Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) are one of the most powerful tools available for building retirement savings outside of an employer plan. The two most common types are the Roth IRA and the Traditional IRA. Both offer significant tax advantages, but they work in opposite directions.
This guide explains how each account works, what the key differences are and how to decide which one suits your situation. Use the Roth IRA Calculator and the Traditional IRA Calculator to model both options with your own numbers.
The Core Difference: When You Pay Tax
The Core Tax Difference
Traditional IRA: Contribute pre-tax money today. Pay income tax when you withdraw in retirement.
Roth IRA: Contribute after-tax money today. Pay no tax on withdrawals in retirement.
Simple way to think about it:
Traditional IRA = Pay tax later (when you retire)
Roth IRA = Pay tax now (today)
Side by Side Comparison
| Feature | Traditional IRA | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Tax on contributions | Pre-tax (reduces taxable income now) | After-tax (no current deduction) |
| Tax on growth | Tax-deferred (no annual tax) | Tax-free (no annual tax) |
| Tax on withdrawals | Taxed as ordinary income | Completely tax-free (if rules met) |
| Required distributions | Yes, from age 73 (RMDs) | No RMDs during your lifetime |
| Early withdrawal of contributions | Penalty plus tax | Contributions can be withdrawn any time tax-free |
| Income limits (2024) | No income limit to contribute | Phase out above 146,000 (single) and 230,000 (married) |
| Contribution limit 2024 | 7,000 dollars (8,000 if age 50 or above) | Same limits apply |
The Key Decision: Future Tax Rate
The best account type depends on whether you expect your tax rate to be higher or lower in retirement compared to today.
| Your Situation | Better Choice |
|---|---|
| You expect a lower tax rate in retirement | Traditional IRA. Defer tax until you are in a lower bracket. |
| You expect a higher tax rate in retirement | Roth IRA. Pay tax now at the lower rate, withdraw tax-free later. |
| You are young and early in your career | Roth IRA usually wins. Your current income and tax rate are likely lower than at career peak. |
| You are in peak earning years | Traditional IRA often wins. The pre-tax deduction reduces a high current tax bill. |
| You want flexibility | Roth IRA is more flexible. No RMDs. Contributions can be withdrawn any time. |
| You are uncertain about future tax rates | Contributing to both hedges against uncertainty. |
The Power of Tax-Free Withdrawal in Retirement
Roth vs Traditional: 30-Year Growth Comparison
Both accounts: 6,000 dollar annual contribution, 7% annual return, 30 years
Projected balance at retirement: approximately 567,000 dollars (both the same before taxes)
Traditional IRA withdrawal at 22% tax rate:
567,000 × (1 − 0.22) = 442,260 dollars available to spend
Roth IRA withdrawal at any tax rate:
567,000 dollars available to spend, fully tax-free
If tax rates rise in the future, the Roth advantage grows even larger.
Required Minimum Distributions: A Key Difference
Traditional IRA holders must begin taking Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) from age 73. These withdrawals are taxable and can push retirees into higher tax brackets. Use the RMD Calculator to see what your required withdrawals will be.
Roth IRAs have no RMDs during the owner's lifetime. This makes them particularly valuable for people who do not need to spend all their retirement savings and want to leave money to heirs.
Can You Contribute to Both?
Yes. You can contribute to both a Traditional IRA and a Roth IRA in the same year, as long as your total contributions across both accounts do not exceed the annual limit of 7,000 dollars (8,000 if you are 50 or older). You can also hold both alongside a 401k plan.
The Backdoor Roth IRA
High earners who exceed the Roth IRA income limit can still benefit from a Roth through a backdoor contribution. This involves making a non-deductible Traditional IRA contribution and then converting it to a Roth. This strategy has tax implications and is worth discussing with a financial adviser before proceeding.
Related Tools
- Roth IRA Calculator: model tax-free growth and withdrawals
- Traditional IRA Calculator: model pre-tax contributions and taxable withdrawals
- RMD Calculator: required minimum distributions from age 73
- Retirement Calculator: total savings target across all accounts
- All Finance Tools: browse all retirement calculators on CalConvs
Frequently Asked Questions
Which IRA is better for a 25-year-old?
A Roth IRA is generally better for most people in their mid-twenties. Early in a career, income and marginal tax rates are typically at their lowest, making it the ideal time to pay tax on contributions. The tax-free compounding over 40 years produces a significantly larger after-tax balance than a Traditional IRA with the same contributions.
Can I withdraw from my Roth IRA at any time?
You can withdraw your contributions (not earnings) from a Roth IRA at any time, at any age, without tax or penalty. Withdrawing earnings before age 59 and a half and before the account has been open for at least 5 years may trigger tax and a 10 percent penalty. This flexibility makes the Roth IRA a useful emergency back-up fund of last resort.
What happens if I exceed the Roth IRA income limit?
If your income exceeds the Roth IRA limit (146,000 dollars in 2024 for single filers, phasing out completely at 161,000 dollars), you cannot contribute directly to a Roth IRA. You can use the backdoor Roth strategy: contribute to a non-deductible Traditional IRA and then immediately convert it to a Roth. Consult a tax adviser before doing this if you have existing pre-tax IRA funds.
Is it too late to open an IRA at 50?
No. Opening an IRA at 50 still gives you 15 or more years of tax-advantaged growth before a typical retirement age of 65 or 67. At 50, you also qualify for catch-up contributions of an additional 1,000 dollars per year (total 8,000 dollars). Even a late start is significantly better than no IRA at all.
