or many folks, retirement investing has followed a familiar script. Individuals contribute to taxadvantaged accounts, select from a limited menu of investment options, and hope for long term market performance. While this model has worked for many, it increasingly feels out of step with how people invest outside their retirement accounts.
Today’s investors are more informed, more entrepreneurial, and more interested in diversification than ever before. They invest in real estate, private businesses, private credit, and other alternative assets—yet most of their retirement capital remains locked into public markets by default.
This gap between how people invest and how retirement accounts are structured has created a growing demand for flexibility, transparency, and control. Addressing that demand is the mission behind Rocket Dollar, a platform designed to give individuals the ability to invest their retirement dollars beyond stocks and bonds.
The Limitations of Typical Retirement Accounts
Typical IRAs and employer-sponsored retirement plans are built for simplicity and standardization. While they offer meaningful tax advantages, they usually restrict investments to publicly traded securities such as stocks, bonds, and mutual funds.
This structure assumes that most investors prefer to outsource decision-making to fund managers and accept market-based returns. But as alternative assets have become more accessible and better understood, many investors are questioning whether those limitations still make sense—especially when retirement accounts often represent the largest pool of long-term capital they will ever accumulate.
The issue isn’t contribution limits or tax treatment. It’s access.
The Rise of Self-Directed Retirement Accounts
Self-directed retirement accounts are not new, but they have historically been complex, expensive, and poorly understood. At a high level, a self-directed IRA or Solo 401(k) is structured to provide similar tax treatment to traditional retirement accounts, while allowing a much broader range of investments, including:
● Private real estate
● Private equity and venture capital
● Private credit and debt funds
● Precious metals
● Startups and private businesses
● Alternative investment platforms
The challenge has always been execution. Rules established by the IRA regarding prohibited transactions, custody, and reporting are nuanced, and can be difficult for individuals to understand without specialized support.
Rocket Dollar’s Core Value Proposition
Rocket Dollar was built to make it easier for individuals to use self-directed retirement accounts while maintaining compliance and clarity. The platform provides the infrastructure needed to open and operate a self-directed retirement account, enabling account holders to make their own investment decisions enabling account holders to make their own investment decisions without sacrificing the tax advantages provided by retirement accounts.
Rather than acting as an investment advisor or product distributor, Rocket Dollar focuses on administration, structure, and education. Investors choose what to invest in; Rocket Dollar ensures the account is set up properly and supported with tools designed to assist with account administration and ongoing compliance considerations.
Why Control Matters in a Changing Investment Landscape
Market structure has evolved over time, with periods of increased complexity, correlation, and volatility. Over the same period, many institutional investors, such as pension funds and endowments, have incorporated alternative assets as part of their broader portfolio construction.
Some individual investors have shown increased interest in alternative assets, often citing factors such as:
1. Diversification
Alternative assets may have characteristics that differ from publicly traded securities, which some investors view as a way to introduce varied sources of risk and return.
2. Income and Yield
Certain private credit and real estate strategies are commonly associated with income-oriented cash flows, though their behavior can vary based on structure and market conditions.
3. Alignment with Personal Strategy
Many investors want their capital deployed intentionally—supporting businesses, projects, or asset classes they understand.
Because retirement accounts are typically designed for long-term use, some investors consider how alternative assets might fit within that longer time horizon.
Yet without self-direction, investors are often unable to access those opportunities.
Education as a Foundation, Not an Afterthought
One of the most important—and often overlooked—aspects of self-directed investing is education. Greater flexibility comes with added responsibility, and misunderstandings around applicable rules can create unintended issues for account holders.
Rocket Dollar places a strong emphasis on educational resources as part of its platform experience. Rather than positioning alternatives assets as inherently superior, the platform focuses on providing information about topics such as:
● What investments are permitted
● What transactions are prohibited
● The risks and tradeoffs involved
This approach reflects a broader shift in financial services toward transparency and investor empowerment. The team focuses on sharing general information about rules established by the IRS, so account holders can better understand what is and is not permitted within self-directed retirement accounts before making their own decisions.
A Broader Shift in Retirement Ownership
Rocket Dollar’s growth has emerged alongside broader changes in how some individuals approach retirement planning. Many investors have expressed interest in having greater involvement in the decisions that shape their retirement outcomes.
Self-directed accounts challenge the idea that retirement investing must be passive, generic, or one size fits all. As alternative assets continue to move into the mainstream, platforms that combine flexibility with structure will play an increasingly important role. Rocket Dollar operates in this area by providing account structures that allow individuals to direct their own retirement investments, within applicable rules and account requirements.
Redefining the Role of the Investor
Historically, retirement investing has often been limited to a relatively narrow set of options developed decades ago. With the appropriate infrastructure and access to educational resources, some individuals choose to take a more hands-on role in directing their retirement accounts, which are governed by established tax treatment.
Rocket Dollar positions its value around expanding access and choice, rather than making claims about investment performance. This approach aligns with a broader evolution in financial services that emphasizes transparency and individual decision-making responsibility.
Rocket Dollar, Inc. and its affiliates (collectively, “Rocket Dollar”) do not provide tax, legal, investment, or accounting advice. All marketing materials, including this content, are for general informational purposes only and should not be considered individualized recommendations or financial guidance. You should consult an independent tax advisor, attorney, financial advisor, or CPA to determine whether a Rocket Dollar account or specific investment approach is appropriate for your personal financial situation.