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 at any age without taxes or penalties. Traditional IRAs impose income tax and potential penalties on early withdrawals before age 59½. Having both types of accounts gives you flexibility if you face an unexpected financial need before full retirement age.
When Managing Multiple IRAs Becomes Complicated
Despite the potential benefits, multiple retirement accounts introduce real challenges that shouldn’t be underestimated.
Complexity Multiplies Administrative Burden
Each account requires its own username and password, separate statements to track, and individual record-keeping. If you’re already managing a 401(k) through an employer plus multiple IRAs, your financial life can quickly become overwhelming. As you age, this complexity becomes more problematic—especially if cognitive decline sets in or you eventually need family members to help manage your accounts.
The paperwork burden alone discourages many people. You’ll receive multiple statements, need to monitor multiple balances, and track contributions across platforms. Some people find this intellectually stimulating; others find it exhausting.
Required Minimum Distribution Calculations Get Harder
Once you reach age 73, Traditional IRAs require you to withdraw a minimum amount annually. The calculation is based on your total Traditional IRA balance across all accounts. If you forget to include one account in your calculation or miscount your balance, you face penalties of 25% on the amount you should have withdrawn. This computational challenge intensifies as you accumulate more accounts.
Fee Structures May Work Against You
While many financial institutions now offer commission-free trading and no-fee IRA maintenance, reaching certain thresholds sometimes provides benefits. Having your money consolidated in one account might qualify you for lower expense ratios, reduced trading costs, or waived advisory fees. Spreading money across several institutions might disqualify you from these advantages.
Asset Allocation Oversight Becomes Difficult
Without a comprehensive financial dashboard showing all your holdings in one place, tracking your overall portfolio allocation across multiple IRAs becomes challenging. You might unintentionally concentrate too much in stocks when your goal is diversification, or hold too much in bonds when you actually need growth exposure. Portfolio rebalancing also becomes more complicated and time-consuming.
Making Your Decision: Single or Multiple Roth IRAs?
The right choice depends on your specific circumstances:
Consider multiple accounts if: You have substantial assets that exceed insurance limits, you want to test different investment approaches, you need the flexibility of tax-diverse accounts, or you plan to use advanced strategies like backdoor Roth conversions.
Stick with a single account if: Simplicity is a priority, you’re uncomfortable with account management, you have limited assets, or you prefer to minimize ongoing oversight and administrative tasks.
The decision ultimately reflects your personal financial sophistication, your values around financial management, and your willingness to handle complexity. For many people, maintaining a single Roth IRA plus one Traditional IRA provides sufficient diversification and tax flexibility without becoming unmanageable. But if your situation is more complex or your assets larger, multiple accounts may make genuine financial sense.