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Roth vs Traditional Comparison

Chapter 12: Tax-Advantaged Accounts

The Roth versus Traditional retirement account decision confuses most people because the best answer depends on your unique tax situation. Traditional accounts let you deduct contributions today, reducing your taxable income immediately, but you pay taxes on withdrawals in retirement. Roth accounts force you to pay taxes now but offer tax-free growth and withdrawals later.

This calculator reveals which account type wins for your situation by comparing the after-tax value at retirement. It accounts for your current tax rate, expected retirement tax rate, contribution amount, years of growth, and investment returns. Understanding this calculation helps you make one of the highest-leverage tax decisions in retirement planning.

How to Read Your Results

The chart shows account growth over time in after-tax dollars (what you can actually spend). The two metric cards show your Roth account value (already tax-free) and your Traditional account value after you pay retirement taxes on the entire balance. The winner is whichever account gives you more spendable money in retirement. Pay attention to which is highlighted in green, and note the margin of victory. A close result means either account works fine and flexibility should be your tiebreaker.

Roth vs Traditional Benchmarks

If your current tax rate is lower than expected retirement rate, Roth wins every time. Young people in early careers typically have lower rates and benefit most from Roth. If your current rate is higher than expected retirement rate, Traditional wins. High earners approaching retirement often use Traditional to reduce today's taxes. If rates are equal, Roth wins due to tax-free growth compounding on the full contribution amount. 2025 contribution limits are $7,000 under age 50, $8,000 age 50 and over. Traditional and Roth combined cannot exceed these limits.

Common Mistakes

Ignoring Tax Rate Projections

Many people choose based on today's rate without projecting retirement income. If you'll have substantial pension income, social security, and investment distributions in retirement, your tax rate will likely be higher. This favors Roth now. If you expect to be retired and living off minimal income, your retirement rate will be lower, favoring Traditional. Project both scenarios to decide.

Not Maximizing Employer Matching First

If your employer offers 401(k) matching, prioritize getting the full match before deciding between Roth and Traditional IRA. A 100% match is an instant return that beats any tax advantage. Contribute to your 401(k) enough to capture matching, then decide whether to fill Roth or Traditional IRA space.

Confusing Roth IRAs with Roth 401(k)s

Roth 401(k) contributions have the same limits as Traditional 401(k), currently $23,500 under 50. Roth IRA limits are only $7,000. If you earn over $161,000 (single) or $240,000 (married), you cannot contribute directly to Roth IRA. You can still do "backdoor Roth" by contributing to Traditional IRA and immediately converting to Roth, paying taxes on the conversion.

Forgetting About Required Minimum Distributions

Traditional IRAs require you to start withdrawing at 73 years old. Roth IRAs have no required minimum distributions during your lifetime. This is a massive advantage if you don't need the money. Roth is effectively a tax-free wealth transfer vehicle to heirs. If this matters to you, Roth wins on flexibility alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better: Roth or Traditional IRA?
It depends on your current tax rate versus expected retirement tax rate. If you're in a lower bracket now than you expect in retirement, Roth wins because you pay less tax upfront. If you're in a higher bracket now than in retirement, Traditional wins because you defer taxes. If rates are equal, Roth generally wins due to tax-free growth, no required minimum distributions, and flexibility. Run the calculator with your specific rates to see which wins for you.
What if I expect my taxes to go up in retirement?
If you expect to be in a higher tax bracket in retirement than today, Roth is almost certainly better. This might happen if you have significant investment income, pensions, or social security in retirement. Locking in a lower tax rate today by paying tax on contributions now creates massive tax-free upside when rates are higher later. This is Roth's strongest case.
Can I contribute to both a Roth and Traditional IRA?
Yes, but your total contribution across both cannot exceed the annual limit ($7,000 for 2025 if under 50). Your ability to deduct Traditional IRA contributions phases out at higher incomes, especially if you have access to a 401(k). You can contribute to Roth at any income level if you meet income limits. Many people do a combination: contribute to Traditional up to the deduction limit, then Roth for the remainder.
What happens if I need the money before retirement?
Traditional IRA withdrawals before 59.5 face a 10% penalty plus income tax. Roth IRA contributions can be withdrawn anytime penalty-free, though earnings cannot. This gives Roth flexibility that Traditional lacks. If you value liquidity and might need money before 59.5, Roth's contribution flexibility is a huge advantage. Traditional offers only a few narrow exceptions to the early withdrawal penalty.
How long does it take for Roth growth to exceed Traditional?
When tax rates are equal, Roth exceeds Traditional almost immediately because you're investing the full $7,000 (you paid tax upfront) versus investing less after-tax proceeds in Traditional. As time passes and investment returns compound, this advantage grows. By retirement, a Roth could be worth 20-30% more than Traditional if rates are equal, just from tax-free growth of a larger starting amount.

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