Money in a Roth I.R.A. grows tax-free. You can withdraw contributions at any time without paying a tax on it, but withdrawing investment earnings is more complicated. If you do so before you turn 59½, you may owe taxes and a penalty, although there is wiggle room in some cases, like using the money to buy a first home. Money is contributed after tax, so there is no short-term tax benefit, unlike with a traditional I.R.A. But most teenagers do not earn enough to owe much in taxes anyway.
A 16-year-old may be loath to save hard-earned cash for the distant future. But parents or grandparents can help by making all, or part, of the allowed contribution on the child’s behalf; the money going into the account does not have to be the exact cash the teenager earns, said Ryan Bayonnet, a financial adviser in Akron, Ohio. (He cautioned that parents should make sure their own retirement planning is on track before funding their child’s Roth I.R.A.)
Or parents may “match” their teenager’s contributions, putting in, say, $2 for every $1 the teenager deposits, an approach favored by some financial experts. So if your child contributes $100, you contribute $200. Even small amounts can grow to substantial sums because of a young earner’s long retirement horizon. “The longer you wait, the more you will have to save,” said Carrie Schwab-Pomerantz, chairwoman of the Charles Schwab Foundation and a financial literacy advocate.
Advisers recommend looking for a Roth account offering low account minimums and low-fee investment options. Charles Schwab’s minimum to open a custodial I.R.A. is $100. Fidelity Investments, which began offering a product called “Roth I.R.A.s for Kids” in 2016, has no minimum to establish the accounts, and recently began offering zero-fee investment options, said Maura Cassidy, vice president of retirement and small business at Fidelity. Fidelity said that average balances in the accounts had grown to about $3,800 from more than $2,600 in early 2016.
Most teenagers are not likely to have $5,500 in annual earnings, but it still pays to start early. Fidelity calculated that someone contributing the maximum amount annually at age 15 would have more than $2.4 million at age 65, assuming an annual return rate of 7 percent. If that person waited to begin saving until age 25, the total at age 65 would be about $1.2 million.