How Should You Invest In Your Roth IRA?

April 20, 2017

If you’re like many people I’ve talked to recently, you may have decided to contribute to a Roth IRA before the deadline on Tue. However, it’s not enough to open an account and fund it. After all, a Roth IRA is simply a tax-sheltered account, not an investment. You still have to decide how to invest the money. Here are some options to consider:

Use it as an emergency fund. If you don’t have enough emergency savings somewhere else, you can use a Roth IRA as part or all of your emergency fund since you can withdraw your contributions tax and penalty-free at any time and for any purpose. (Earnings are subject to taxes and a 10% early withdrawal penalty before 5 years and age 59 ½ but the contributions all come out first.) In this case, you’ll want to keep it someplace safe and accessible like a savings account or money market fund. Once you accumulate enough emergency savings elsewhere, you can invest it more aggressively for retirement.

Save for a short term goal. A Roth IRA can also be used penalty-free for a first-time home purchase (up to $10k) or education expenses. If you intend to use your Roth IRA for either goal in the next few years, you’ll probably want to keep it in savings.

Choose investments that complement your other retirement accounts. For example, you may want to use your Roth IRA for investments that may not be available in your employer’s plan like real estate, gold, commodities, emerging markets, international bonds, and microcap stocks. They can help diversify a more traditional mix of bonds and large and small cap US and international stocks.

Choose a more conservative mix for early retirement. If you’re planning to retire before becoming eligible for Medicare at age 65 and are planning to purchase health insurance through the Affordable Care Act (assuming it hasn’t been repealed and replaced), a tax-free Roth IRA can help reduce your insurance costs because the insurance subsidies are based on your taxable income. Since a large percentage of the account may be coming out over a relatively short period of time, you may want to invest it more conservatively than your other retirement investments.

Choose more aggressive investments for long term tax-free growth. If you’re not planning to withdraw your Roth IRA early, you may want to take the opposite approach and use it for the most aggressive parts of your portfolio. That’s because the account is growing tax-free and may be the last to be touched. (It helps that Roth IRAs aren’t subject to required minimum distributions.) Some examples of more aggressive investments would be emerging market and small and micro cap stocks.

Keep it simple. If this all sounds confusing and you want to just keep your investing as simple as possible, you can look at each account separately. For example, you might choose a target date retirement fund for your Roth IRA since it’s a fully diversified one stop shop that automatically becomes more conservative as you get closer to the retirement date. All you need to do is pick the one with the date closest to when you think you’ll retire and set it and forget it. If you want something more customized, you can also use a robo-advisor or design your own portfolio based on your particular risk tolerance.

Like all financial decisions, your choice begins with your goal. Are you trying to save for emergencies? Do you plan to use the account early or late in your retirement? Or do you just want to keep things as simple as possible?