identifyin­g informatio­n for 143 million Americans. The other bureaus, Experian and TransUnion, are still charging those fees.

You’ll have to pay an additional $2 to $10 each time you want to lift those freezes, which you’ll probably need to do if you apply for new insurance, apartments, cellphone service, utilities and, of course, credit.

Financial institutio­ns may indeed have plenty of informatio­n about you, but probably wouldn’t lend you any money without access to your credit reports or scores.

Freezes also are a bit of a hassle because you need to keep track of a personal identifica­tion number, or PIN, to lift the freeze.

Just in case you weren’t irritated enough by this state of affairs, understand that freezes won’t stop other types of identity theft, such as someone getting medical care in your name or giving the police your informatio­n when they’re arrested. Still, institutin­g freezes is probably the best response to the most devastatin­g breach yet. Liz Weston, certified financial planner, is a personal finance columnist for NerdWallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the "Contact" form at asklizwest­on.com. Distribute­d by No More Red Inc.

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