Suze Orman touts Roth IRA gifting strategy for young earners
Summer brings millions of teenagers and recent graduates into the workforce, where their first paychecks make them eligible for one of the most valuable retirement savings tools available today.
A Roth IRA funded during those early earning years can compound tax-free for decades, but almost no young worker will prioritize opening one without direct help from family.
Personal finance expert Suze Orman says families should take the initiative and gift Roth IRA contributions directly to the young earners in their lives rather than wait.
In a May 21, 2026, blog post titled "Jumpstarting a Roth IRA is a Fantastic Legacy," Orman outlined the eligibility rules, real-dollar compound growth projections, and a 4-to-1 matching strategy that turn a modest family gift into a retirement wealth engine.
Orman says compound growth math makes Roth IRA gifting a legacy decision
Orman used dollar projections in her blog post to show families why funding a Roth IRA early produces results that older savers simply cannot replicate later in life. A $3,000 contribution growing at an annualized 7% return would reach roughly $90,000 after 50 years of compounding, Orman calculated in the post.
The way Gen Z is leaning into Roth accounts says something bigger: This is a generation thinking long term.... They're giving their future selves a head start most people wish they had taken.
A $5,000 deposit under those same conditions would amount to approximately $150,000 over the same time frame, she added. Waiting just 10 years to start would cut those gains roughly in half, shrinking a $5,000 contribution with only 40 years of growth to about $75,000, Orman warned.
Orman described the family gift as something beyond money, calling it "a great gift that will be a wonderful part of your legacy" for the younger generations in your life.
Roth IRA gifting rules every family needs to understand before contributing
In the blog post, Orman outlined three core rules governing how families can fund a Roth IRA for young earners. The account holder must have earned income at least equal to the contribution, according to IRSRoth IRA rules.
The account holder does not need to use their own paycheck to fund the contributions, and the money can be gifted by parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, or friends, Orman explained. An 18-year-old earning $3,000 from a summer job can contribute up to that amount, and a graduate earning $65,000 qualifies for the full 2026 maximum of $7,500, Orman wrote.
The 2026 Roth IRA contribution limit is $7,500 for workers under age 50 and $8,600 for those 50 and older, the IRS shared in November 2025. Families have until April 15, 2027, the federal tax filing deadline for the 2026 tax year, to make contributions that qualify for the current calendar year.
Orman's 4-to-1 matching strategy helps young earners build a savings habit
Orman tailored her advice to two situations, noting that gifting the full contribution amount is the most practical approach for teenagers who are not focused on retirement. For young adults earning a salary, she proposed a matching deal where families contribute four dollars for every one dollar the young adult saves in their Roth IRA.
She recommended showing young earners how compound growth works with the free compound interest calculator at Investor.gov, so they can visualize how starting early can build significant wealth. Orman called compound growth "the great gift only the young can enjoy" and stressed that the advantage shrinks with each passing year, the post stated.
The matching arrangement is designed to fund the account while building a savings habit that the young adult continues independently long after the family gift ends, Orman wrote. That behavioral nudge mirrors what workplace retirement plans have already proven at scale.
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Employees who receive an employer match contribute at higher rates and stay enrolled longer than those who do not, according to Vanguard's 2025 How America Saves report.
Orman's family matching strategy applies the same principle outside the workplace, giving young earners a financial incentive to participate while reinforcing the habit of directing money toward long-term savings before lifestyle spending absorbs it, the blog post noted.
Workplace Roth 401(k) and employer matching also key for retirement
Orman also urged families to ensure young adults with workplace plans actually use them effectively. Many plans automatically enroll new employees in a traditional 401(k), even when a Roth 401(k) option is available. Orman wrote that switching to a Roth 401(k) is "free and easy" and, in her view, the better choice.
She added that default contribution rates are often set below the level needed to capture an employer's full matching contribution, "free money" that workers should claim by asking HR for a higher rate.
Beyond the workplace, Orman's broader argument rests on a timing advantage that no amount of money can recreate later. Whether through outright gifting for teenagers or a structured matching arrangement for young adults, Orman framed the conversation as one that families need to initiate now rather than assume will happen on its own.
Related: Suze Orman shut down a caller's desperate 401(k) plan
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This story was originally published May 26, 2026 at 6:47 AM.