Is it worth investing if I can only contribute $50 a month?

https://lemmy.world/post/23333629

Is it worth investing if I can only contribute $50 a month? - Lemmy.World

Assuming I have a time horizon >10 years.

As much as I hate to send you to Reddit, the r/personalfinance flowchart is hard to beat for most people. I’d recommend you start there to make sure you’re not overlooking something like your emergency fund.

Is there a reason to focus on 401k (beyond the employer match) before HSA? Isn’t HSA more tax savings advantageous, even if just limited to health care expenses?

I’m not certain why they have HSA after 401k and IRA, but some possible things I can think of:

  • HSAs can be harder to take advantage of of the triple tax benefit if you’re retiring early (that is, still younger and healthier)
  • HSAs probably have worse investment options than an IRA
  • Allowing the user to optimize their Roth vs Traditional mix

Again, I don’t really know because you’re right about the HSA triple tax advantage making it seem better than IRA or 401k, but I’m sure there was a reason given if you care to trawl the subreddit.