After-Tax Contribution

  

When you put money into a retirement account, it matters whether the funds come before taxes or after taxes. An after-tax contribution means you have already paid taxes on the money, i.e. the funds have been counted for income tax purposes in the year you received them. When you take that money out, decades later, it won't be taxed. That is, when you put after-tax funds into retirement, you don't have to pay taxes again down the road when you use them in retirement (though you might have to pay taxes on any investment gains you make).

An alternative world of deferred tax savings exists, essentially called a pre-tax investment. These tax-deferred savings vehicles include things like 401(k)s and IRAs which come in a range of flavors. These forms of investments allow you to avoid taxes now, though you will have to pay taxes on them when you take money out during your retirement years. The benefit is that you have more money to invest, because the government hasn't taken a bite out of your wallet yet. As this grows over time, the extra funds should multiply, leaving you better off in the end, even though you have to eventually pay the taxes down the road.

The rationale is that, in your peak earnings years, you're paying high marginal tax rates...maybe 30-35-40 percent. When you retire, you'll likely be paying a lower tax rate as you withdraw (and then pay taxes on) your IRA and 401k savings vehicles.

The big idea here: When you make an after-tax contribution to a savings for retirement vehicle, the tax is thus already paid. You don't pay it again.

Wasn't that a line from Casablanca? "Pay it again, Sam"...or something like that?

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is contribution margin?12 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop... what is contribution margin, well, shmoop has spent a fortune

00:08

building the oh so fine content you digest and then mostly for free and you [Girl watching Shmoop videos]

00:14

could pay us if you wanted to..For years we've made no operating profit choosing

00:19

instead to roll any excess cash we found in our cigar boxes into building more

00:24

content so while our operating margins ie the cost of running the entire

00:29

business paying our writers, our clowns, our rent, our cloud storage facilities the [Clown bouncing on the spot]

00:34

office jester we have on retainer permanently to entertain the writers

00:39

have been low or nearly zero our contribution margins are really high

00:45

that is our cost of serving another thousand pages which you view hungrily

00:50

clicking on our ads thank you very much that cost to us is well something less [Person holding half a penny]

00:55

than a penny but we sell it to advertisers for a thousand page views

00:59

and about three bucks a unit there thousand pages for three bucks what a

01:03

deal so the contribution margin of that additional n plus one unit of our

01:08

product a thousand page views is extremely high like $2.99 divided by

01:14

three dollars or well over 99% contribution margin those are

01:19

our contribution margins here at Shmoop, very very high and not all companies [Man discussing contribution margins]

01:23

have such high contribution margins our sister company robot-date-eat-pray-

01:28

love which manufactures emotionally deep robots designed to take the place of [Emotional robot walking with a woman]

01:33

well you know special friends well they sell their robots for 15 grand each

01:39

but their cost of building that robots really high like 12 grand each no matter

01:44

how many robots they make so RDEPL carries a contribution margin of just 15

01:50

minus 12 or 3 grand / 15 grand or about 20 percent sorry all these numbers may

01:56

sound a bit tedious but if you're on a date with the robot they make for some

02:00

scintillating conversation [Girl sitting with robot on a date]

Up Next

Finance: What is Aftertax Yield?
8 Views

What is After Tax Yield? After tax yield is simply how much an investment makes (or yields) after taxes have been paid. This term refers to bond yi...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)