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 paralyzesA 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

‘You Can Have Your Cake and Eat It Too’: Suze Orman to 55-Year-Old Torn Between 457(b) and Roth 401(k)

2026/06/17 20:43
Okuma süresi: 5 dk
Bu içerikle ilgili geri bildirim veya endişeleriniz için lütfen crypto.news@mexc.com üzerinden bizimle iletişime geçin.

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..

  • Funding 457(b) and Roth 401(k) to employer match captures $6,400 annual free money and preserves $26,100 remaining deferral room to max Roth before age 50+ catch-up rules.
  • This strategy works for 55-year-old late savers earning under $150,000 in FICA wages who need to close a retirement savings gap.
  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

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.

The stakes for a saver who started late

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.

Why Orman’s verdict is correct

Orman is right, and the math is not close. Her sequence works like this:

  1. Capture both matches first. “Why not contribute to both up to the point of the match because that’s a guaranteed 4% on your money.” An employer match is an instant return on contribution that no market investment can promise. Leaving either match on the table is a pay cut the caller is volunteering for.
  2. Then max the Roth 401(k). “I personally would then be maxing out my Roth 401(k).” Roth contributions go in after tax and grow tax-free, which matters when the saver expects tax rates to rise or wants flexibility over taxable income in retirement.
  3. If money remains, return to the 457(b). The 457(b) is a pre-tax plan typically offered to government and nonprofit employees, and its withdrawal rules are unusually friendly. Distributions are not subject to the 10% early-withdrawal penalty once you separate from service, regardless of age.

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 variable that flips the order

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.

What to do this week

Three concrete moves:

  • Log into your benefits portal and set deferral elections so both the 457(b) and the Roth 401(k) hit the full match percentage on the next pay run.
  • Check Box 3 of your 2025 W-2. If wages cleared $150,000, your plan administrator will route catch-up dollars to Roth automatically; if not, you keep the pre-tax option.
  • Build a tax-bucket worksheet listing balances in pre-tax, Roth, and taxable accounts. The goal is having enough in each to control your tax bill in retirement.

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.

If You’ve Been Thinking About Retirement, Pay Attention (sponsor)

Retirement planning doesn’t have to feel overwhelming. The key is finding expert guidance, and SmartAsset’s simple quiz makes it easier than ever for you to connect with a vetted financial advisor. Here’s how:

  1. Answer a Few Simple Questions. 

  2. Get Matched with Vetted Advisors 

  3. Choose Your  Fit 

Why wait? Start building the retirement you’ve always dreamed of. Get started today! (sponsor)  

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..

Piyasa Fırsatı
TornadoCash Logosu
TornadoCash Fiyatı(TORN)
$5.303
$5.303$5.303
0.00%
USD
TornadoCash (TORN) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200xWorld Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

Combine up to 20 World Cup matches in one order

Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen crypto.news@mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Why Solana Amplified a Post on Unified Systems for Interoperability

Why Solana Amplified a Post on Unified Systems for Interoperability

Solana recently amplified a post discussing the power of unified systems for interoperability, gathering significant engagement on social media. The post Why Solana
Paylaş
Coinfomania2026/06/20 02:34
Covéa Chooses Shift Technology as Strategic Partner for Fraud and Risk Management

Covéa Chooses Shift Technology as Strategic Partner for Fraud and Risk Management

Covéa has selected Shift Technology as a long-term partner to support a consistent and shared view of risk from policy inception through to claims settlement The
Paylaş
ffnews2026/04/02 07:00
One Of Frank Sinatra’s Most Famous Albums Is Back In The Spotlight

One Of Frank Sinatra’s Most Famous Albums Is Back In The Spotlight

The post One Of Frank Sinatra’s Most Famous Albums Is Back In The Spotlight appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Frank Sinatra’s The World We Knew returns to the Jazz Albums and Traditional Jazz Albums charts, showing continued demand for his timeless music. Frank Sinatra performs on his TV special Frank Sinatra: A Man and his Music Bettmann Archive These days on the Billboard charts, Frank Sinatra’s music can always be found on the jazz-specific rankings. While the art he created when he was still working was pop at the time, and later classified as traditional pop, there is no such list for the latter format in America, and so his throwback projects and cuts appear on jazz lists instead. It’s on those charts where Sinatra rebounds this week, and one of his popular projects returns not to one, but two tallies at the same time, helping him increase the total amount of real estate he owns at the moment. Frank Sinatra’s The World We Knew Returns Sinatra’s The World We Knew is a top performer again, if only on the jazz lists. That set rebounds to No. 15 on the Traditional Jazz Albums chart and comes in at No. 20 on the all-encompassing Jazz Albums ranking after not appearing on either roster just last frame. The World We Knew’s All-Time Highs The World We Knew returns close to its all-time peak on both of those rosters. Sinatra’s classic has peaked at No. 11 on the Traditional Jazz Albums chart, just missing out on becoming another top 10 for the crooner. The set climbed all the way to No. 15 on the Jazz Albums tally and has now spent just under two months on the rosters. Frank Sinatra’s Album With Classic Hits Sinatra released The World We Knew in the summer of 1967. The title track, which on the album is actually known as “The World We Knew (Over and…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:02

Score Your Share of 50K USDT

Score Your Share of 50K USDTScore Your Share of 50K USDT

Complete DEX+ tasks to unlock the Champion Wheel