I would get a ThermalRight cooler such as the Phantom Spirit Evo and save almost $80 for other parts. Or for $30 less than the Noctua you can get the new Arctic Liquid Freezer III if you're okay with a water cooling AIO.
You could save a bit more with some cheaper options for the motherboard as well, so you may want to consider if you really need everything that particular board offers versus some of the others available. Main differences seem to be wifi standard (do you have or intend to acquire the infrastructure for WiFi 7?), # of SATA ports (do you really need more than 6 attached SATA devices?), supported RAM speeds (do you think you'll be upgrading your kits beyond 7600 MHz?), and # of M.2 slots (do you think you'll need space for more than 3 M.2 drives?). Depending on your retailers, bundles may be available that can save you even more money.
If you're set on the 4060 Ti 16 GB there's cheaper options for that as well, $450 or less from MSI, Gigabyte, Asus, and PNY. For about the same price as the card you listed you could get the base 4070, it has 12 GB of VRAM instead but it'll still outperform the 4060 Ti in gaming, your other use cases may make better use of the extra VRAM idk. If you save in other areas as I mentioned you could even go up to the 4070 Super for $600. Again, "only" 12 GB of VRAM but depending on your use cases it may make up for that. On the AMD side you're in the ballpark of the 7800 XT or the 7900 GRE, both of which have 16 GB of VRAM and should beat the 4060 Ti in gaming performance at least.
IMO the 14900K isn't worth it vs. the 14700K.