The post ‘You Can Have Your Cake and Eat It Too’: Suze Orman to 55-Year-Old Torn Between 457(b) and Roth 401(k) appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 55-year-old caller called into Suze Orman’s Women & Money podcast episode “Caution, Caution, Caution!” published June 11, 2026, with a question that paralyzes a lot of late-starting savers. Her employer matches both her 457(b) and her Roth 401(k) up to 4%. Which one should she fund? She admitted on the air, “I have to admit, I’m a latecomer to your podcast, and at the age of 55, I feel so overwhelmed.”
Orman’s answer was blunt: stop choosing. “You can have your cake and eat it too, and you should, because a 457, everybody, is an account that you put money in before taxes.” She laid out a three-step sequence the caller could run starting with her next paycheck.
This question matters because the average 401(k) balance for someone age 55 to 59 sits at roughly $244,900, and Fidelity’s milestone for a 50-year-old is six times salary, rising to eight times by age 60. A caller who feels behind has roughly a decade before traditional retirement age to close that gap. Picking the wrong account, or worse, freezing and picking neither, costs real money in match dollars that disappear every pay period they go unclaimed.
Orman is right, and the math is not close. Her sequence works like this:
Run the numbers for 2026. The standard employee deferral limit is $24,500, and the catch-up for workers age 50 to 59 is an additional $8,000, taking total elective deferrals to $32,500. If the caller earns $80,000 and routes 4% to each plan to grab both matches, that is $3,200 in her 457(b) and $3,200 in her Roth 401(k), plus $3,200 from her employer in each account. She has captured $6,400 of free money and used $6,400 of her own elective deferral cap. She can still push another $26,100 into her Roth 401(k) before hitting the $32,500 ceiling.
The one factor that can rearrange Orman’s sequence is the SECURE 2.0 Roth catch-up rule. Starting in 2026, workers age 50 and older who earned more than $150,000 in FICA wages in 2025 are required to direct catch-up contributions into a Roth account. For a caller above that threshold, the $8,000 catch-up is no longer optional pre-tax money. The New York Times illustrated the cost: a 55-year-old in the 24% bracket making the maximum $8,000 catch-up would have cut their federal tax bill by about $1,900 under the old rules. Under the new rules, that $8,000 is taxable income today.
For a saver below the wage threshold, Orman’s order holds cleanly. For one above it, the Roth bias is already baked into the catch-up, which strengthens the case for putting any remaining dollars into the 457(b) to preserve a pre-tax bucket and keep some tax diversification.
Three concrete moves:
Orman’s cake-and-eat-it advice is the cleanest way to grab every match dollar, lock in tax-free growth, and still keep a pre-tax lever for the years between now and retirement.
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The post ‘You Can Have Your Cake and Eat It Too’: Suze Orman to 55-Year-Old Torn Between 457(b) and Roth 401(k) appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


