Roth and traditional retirement accounts represent opposite tax strategies: traditional accounts offer upfront tax deductions but require taxing withdrawals in retirement, while Roth accounts use after-tax contributions but allow tax-free withdrawals. The right choice depends on your current tax bracket, expected retirement tax bracket, and time horizon.
The Comparison
Traditional IRA/401(k):
- Contributions are tax-deductible (reduce taxable income now)
- Growth is tax-deferred
- Withdrawals in retirement are fully taxable as ordinary income
- Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) start at age 73
Roth IRA/401(k):
- Contributions are made with after-tax money (no deduction)
- Growth is tax-free
- Withdrawals in retirement are tax-free (including earnings)
- No RMDs during owner's lifetime
- Can withdraw contributions (not earnings) anytime penalty-free
The Decision Framework
| Situation | Better Choice |
|---|---|
| Low current tax bracket, expect higher later | Roth |
| High current tax bracket, expect lower later | Traditional |
| Early retirement planned | Roth (withdrawal flexibility) |
| Need upfront tax deduction | Traditional |
| High income now, lower later | Traditional |
| Long time horizon to growth | Roth |
Worked Example
Saver A: 32 years old, 25% tax bracket now, invests $7,000/year for 33 years until 65, earns 7% annually.
Traditional: Saves $1,750 in tax per year ($7,000 × 0.25). Invests $7,000 anyway, grows to $1.1M, pays tax on withdrawal (assume 25% in retirement). Net after-tax: $825,000.
Roth: No tax deduction. Invests $7,000 after-tax, grows to $1.1M, withdraws tax-free. Net after-tax: $1.1M.
If retirement tax bracket is 32% instead of 25%, the Traditional advantage shrinks further.
Income Limits and Conversions
Roth IRAs have income limits for direct contributions (2026: $146k-$161k single). However, anyone can do a backdoor Roth conversion: contribute to traditional IRA and immediately convert to Roth. This gets around the limits but triggers taxes on gains.
Tips
If you can only afford one strategy, prioritize getting employer match (traditional 401k). Beyond that, Roth is often better for younger savers because they have decades of tax-free growth. Also consider tax diversification — have both Roth and traditional accounts to give yourself flexibility in retirement.
Use our Roth vs Traditional Calculator to model which strategy saves more in your specific situation.