Michael West Financials LLC · Est. 2024
Reference · Glossary

Plain-English definitions for the words nobody explains.

Every term used across the guides and calculators, defined in one sentence (or two if it earns it). Where a term has its own guide, the definition links there.

Foundations

Emergency fund

3–6 months of essential expenses in cash savings. The buffer that stops every other plan from unraveling.

Calculator: emergency fund.

Order of operations

The sequence for what to do with each dollar: deductibles → match → debt → fund → Roth → 15% → goals → debt → wealth.

See the order of operations guide and walkthrough.

Income

Gross income

Total earnings before taxes, FICA, and any deductions. The number on your offer letter. 401(k) deferral percentages run on this.

Net income / Take-home

What lands in your bank after taxes and deductions. Useful for budgeting; misleading for retirement-savings percentages (always anchor those on gross).

AGI

Adjusted Gross Income. Gross income minus certain deductions (Traditional 401(k) contributions, HSA, etc.). Used to determine eligibility for many tax breaks.

MAGI

Modified AGI. AGI with certain items added back. Used for Roth IRA income limits and ACA subsidies.

Tax timing

Pre-tax

Money contributed before income tax is deducted. Lowers taxable income today; you pay tax later when you withdraw.

After-tax (Roth)

Money contributed after income tax. No upfront deduction; growth and qualified withdrawals are tax-free.

Tax-deferred

Investments grow without annual taxation. Tax is paid on withdrawal. Traditional 401(k)/IRA work this way.

Tax-free

Investments grow with no annual tax AND withdrawals are tax-free. Roth 401(k)/IRA and HSA (for medical) work this way.

Marginal tax bracket

The rate on your last dollar of income. Different from your "effective" (average) tax rate, which is lower.

FICA

Federal Insurance Contributions Act — payroll tax for Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%). Comes out of every W-2 paycheck, before federal income tax.

Accounts

401(k)

Employer-sponsored retirement account funded with pre-tax (Traditional) or after-tax (Roth) payroll deferrals.

See the 401(k) guide.

403(b)

Same idea as a 401(k), but for public schools, hospitals, and certain non-profits. Same contribution limits.

IRA

Individual Retirement Account. Opened by you, not your employer. Lower limits than a 401(k) but more investment flexibility.

See the IRA guide.

Roth IRA

IRA funded with after-tax dollars. Growth and qualified withdrawals are tax-free. Income limits apply.

Traditional IRA

IRA funded with pre-tax dollars (if eligible). Withdrawals taxed as ordinary income in retirement.

HSA

Health Savings Account. Triple tax-advantaged: pre-tax in, tax-free growth, tax-free out for medical. Requires an HDHP.

See the HSA guide.

HDHP

High-Deductible Health Plan. Required to be eligible to contribute to an HSA.

529 Plan

State-sponsored education savings account. Tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals for qualified education.

See the 529 guide.

Brokerage account

Taxable investment account with no contribution limits and full liquidity. Long-term gains taxed at lower rates.

Investing

Index fund

A fund that holds every stock in an index (e.g., S&P 500), proportionally. Low fees, broad diversification, no manager picking stocks.

ETF

Exchange-Traded Fund. Like a mutual fund but trades like a stock. Most index funds today are ETFs.

Target-date fund

A fund that auto-rebalances from stocks toward bonds as you approach a retirement year (e.g., Target Date 2055). Good default for set-and-forget investors.

Expense ratio

Annual fee charged by a fund, as a % of assets. Anything above 0.20% is suspect; 0.05% or less is excellent.

Compound growth

Earnings on earnings. Each year your previous gains also generate gains. Calculator: compound growth.

Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA)

Investing a fixed amount on a regular schedule, regardless of price. Default if you contribute every paycheck.

See the DCA guide.

Asset allocation

How your portfolio is split between stocks, bonds, and other asset classes. The single biggest driver of long-term returns.

Debt

APR

Annual Percentage Rate. The yearly interest rate on a debt. Above ~7%, prioritize payoff over investing extra.

Snowball method

Pay off smallest debt first. Behaviorally optimal — each finished debt builds momentum.

Avalanche method

Pay off highest-APR debt first. Mathematically optimal — minimizes total interest.

Amortization

How a loan payment splits between interest and principal. Early payments are mostly interest; late payments are mostly principal.

See the mortgage payoff calculator.

Retirement

Employer match

Money your employer contributes to your 401(k), often as a % of what you contribute. Always capture the full match — it's a 50–100% guaranteed return.

Vesting

How long you must work before employer-contributed funds are yours to keep. Common: cliff (4 yrs all-or-nothing) or graded (20% per year).

RMD

Required Minimum Distribution. Mandatory annual withdrawal from Traditional 401(k)/IRA starting at age 73 (rising to 75). Roth doesn't have RMDs in your lifetime.

FRA

Full Retirement Age for Social Security. 66 to 67 depending on birth year. The age at which you get 100% of your earned benefit.

See the Social Security guide.

4% rule

Heuristic that a 4% initial withdrawal — adjusted for inflation each year — has historically lasted 30 years. Useful starting point, not a guarantee.

Sequence of returns

The risk that a bad market in your first decade of retirement drains your portfolio faster than a bad market later would. A few bad early years are harder to recover from than a few bad late years.

Insurance

Term life insurance

Pays a death benefit if you die during a fixed term. Cheap, simple. The right kind of life insurance for almost everyone who needs life insurance.

Whole life insurance

Permanent life insurance with a cash-value component. Almost always overpriced for what it does. Skip.

See the insurance guide.

Long-term disability (LTD)

Replaces ~60% of gross income if you can't work due to illness or injury. The most overlooked insurance for working-age adults.

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