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The 415c limit is $49,000. This includes all pretax, aftertax, roth, catch up contributions, and employer match. There's not a maximum specifically for aftertax.
FICA and Medicare deductions
The type of pension in which one will pay taxes on until the money is withdrawn is a 401(k). In some cases, an employer may match the contributions made to the plan.
employer rate match
form_title= Retirement Plan form_header= Create your retirement plan and start saving now. At what age, do you want to retire?*= _ [50] How much are you putting to your 401k each month?*= _ [50] Does your employer match your contributions?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure
There is no limit set by IRS on a per month basis, however there is an annual limit to your contributions. Some employers do create restrictions on how much of your salary you can contribute, but that varies from employer to employer. Assuming that you want to maximize your 401k for the year and you want to contribute an even amount per month, then you would contribute $16,500/12 = $1,375 per month. This does not include your employer match.
That depends on the employer's plan provisions. Most match dollar for dollar up to a certain % (I have seen 2-6% from the employers I have worked with and for in the past). Check your employer's intranet site or call your benefits provider for details on your specific plan.
Go to an investment broker (many banks have these) and open the account. You'll need to decide how much of your paycheck you want to put into the 401k. Note that there is a maximum amount that can be contributed to this account tax-free. I would first check with your employer as to whether there is a company sponsored 401k available. Many times your employer will match your contributions up to a certain percentage.
To be clear, not payments from it, they match all contributions to it.
Yes and no, if an employer contributes to your Roth IRA directly the employer must report it as income to you. Since it is income they must also report it to uncle sam as taxable income and the employer will have to pay payroll taxes on the contribution. They can not pay into a Roth as the employer, so that answer is NO. Most employers will not want to deal with the potential IRS reporting nightmare this can have. That being said, the're companies that offer PDP, payroll deduction plans. These plans are employee funded through the employees paycheck. The funds can be used to fund any type of account, i.e Roth, IRA, 529 and so on. The Employer then sends one check monthly to the company of choice based on the amount each employee has withheld from thier individual pay checks, hence payroll deduction. If the employer is looking to offer this as a benefit to it's employee or key employee the employer would increase the employee's pay to match the amount the employer wishes to contribute to the employee. But ultimately it looks like the employee is making the contributions.
Ryan giggs
Bloomberg has a 401k Calculator that shows how changes to salary, contributions, employer match, retirement age and rate of return will affect your retirement savings. It is at www.bloomberg.com/invest/calculators/401k.html You can find a free online 401K calculator at moneycentral.msn.com/ or www.bloomberg.com/invest/calculators/