The Most Important Retirement Decision You'll Make
Choosing between a Roth IRA and a Traditional IRA is one of the most impactful financial decisions for long-term wealth building. Both offer powerful tax advantages — but they work in fundamentally different ways. The right choice depends on your current income, expected future tax rate, and when you plan to access the money.
Model both scenarios with our Retirement Calculator to see which IRA puts more money in your pocket over time.
How Each IRA Works
Traditional IRA: Pay Taxes Later
Contributions to a Traditional IRA may be tax-deductible in the year you contribute. Your money grows tax-deferred, meaning you don't pay taxes on gains until you withdraw in retirement. At that point, withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income.
- Tax benefit: Upfront deduction reduces your taxable income now
- Growth: Tax-deferred (no annual taxes on dividends or capital gains)
- Withdrawals: Taxed as ordinary income in retirement
- Best if: You expect to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement
Roth IRA: Pay Taxes Now
Contributions to a Roth IRA are made with after-tax dollars — no upfront deduction. But your money grows completely tax-free, and qualified withdrawals in retirement are also tax-free. You've already paid the tax bill.
- Tax benefit: Tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals
- Growth: Completely tax-free
- Withdrawals: Tax-free (after age 59½ and 5-year holding period)
- Best if: You expect to be in a higher tax bracket in retirement
2026 Contribution Limits
The IRS sets annual contribution limits that apply to both IRAs combined (not each separately). For 2026, the IRS raised the IRA limit to $7,500 (up from $7,000 in 2025):
- Under 50: $7,500 per year
- 50 and older: $8,600 per year (includes a $1,100 catch-up contribution)
These limits are the same for both Roth and Traditional IRAs. If you contribute $4,000 to a Traditional IRA, you can only contribute $3,500 to a Roth IRA that year (assuming you're under 50).
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Traditional IRA | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Tax deduction on contributions | Yes (may be limited by income) | No |
| Tax on growth | Deferred | None (tax-free) |
| Tax on qualified withdrawals | Ordinary income tax | None |
| 2026 contribution limit | $7,500 ($8,600 if 50+) | $7,500 ($8,600 if 50+) |
| Income limits for contributions | None (deduction may be limited) | Phases out $153K–$168K single / $242K–$252K married (2026) |
| Required Minimum Distributions | Yes, starting at age 73 | No RMDs for the original owner |
| Early withdrawal penalty | 10% + income tax before 59½ | Contributions: anytime, tax-free. Earnings: 10% before 59½ |
| Best for | Higher earners who expect lower taxes later | Younger savers who expect higher taxes later |
The Tax Math: A Real Example
Let's say you invest the full $7,500 limit at age 30, and you won't touch it until age 65. Assuming 8% average annual returns:
Traditional IRA Path
- Contributes: $7,500 pre-tax
- Tax savings now: $1,650 (at the 22% bracket)
- Grows to: ~$110,900 at age 65
- Taxes owed: ~$24,400 (at a 22% effective rate in retirement)
- Net after taxes: ~$86,500
Roth IRA Path
- Contributes: $7,500 after-tax (paid $1,650 in taxes upfront)
- Grows to: ~$110,900 at age 65
- Taxes owed: $0
- Net after taxes: ~$110,900
The Roth wins by about $24,400 — but only if your tax rate stays the same or increases. If your retirement tax rate drops to 12%, the Traditional IRA would net ~$97,600, making it the better choice. Play with both scenarios in our Retirement Calculator.
When to Choose a Roth IRA
- You're early in your career — your income (and tax rate) will likely increase over time
- You expect tax rates to rise — many financial advisors believe rates will increase due to national debt
- You want flexible access — Roth contributions (not earnings) can be withdrawn penalty-free anytime
- You want to avoid RMDs — Roth IRAs have no Required Minimum Distributions for the original owner, while Traditional IRAs require withdrawals starting at age 73, so a Roth lets your money compound longer
- You want to leave a tax-free inheritance — beneficiaries receive Roth IRA assets tax-free
When to Choose a Traditional IRA
- You're in a high tax bracket now — the upfront deduction provides immediate tax relief
- You expect significantly lower income in retirement — you'll pay less tax on withdrawals
- You're not eligible for the Roth — your income exceeds the Roth IRA phase-out range (in 2026, contributions phase out between $153K–$168K for single filers and $242K–$252K for married couples filing jointly)
- You need to reduce this year's tax bill — use our Tax Bracket Calculator to see the impact
The Backdoor Roth Strategy
If your income exceeds the Roth IRA limits, you can still contribute through the Backdoor Roth strategy:
- Contribute to a Traditional IRA (non-deductible, since your income is too high)
- Convert the Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA
- Pay taxes only on any gains between contribution and conversion (usually minimal if done quickly)
This strategy is legal, widely used by high earners, and was not restricted by recent tax legislation. Just be aware of the pro-rata rule if you have other pre-tax IRA balances — it can complicate the tax calculation.
Can You Contribute to Both?
Yes! You can split your annual limit between a Roth and Traditional IRA however you want. For example:
- $4,000 to Roth IRA + $3,500 to Traditional IRA = $7,500 total
- $7,500 all to Roth = $7,500 total
- $7,500 all to Traditional = $7,500 total
Some people hedge by splitting contributions — getting some tax benefits now while building a tax-free bucket for later. This diversification in tax treatment is called tax diversification, and it's increasingly recommended by financial planners.
How IRAs Compare to 401(k)s
IRAs and 401(k)s are complementary, not competing. Key differences:
- 401(k) limit: $24,500 in 2026 ($32,500 if 50+) — much higher than IRA limits
- Employer match: Only available in 401(k)s — always contribute enough to get the full match first
- Investment choices: IRAs offer more flexibility (any brokerage, any fund). 401(k)s are limited to your employer's plan options
The optimal strategy: max your employer match in your 401(k), then max your IRA, then go back and max the rest of your 401(k).
FAQ
Can I switch from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA?
Yes, this is called a Roth conversion. You'll owe income tax on the converted amount in the year of conversion, but future growth and withdrawals will be tax-free. This can make sense in low-income years or when you expect higher future tax rates.
What happens if I withdraw from my IRA before 59½?
Traditional IRA: You pay a 10% early withdrawal penalty plus regular income tax. Roth IRA: You can withdraw your contributions (not earnings) at any time with no penalty or tax. Earnings withdrawn early face a 10% penalty plus tax.
Is there a deadline to contribute to an IRA?
You can contribute anytime during the tax year (January 1 – December 31) plus up to the tax-return due date of the following year. Per IRS Publication 590-A, that deadline is the filing due date not including extensions — typically April 15. So for the 2026 tax year, you generally have until April 15, 2027 to make your contribution.
What if my income changes from year to year?
You can change your IRA strategy every year. Contribute to a Traditional IRA in high-income years (for the tax deduction) and a Roth IRA in lower-income years (when you're in a lower bracket). There's no requirement to be consistent.
Should I contribute to an IRA or pay off debt first?
Generally, pay off high-interest debt (credit cards above 15%) first — use our Credit Card Payoff Calculator to set a timeline. For low-interest debt (mortgage, student loans below 6%), contributing to an IRA while making minimum payments on debt is often the better mathematical choice, since investment returns historically exceed those interest rates.
Start Planning Today
Whether you choose Roth, Traditional, or both, the most important thing is to start contributing now. Every year you delay is a year of lost compound growth. Run your personalized numbers with our free Retirement Calculator, then pair it with our 401(k) Calculator to build a complete retirement strategy.
This article is general educational information, not financial, tax, or investment advice. Contribution limits, income phase-out ranges, and tax rules are set by the IRS and change yearly — figures here reflect the 2026 tax year. Confirm current limits at IRS.gov and consult a qualified tax or financial professional before making decisions about your own situation.