The single most important question for US retirement savers: Roth or Traditional IRA? The answer depends entirely on whether you expect to be in a higher or lower tax bracket in retirement than you are today. This calculator runs both with your specific tax assumptions and shows the after-tax winner.
Calculator → Comparison
Traditional IRAvsRoth IRA
Pay tax now or pay tax later? The right answer depends on your tax bracket today vs in retirement.
Traditional IRA Option A
Contributions are pre-tax (deduct from income today). All withdrawals taxed at retirement-age rates.
Traditional IRA
Roth IRA Option B
Contributions are post-tax (no deduction today). All growth and withdrawals are 100% tax-free in retirement.
Roth IRA
The Verdict
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The Decision Rule (in 30 seconds)
- You’re in a low bracket NOW (12-22%) and expect MORE income in retirement? → Roth wins. Lock in today’s low rate.
- You’re in a high bracket NOW (32-37%) and expect MUCH LESS income in retirement? → Traditional wins. Defer to lower future rates.
- You’re uncertain about future tax rates? → Roth has the edge. Tax-free is tax-free regardless of what happens.
- You’re early-career, high-saver, plan for FIRE? → Strongly Roth. Your retirement might span 40+ years and tax rates may rise.
- You’re mid-career and expect retirement spending to drop substantially? → Traditional often wins.
Key Differences
| Feature | Traditional IRA | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Contribution | Pre-tax (deduction now) | Post-tax (no deduction) |
| Growth | Tax-deferred | Tax-free |
| Withdrawal Tax | Taxed as income | 100% tax-free |
| Required Distributions (RMDs) | Yes, starting age 73 | None during owner’s lifetime |
| Income Limits | Deduction phases out | Phases out at $146-161K (single) |
| Early Withdrawal | 10% penalty + tax before age 59½ | Contributions any time penalty-free |
| 2025 Contribution Limit | $7,000 ($8,000 age 50+) | Same |
Hidden Roth Advantages
- No RMDs — let it grow tax-free for life and pass to heirs.
- Tax diversification — having both Roth + Traditional gives you flexibility to manage tax brackets in retirement year-by-year.
- Withdrawals don’t affect Social Security taxation — Traditional withdrawals can push your provisional income up enough to make 85% of SS taxable.
- Better for legacy planning — heirs get tax-free distributions; with Traditional, they pay income tax on RMDs over 10 years.
- Hedge against future tax hikes — Federal tax rates are at historical lows; many expect rises.
Worked Example
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I convert Traditional to Roth?▾
Can I contribute to both?▾
What about a Roth 401(k)?▾
Why isn’t Roth always better?▾
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