Investing Basics for Professionals With Little Time or Experience

New visitors to Physician on FIRE may be excited at the prospects of financial independence and the possibility of a reasonably early retirement, but overwhelmed when presented with a lot of technical talk about specific investment accounts and strategies.

This is totally understandable; we’re not taught the difference between a 401(k) and 457(b) in medical school or residency. If you’re self-employed like I once was, you may have opened a SEP-IRA (as I once did) when an individual 401(k) may have been a better idea.

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Even the White Coat Investor wasn’t born with knowledge of expense ratios, the difference between short-term and long-term capital gains, or ordinary versus qualified dividends. Or was he?

Investing Basics for Professionals With Little Time or Experience

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Nearly all employed attending physicians and some residents will have access to a workplace retirement plan or plans. For the employed physician, the most common names for those are 401(k) and 403(b). 

Employer-Based Retirement Plans

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If you’re self-employed, you may have the option of contributing to either an individual 401(k) or a SEP IRA, each of which can accept up to $57,000 in contributions (or $63,500 in an individual 401(k) for those 50 and over).

Self-employed and Partnership Retirement Plans

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If your health insurance plan is considered an HDHP (high deductible health plan), you will be able to invest in an HSA. This allows you to defer another $7,100 of income per family or $3,550 in 2020 as you max out an HSA.

Additional Retirement Plans

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