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Tax-Advantaged Investing

The order you fill your accounts matters as much as what you invest in. Here's the priority system the FI community uses to squeeze maximum value from every dollar.

12 min read High Impact

The Account Priority Order

Follow this sequence to maximize your tax advantage at every step.

1

401(k) Up to Employer Match

If your employer matches contributions, this is a guaranteed 50-100% instant return. Even if you have high-interest debt, capture the full match first. It's free money — no investment in history beats an instant 100% return.

Pro tip: Check if your employer offers a true match (e.g., 50% of first 6%) vs profit sharing. Both are valuable, but true matches require your contribution.

2

HSA (If Eligible)

The Health Savings Account is the only triple-tax-advantaged account in the tax code: tax-deductible contributions, tax-free growth, and tax-free withdrawals for medical expenses. After 65, it functions like a traditional IRA for non-medical expenses.

Pro tip: Pay medical expenses out of pocket now, invest the HSA, and reimburse yourself decades later. The tax-free growth on those dollars is enormous.

3

Roth IRA

Contribute after-tax dollars, then everything grows tax-free forever. No required minimum distributions, contributions can be withdrawn penalty-free anytime, and you'll pay zero tax in retirement on these funds. Max it out every year.

Pro tip: If your income is too high for direct Roth IRA contributions, use the Backdoor Roth strategy — contribute to a traditional IRA, then convert.

4

Max Out 401(k)

After the match, continue contributing up to the annual limit. Each dollar reduces your current taxable income. For FI seekers, the goal is to max this out as early in the year as possible, then redirect to other accounts.

Pro tip: Traditional vs Roth 401(k)? If you expect lower tax rates in early retirement (most FI seekers do), traditional is often better. You'll withdraw in the 0-12% bracket.

5

Taxable Brokerage Account

Once you've maxed all tax-advantaged space, put the rest in a taxable brokerage account. You lose tax advantages, but gain full flexibility — no contribution limits, no withdrawal penalties, no age restrictions. Essential for early FI.

Pro tip: Use tax-efficient index funds like VTI in taxable accounts. Their low turnover minimizes capital gains distributions.

The Mega Backdoor Roth

For those whose 401(k) plans allow after-tax contributions and in-service conversions, the Mega Backdoor Roth lets you funnel an additional $46,000+ into Roth accounts annually (beyond the standard 401(k) limit).

Not all plans support this, but if yours does, it's one of the most powerful wealth-building tools available. Check with your HR department or plan administrator to see if after-tax contributions and in-service Roth conversions are allowed.

Which Assets in Which Accounts

Asset location — placing the right investments in the right account types — can save thousands in taxes.

Asset Type Best Account Why
Bonds & Bond Funds Tax-Deferred (401k/Trad IRA) Interest is taxed as ordinary income — shelter it
REITs Tax-Deferred (401k/Trad IRA) Dividends taxed as ordinary income — shelter them
Growth Stocks Roth IRA Maximum growth potential, tax-free forever
Total Market Index Taxable Brokerage Tax-efficient, low turnover, qualified dividends
International Stocks Taxable Brokerage Foreign tax credit only available in taxable

The HSA: A Stealth Retirement Account

The HSA is the only account with triple tax advantages: tax-deductible going in, tax-free growth, and tax-free coming out for medical expenses.

Tax Free In
Contributions reduce your taxable income
Tax Free Growth
Investments compound with zero tax drag
Tax Free Out
Withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free

After Tax-Advantaged: Taxable Best Practices

A taxable brokerage is your bridge account to early FI — the money you'll live on before age 59.5.

Use tax-efficient index funds

Total market funds like VTI have minimal capital gains distributions. Avoid actively managed funds that create taxable events.

Hold for over a year

Long-term capital gains rates (0-20%) are much lower than short-term rates (your ordinary income rate). Patience pays.

Tax-loss harvest

When investments drop, sell to lock in losses you can use to offset gains. Immediately buy a similar (not identical) fund to stay invested.

Mind the 0% bracket

In early retirement, you may qualify for the 0% long-term capital gains rate. Strategic selling in low-income years can reset your cost basis tax-free.

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