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Contribution Strategies

jJ_Chub·Updated Feb 2026

Contribution Priority Order

With limited capital, contribution order affects long-term wealth through tax efficiency differentials. The standard ordering optimizes for marginal tax benefit — but the reasoning matters more than the memorized order, because your situation may differ:

Tax-Optimal Contribution Sequence
1 401k to employer match: Immediate 50-100% return on contribution. Mathematically unbeatable.
2 HSA (if eligible): Triple tax advantage — deductible, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawal for medical.
3 Roth IRA (if eligible): Tax-free growth, no RMDs, contribution basis accessible anytime.
4 401k beyond match: Tax-deferred compounding at full contribution limit.
5 Taxable brokerage: No tax advantages but unlimited contributions and liquidity.

2024 Contribution Limits

Annual Contribution Limits by Account Type
Account Under 50 Age 50+
401k / 403b (employee) $23,000 $30,500
IRA (Traditional or Roth) $7,000 $8,000
HSA (Family) $8,300 $9,300
HSA (Self-only) $4,150 $5,150
401k Total (incl. employer) $69,000 $76,500

Mega Backdoor Roth: Some 401k plans permit after-tax contributions up to the $69,000 total limit. These can be converted to Roth via in-plan conversion or rollover. Check plan documents for availability.

Traditional vs Roth Decision

The core question: pay taxes at current marginal rate (Traditional) or expected future rate (Roth)? This sounds simple but the real insight is about tax bracket arbitrage:

Traditional advantage when: current_marginal_rate > expected_retirement_rate

The Stack Insight: Traditional contributions avoid your highest marginal bracket (often 22-32%). Roth withdrawals fill from the bottom of your retirement income. You're not comparing like with like — you're stacking different buckets for different purposes.

HSA: Triple Tax Advantage

The HSA is the only account with three distinct tax benefits:

  1. Tax-deductible contributions: Reduces current-year taxable income (like Traditional IRA)
  2. Tax-free growth: No taxes on dividends, interest, or capital gains (like Roth)
  3. Tax-free withdrawals: For qualified medical expenses at any age

HSA Optimization: Pay medical expenses out-of-pocket, save receipts indefinitely, let HSA compound. Withdraw tax-free decades later using saved receipts. After age 65, non-medical withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income (like Traditional IRA).

Roth IRA Income Limits (2024)

Direct Roth IRA contributions are phased out at higher incomes:

Pro-Rata Rule: Backdoor Roth conversions are taxed proportionally if you hold pre-tax IRA balances. Roll pre-tax IRA funds into 401k before executing backdoor conversions.

Try It

I make $150k, max 401k + backdoor Roth + HSA. Model my retirement at 55 with a 4% withdrawal rate.