Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA: The Complete Comparison
Both Roth and Traditional IRAs are Individual Retirement Accounts that offer tax advantages to help you save for retirement. The key difference is when you get the tax break: Traditional IRA gives you a tax deduction now but you pay taxes on withdrawals in retirement. Roth IRA gives you no immediate deduction but your money grows tax-free and qualified withdrawals are completely tax-free.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Roth IRA | Traditional IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Tax Deduction | No deduction upfront | May deduct contributions |
| Tax on Withdrawals | Tax-FREE in retirement | Taxed as ordinary income |
| 2026 Contribution Limit | $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+) | $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+) |
| Income Limits | Yes - phases out at ~$150k single | No income limit to contribute |
| Required Minimum Distributions | None during owner's lifetime | Required starting at age 73 |
| Early Withdrawal | Contributions can be withdrawn anytime | 10% penalty before age 59.5 |
| Best For | Younger earners, lower tax bracket now | Higher earners needing deduction now |
Why the Roth IRA Is Often the Better Choice
For most young professionals early in their careers, the Roth IRA is the superior choice. Here's why: if you're currently in the 22% tax bracket and expect to be in the 24-32% bracket at retirement, paying taxes at 22% now through Roth contributions is better than paying 24-32% later through Traditional IRA withdrawals. Additionally, tax rates historically trend upward over time, making the future tax-free nature of Roth withdrawals even more valuable.
The Backdoor Roth IRA
If your income exceeds the Roth IRA limits (in 2026: $161,000 for single filers, $240,000 for married filing jointly), you can still fund a Roth IRA through the "backdoor" method: contribute to a Traditional IRA (nondeductible), then convert it to a Roth IRA. This is a perfectly legal strategy used by many high earners.
Can You Have Both?
Yes! You can contribute to both a Roth IRA and Traditional IRA in the same year, but your total combined contributions cannot exceed the annual limit ($7,000 in 2026). Many investors split their contributions based on their tax situation and retirement goals.