P

Personal Finance

— Building wealth and financial literacy
31 members Created Jun 2026
This thread is archived

Controversial: dividend peaked years ago

youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ

I want to challenge the conventional wisdom that you should max your tax-advantaged accounts before investing in a taxable brokerage.

The standard order is right most of the time. But there's a scenario where it breaks down: early retirement, where you need to access investment funds before 59.5.

If you're on a FIRE path targeting retirement at 45 and you put every available dollar into tax-advantaged accounts, you have a 14-year gap between early retirement and when you can access those accounts without penalty (unless you use the Roth conversion ladder or substantially equal periodic payments).

For early retirees, a taxable brokerage account is essential — it provides the bridge between early retirement and account accessibility.

The revised order for early retirement planning: get the 401k match, max HSA, max Roth IRA, then split between maxing the rest of the 401k and building a taxable brokerage. The split depends on your expected gap between early retirement and account accessibility.

12
Thread is archived — no new replies

Report thread

Why are you reporting this thread?

Restore the redacted content?

This will make it visible to everyone again. The clear action is logged in the mod log.