If one of your investing resolutions for 2018 is to max out your retirement account, two paths are available: Front-load your contributions early or spread them out evenly. So which makes more sense?
The typical employee contributed 8.5 percent of his salary to a 401(k) in the third quarter of 2017, according to Fidelity Investments — the highest rate in almost a decade. Twenty-nine percent of savers reported upping their contribution rate over the previous year.
While investors are saving more in their plans, only a small number are taking full advantage of their 401(k)’s potential. Vanguard’s 2017 report “How America Saves” found that just 10 percent of investors contributed the full $18,000 allowed to their plans in 2016.
If one of your investing resolutions for 2018 is to max out your retirement account, how quickly you do it matters. There are two paths available: Front-load your contributions early in the year or spread them out evenly. So which makes more sense?
“The long and short of it is, it all depends,” says Rob Kolb, partner at Go Green Financial & Insurance Services in Rocklin, California.
Traditionally, the standard practice has been dollar-cost averaging, a strategy built on the premise that contributing monthly and consistently over a long period will reap steadier returns by averaging the ups and downs of the market.
Investors, though, don’t always have the ability or opportunity to use time and consistency to their advantage, Kolb says. In that case, front-loading contributions to a 401(k) may be the better choice, but before maxing out your plan early, here’s what else you should consider.
Whether you front-load or not, starting early and saving regularly are the keys to a successful retirement, Kolb says. “Nothing helps more than having time on your side.”