If you want another retirement savings option to add to your
company’s benefits package, consider a Roth 401(k). But make sure employees use
it. The Plan Sponsor Council of America found that Roth 401(k)s are available
at 70% of employer plans, but only 20% of participants who had access to one in
2017 made contributions to it. These plans have traits of both Roth IRAs and
employer-sponsored 401(k)s. Contributions to an employee’s Roth 401(k) account
are made with after-tax, instead of pretax, dollars. But after five years,
qualified distributions are exempt from federal income tax (the same as with a
Roth IRA). In contrast, regular 401(k) distributions are taxed at
ordinary-income rates of up to 37%.