Retirement planning is about keeping as much as possible for you, your family, places you care about, and giving as little as possible to the IRS. The wrong choice can leave a “tax time bomb” waiting in retirement.
I’m a big fan of the Roth IRA and almost always see it as the better option for most people. Here’s why, and how to decide what fits your stewardship journey.
How They Work: The Key Differences
- Traditional IRA: Contribute pre-tax dollars (often deductible now, lowering your current taxable income). Money grows tax-deferred. Withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income.
- Roth IRA: Contribute after-tax dollars (no deduction now). Money grows tax-free. Qualified withdrawals (after age 59½ and 5-year rule) are completely tax-free — growth, earnings, everything.
Both share the same contribution limits (see our post on IRA Contribution Limits for 2025 & 2026).
Pros and Cons at a Glance
| Feature | Traditional IRA | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Contributions | Pre-tax (deductible if eligible) | After-tax (no current deduction) |
| Tax on Growth | Tax-deferred | Tax-free |
| Withdrawals | Taxed as ordinary income | Tax-free (qualified) |
| RMDs | Required starting at age 73 | None during your lifetime |
| Early Withdrawals | Penalty + taxes on full amount (exceptions apply) | Contributions withdrawable penalty/tax-free; earnings penalized if early |
| Best If… | High current bracket, expect lower in retirement | Same/higher future bracket, want tax-free flexibility and legacy |
| Inheritance | Taxable to heirs (10-year depletion under SECURE Act) | Tax-free for heirs |
Why Roth Often Wins: Defusing the Tax Time Bomb
Roth means paying taxes now at today’s rates, then enjoying tax-free money forever. No taxes on growth, no Required Minimum Distributions forcing withdrawals you don’t need, and no bracket creep pushing you into higher taxes (32% or even 37%). This gives real flexibility: more for vacations, helping family, or generous giving without IRS surprises.
Traditional offers an upfront deduction that feels good now, but deferred taxes can explode later especially with large balances. A $1 million Traditional IRA could lose 24–37% to taxes on withdrawals or RMDs. For heirs, it’s often worse: non-spouse beneficiaries must empty it within 10 years, facing annual taxes that reduce what they keep (or even impact financial aid). A Roth passes tax-free and that’s infinitely better for leaving an inheritance to your children’s children, as Proverbs 13:22 reminds us: “A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children…”
If you expect the same or higher tax bracket in retirement (due to bracket creep, policy changes, or income growth), Roth usually comes out ahead. Even if brackets stay similar, the tax-free compounding, no RMDs, and tax-free legacy make it powerful for stewardship.
Traditional could be better if you’re in a high bracket today and anticipate lower in retirement (e.g., post-career drop) the deduction saves real money now.
Income Limits to Know
Roth has direct contribution phase-outs based on modified adjusted gross income (MAGI):
- 2025: Single <$150,000 full; phase-out $150,000–$165,000. Joint <$236,000 full; $236,000–$246,000 phase-out.
- 2026: Single <$153,000 full; phase-out $153,000–$168,000. Joint <$242,000 full; $242,000–$252,000 phase-out.
(Traditional deductions phase out if covered by a workplace plan — see flow charts in our limits post.)
If phased out of direct Roth, the backdoor Roth (nondeductible Traditional contribution → Roth conversion) can still open the door.
We Can Help
The best choice depends on your full picture: current taxes, future projections, giving plans, and legacy goals. Contact us for a personalized review. We can run scenarios and help defuse any potential tax time bomb so you keep more to grow wisely.