Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA: Pick the Right One for Your Age

Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA: Pick the Right One for Your Age

Investing 101

Both are great. Both have $7,000 contribution limits in 2026 ($8,000 if 50+). The difference comes down to one question: when do you want to pay taxes?

Roth IRA: Pay Tax Now, Withdraw Tax-Free Later

  • Contributions are after-tax dollars
  • Growth and withdrawals are tax-free in retirement
  • No required minimum distributions (RMDs)
  • Withdraw contributions (not earnings) anytime without penalty

Income limits 2026: Phase-out begins at $146k single / $230k married filing jointly.

Traditional IRA: Pay Tax Later

  • Contributions are pre-tax (or deductible from taxable income)
  • Growth is tax-deferred
  • Withdrawals taxed as ordinary income
  • Required to start withdrawing at age 73

Deduction limits 2026: Phase-out for those with workplace plans begins at $77k single / $123k MFJ.

The Age Heuristic

  • Under 30: Roth almost always. Your current tax bracket is probably lower than retirement.
  • 30–50: Depends on income, marital status, retirement goals. Often split between both.
  • 50–65, high earner: Traditional for current deduction often wins.
  • Already retired but still working: Roth conversion ladders may be optimal.

When Roth Wins Mathematically

  • You expect higher tax rates in the future
  • You’re in a low tax bracket today (12% or 22%)
  • You want to leave tax-free money to heirs
  • You’ll have other taxable income sources in retirement

When Traditional Wins Mathematically

  • You’re in 32%+ bracket now
  • You expect to retire in a lower bracket (especially relocating to no-tax state)
  • You need the current deduction to fund the contribution itself

The Best Strategy for Most People

Contribute to Roth via the “back door” if you’re above income limits:

  1. Contribute $7,000 to non-deductible Traditional IRA
  2. Immediately convert to Roth IRA
  3. Pay zero tax since there’s no growth yet

Works perfectly if you don’t have other Traditional IRA balances.

Where to Open

  • Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard: Best for hands-off index investors
  • Robinhood, M1, Webull: Easier UI, similar costs
  • Avoid brokerages charging account maintenance fees — they’re rare but exist

💡 Pro Tip: Maxing both spouses’ Roth IRAs = $14,000/year of after-tax money growing tax-free. Over 30 years at 7%, that’s $1.3M+.

Deixe um comentário

O seu endereço de e-mail não será publicado. Campos obrigatórios são marcados com *

Rolar para cima