One of the most common mistakes I see when working with clients — engineers, professionals, high earners — is that they're saving money, but putting it in the wrong place. They're maxing out a taxable brokerage account while leaving their HSA untouched. Or contributing the bare minimum to their 401(k) when their employer would match more. The order in which you invest matters enormously, and most people have never thought about it.
Over a 30-year career, getting the order right vs. wrong can mean a difference of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Here's the sequence I walk every client through.
The Six-Step Order of Operations
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1
Build a 3–6 Month Emergency Fund in a High-Yield Savings Account
Before you invest a single dollar, you need a cash buffer. Three to six months of expenses, sitting in a high-yield savings account (HYSA) earning 4–5% APY. Without this, any market downturn forces you to sell investments at the worst possible time. Don't skip this step — it protects everything that follows.
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2
Contribute to Your 401(k) Up to the Employer Match
If your employer matches contributions — say, 4% of your salary — contribute at least that much. This is an instant 50–100% return on your money before the market does anything. There is no better guaranteed return anywhere. Not getting the full match is leaving free money on the table.
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3
Max Out Your HSA if You Have a High-Deductible Health Plan
The HSA is the single most tax-advantaged account available to Americans. Contributions are pre-tax, growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free — a true triple tax advantage. In 2024, you can contribute up to $4,150 as an individual or $8,300 for a family. Invest the balance in index funds and let it grow. You will use healthcare eventually.
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4
Max Out Your Roth IRA ($7,000 limit in 2024)
The Roth IRA grows tax-free and withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. If you're currently in a lower tax bracket than you expect to be in retirement, this is the most powerful account you have. Contribute the annual maximum ($7,000, or $8,000 if you're 50+) and invest in a simple three-fund portfolio or target-date fund.
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5
Max Out Your 401(k) to the IRS Limit ($23,000 in 2024)
Now go back and fill up the 401(k) to the full IRS limit. You already captured the employer match in step 2 — now you're adding more pre-tax (or Roth) dollars on top. This reduces your taxable income today and allows decades of tax-advantaged compounding.
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6
Invest the Rest in a Taxable Brokerage or Real Estate
Once all tax-advantaged buckets are full, any additional savings go into a taxable brokerage account or toward a real estate investment. At this stage, you're building wealth at an accelerated pace with no more tax shelters to maximize — but that's a good problem to have.
Why the Order Matters: A Quick Example
Imagine two people, both earning $120,000 a year, both saving $2,000 a month. Person A follows the order above. Person B puts everything into a taxable brokerage from day one.
After 30 years at a 7% average return, Person A has significantly more — not because they saved more, but because they sheltered more from taxes along the way. The difference isn't timing the market. It's using the accounts in the right order.
The key insight: Tax-advantaged accounts are not just retirement accounts. They are the most powerful legal tool available to everyday investors. The government is literally giving you free money in the form of tax breaks — and most people don't take full advantage of it.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Not getting the full employer match
This is the most expensive mistake in personal finance. If your employer matches 4% and you only contribute 2%, you are declining free compensation. There is no investment that guarantees a 100% return. The match does.
Skipping the HSA
Many people treat their HSA as a spending account for co-pays. Instead, treat it as a stealth retirement account. Pay medical expenses out of pocket if you can, let the HSA balance grow, and reimburse yourself years later — tax-free.
Investing in a taxable account before maxing tax-advantaged accounts
A taxable brokerage is not bad. It's just less efficient than an IRA or 401(k). If you have room in your tax-advantaged accounts, fill those first.
Where Does Real Estate Fit?
Real estate investing sits at Step 6 for most people — after tax-advantaged accounts are maximized. The exception is if real estate generates cash flow that can fund your other contributions, or if you've found a deal with returns that clearly outpace what your index funds will deliver. In the DFW market, where rental demand is strong and appreciation has been consistent, real estate can absolutely be part of the picture. But it's a complement to, not a replacement for, the foundation above.
If you want help thinking through your specific situation — which accounts to prioritize, whether your employer plan is any good, or how to work real estate into your financial picture — that's exactly what a session is for.