Should I move my 401k to my new job or keep it?

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  • #136703 Reply
    USER

      Hi everyone, I am about to start a new job at a new company for the first time in 8 years. The job will be in a slightly LCOL area with a 20% pay increase.

      I’ve been paying into a 401k for about 7 or the last 8 years.

      I seem to have the option to keep my current 401k right where it is, or move it to my new company’s program.

      Why would you keep it where it is vs move it? And do I have any other options?

      Thanks for any input!

      #136704 Reply
      Jule

        It depends, who manages the 401k on your old job and who manages the 401k at your new job?

        Also, it’s better to consolidate, if at all possible.

        If you are a higher earner and contribute to a Roth IRA, don’t roll it to a traditional IRA.

        This would create tax issues and impede you from continuing those contributions.

        #136705 Reply
        Lisa

          Many roll there’s to new accounts. I’ve opted to leave mine as they were all Vanguard with is rated highly as a low fee brokerage

          #136706 Reply
          Chad

            I would say if you’re old 401k has good funds and is doing well there’s no harm in leaving it where it is.

            However, if your new 401k is better, then it makes perfect sense to roll it over.

            It also might makes sense to roll it over to consolidate so you have less to manage and it makes it easier to manage allocation percentages.

            #136707 Reply
            Nicholas

              You can roll it to a traditional ira at vanguard or other major investment firm to invest it in low cost index funds.

              Many 401k plans have higher investment fees so I would just look into that before deciding on your next steps.

              #136708 Reply
              Michele

                You can also roll into your own rollover account, Fidelity or Vanguard, etc.

                Traditional or Roth depends on your current allocations. Read A Simple Path to Wealth.

                #136709 Reply
                Fritze

                  Compare fund, you can do both. Also, if you have pretax IRA and cannot do backdoor Roth conversion without triggering pro- rata rule, then ask if current new 401k can do a reverse rollover from IRA into it then do backdoor Roth.

                  #136710 Reply
                  Flores

                    I’ve always found it easier to just roll existing funds into the new 401k. I just prefer to have things streamlined and it will still be in a target date fund

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