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Home›Investing & Wealth›Retirement & Taxes›Tax & Retirement

Roth vs. Traditional IRA: Tax Treatment and Long-Term Strategy

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
6 sources7 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Traditional IRA: Contribute pre-tax, deduct from income, pay taxes on withdrawal (suited for high earners wanting immediate tax deduction)
  • Roth IRA: Contribute post-tax, pay taxes now, withdraw completely tax-free forever (better for young investors expecting higher future taxes)
  • Roth conversion: Move Traditional IRA to Roth, pay taxes once, then enjoy tax-free growth forever (popular strategy for tax planning)
  • Income limits apply: High earners can't contribute to Roth directly; must use backdoor Roth strategy (contribute to Traditional, convert to Roth)
On this page
  • Traditional IRA Mechanics
  • Roth IRA Mechanics
  • Traditional vs. Roth: The Decision Framework
  • Income Limits and Phase-Out
  • The Backdoor Roth Strategy
  • Roth Conversion Strategy
  • Withdrawal Rules: When Can You Access Money?
  • The Long-Term Math: Which Wins?
  • Action Items: Choose Your IRA Strategy

Traditional IRA Mechanics

A Traditional IRA is a tax-deferred retirement account where contributions are deducted from your taxable income.

Contribution limit (2024): $7,000/year (age 50+: $8,000)

How it works:

  • You contribute $7,000 (pre-tax)
  • Your taxable income decreases by $7,000
  • If you're in 24% bracket, you save $1,680 in taxes immediately
  • Account grows tax-free for decades
  • When you withdraw in retirement, you pay ordinary income tax on withdrawals

Worked example: Traditional IRA

You're 35 years old, earn $80,000/year, 24% tax bracket.

  • Contribute to Traditional IRA: $7,000
  • Tax savings: $7,000 × 24% = $1,680
  • Your actual out-of-pocket cost: $7,000 - $1,680 = $5,320
  • Account grows at 8% annually for 30 years
  • Value at age 65: $7,000 × (1.08)^30 = $72,243
  • Withdraw $72,243 at age 65 (assuming 22% tax bracket in retirement)
  • Taxes owed: $72,243 × 22% = $15,893
  • Net after-tax value: $72,243 - $15,893 = $56,350

The trade-off: You get $1,680 tax deduction now, but pay $15,893 in taxes later. Net tax cost: $14,213 over 30 years.

Roth IRA Mechanics

A Roth IRA is an after-tax retirement account where contributions are made with post-tax dollars but grow completely tax-free.

Contribution limit (2024): $7,000/year (age 50+: $8,000)

How it works:

  • You contribute $7,000 (post-tax, no deduction)
  • Account grows tax-free
  • When you withdraw, all growth is completely tax-free
  • No Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) at age 73

Worked example: Roth IRA

You're 35 years old, earn $80,000/year, 24% tax bracket.

  • Contribute to Roth IRA: $7,000 (post-tax)
  • No tax deduction (you already paid taxes on this $7,000)
  • Account grows at 8% annually for 30 years
  • Value at age 65: $7,000 × (1.08)^30 = $72,243
  • Withdraw $72,243 at age 65
  • Taxes owed: $0 (completely tax-free)
  • Net after-tax value: $72,243

The comparison to Traditional:

  • Traditional IRA (after-tax): $56,350
  • Roth IRA (after-tax): $72,243
  • Roth advantage: $15,893

Why the difference? In a Traditional IRA, you pay tax on ALL withdrawals, including the compounded growth. In a Roth IRA, you pay tax only on the contribution ($7,000), and the growth ($65,243) is completely tax-free.

Traditional vs. Roth: The Decision Framework

Choose Traditional IRA if:

  1. You're in a high tax bracket now (32%, 35%, 37%)
  2. You expect to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement
  3. You want immediate tax deduction
  4. You can afford to pay taxes out of pocket (not reducing IRA contribution)

Example: High earner choosing Traditional

  • Current income: $200,000, tax bracket: 35%
  • Contribute $7,000 to Traditional IRA
  • Tax savings: $7,000 × 35% = $2,450
  • In retirement: Withdraw at 22% rate (lower bracket)
  • Effective tax on that $7,000: 22%
  • Tax arbitrage: Save 35% now, pay 22% later = 13% net savings

Choose Roth IRA if:

  1. You're in a lower tax bracket now (12%, 22%)
  2. You expect to be in equal or higher tax bracket in retirement
  3. You want tax-free withdrawals
  4. You have 20+ years until retirement (compounding matters)

Example: Young earner choosing Roth

  • Current income: $45,000, tax bracket: 12%
  • Contribute $7,000 to Roth IRA
  • No tax deduction now
  • In retirement: Withdraw $72,243 completely tax-free
  • If tax rates have risen to 24-28%, you've avoided paying taxes on $65,243 of growth
  • Tax savings: $15,673+ (growth taxed at higher future rate)

Income Limits and Phase-Out

Critical issue: Roth contributions are subject to income phase-outs.

2024 Roth IRA income limits:

Single filer:

  • Full contribution: Income below $146,000
  • Partial contribution: $146,000-$161,000
  • No contribution: Income above $161,000

Married filing jointly:

  • Full contribution: Combined income below $230,000
  • Partial contribution: $230,000-$240,000
  • No contribution: Income above $240,000

Example: Phase-out You're single with $155,000 income.

  • Income range for phase-out: $146,000-$161,000 (width: $15,000)
  • Your income: $155,000
  • Excess over threshold: $155,000 - $146,000 = $9,000
  • Reduction factor: $9,000 / $15,000 = 60%
  • Maximum contribution: $7,000 × (1 - 60%) = $2,800

High earners are restricted in Roth contributions.

The Backdoor Roth Strategy

Problem: High earners are excluded from direct Roth contributions.

Solution: Backdoor Roth conversion

How it works:

  1. Contribute $7,000 to Traditional IRA (non-deductible)
  2. Immediately convert to Roth IRA
  3. No tax owed (you're just moving pre-tax money to Roth)
  4. Growth is now tax-free forever

Example:

  • Income: $250,000 (excluded from direct Roth)
  • Contribute $7,000 to Traditional IRA (non-deductible)
  • Traditional IRA balance: $7,000
  • Convert $7,000 to Roth IRA
  • Pay tax on conversion: $0 (you're converting pre-tax money you already paid tax on)
  • Roth IRA balance: $7,000
  • 30 years later at 8% growth: $72,243 (tax-free)

The pro-rata rule complication:

If you have an existing Traditional IRA with pre-tax money, the backdoor Roth becomes complicated.

Example with existing Traditional IRA:

  • Existing Traditional IRA: $50,000 (pre-tax)
  • New Traditional IRA contribution: $7,000 (non-deductible)
  • Total Traditional IRA: $57,000
  • Convert $7,000 to Roth
  • Tax owed: ($50,000 / $57,000) × $7,000 = $6,140 in taxes

The IRS taxes your conversion proportionally based on your total Traditional IRA balance.

Roth Conversion Strategy

Even if you're not doing a backdoor Roth, you can strategically convert Traditional IRA to Roth.

When to convert:

  1. Low-income year: You take a sabbatical, lose job, or start business in low-income year

    • Opportunity to convert at lower tax rate
    • Example: Normal income $100,000 (32% bracket), sabbatical year $30,000 (12% bracket)
    • Convert $50,000 Traditional to Roth
    • Tax owed: $50,000 × 12% = $6,000 (vs. 32% = $16,000)
    • Saves $10,000 in taxes
  2. Market downturns: After stock market crash, IRA worth less

    • Convert at lower valuation
    • Example: $100,000 Traditional IRA drops to $70,000 after crash
    • Convert $70,000 to Roth
    • Pay tax on $70,000 (not original $100,000)
    • When market recovers, $70,000 grows tax-free
    • Growth from crash recovery is completely tax-free
  3. Pre-retirement: In years 55-65 before required distributions

    • Convert strategically during lower-income years
    • Build Roth balance that later provides tax-free income
    • Avoid Required Minimum Distributions (Roth has none)

Withdrawal Rules: When Can You Access Money?

Traditional IRA:

  • Before 59.5: 10% early withdrawal penalty + income tax (except hardship)
  • Age 59.5-72: Withdraw anytime, pay income tax
  • Age 73+: Required Minimum Distribution (must withdraw ~4% annually)

Roth IRA:

  • Contributions: Withdraw anytime, tax-free (you already paid tax)
  • Growth: Before 59.5, pay 10% penalty + income tax (except Roth conversion rules)
  • Growth: Age 59.5+, withdraw tax-free
  • No Required Minimum Distributions
  • Can leave to heirs completely tax-free

Example: Roth flexibility

You contributed $7,000/year for 10 years = $70,000 contributions, grown to $140,000.

At age 45, you need $30,000 for emergency:

  • Withdraw $30,000 from Roth IRA
  • No penalty or tax (you're withdrawing contributions)
  • Remaining balance: $110,000

With Traditional IRA, you'd owe $7,200 in taxes ($30,000 × 24%) + $3,000 penalty = $10,200 in taxes and penalties.

Roth is more flexible.

The Long-Term Math: Which Wins?

Scenario: Compare over 35 years

Assume 8% annual returns, start at age 30, end at age 65.

Traditional IRA strategy:

  • Contribute $7,000/year for 35 years
  • Tax deduction at 24% = $1,680 annual tax savings
  • Accumulated savings: $58,800 in tax deductions
  • IRA value at 65: $1,471,000
  • Withdraw $1,471,000 at 24% tax rate
  • After-tax value: $1,117,760

Roth IRA strategy:

  • Contribute $7,000/year for 35 years (after-tax cost $8,750 due to taxes)
  • No tax deduction
  • Roth value at 65: $1,471,000
  • Withdraw $1,471,000 completely tax-free
  • After-tax value: $1,471,000

Difference: $353,240 (Roth wins if tax rates stay the same)

This assumes tax rates don't change. If rates rise to 32% by retirement, Roth advantage grows to $500,000+.

Action Items: Choose Your IRA Strategy

  1. Determine your current tax bracket: Find on latest tax return
  2. Estimate retirement tax bracket: Conservative estimate (lower than current)
  3. Check Roth eligibility: Based on income limits
  4. If eligible for Roth: Prioritize Roth over Traditional (especially if young)
  5. If ineligible: Use backdoor Roth strategy
  6. If high earner with Traditional IRA: Plan strategic conversions in low-income years
  7. Commit to annual contribution: $7,000/year starting now

Choosing between Traditional and Roth is one of the most important tax decisions you'll make. Roth typically wins for younger investors with decades of tax-free growth ahead.

◆ Sources

  1. IRS — Traditional IRA Publication 590-A
  2. Vanguard — IRA Comparison Guide
  3. Fidelity — Roth Conversion Strategy
  4. Investopedia — Backdoor Roth
  5. NerdWallet — Traditional vs. Roth IRA
  6. Federal Reserve — Retirement Savings Analysis
On this page
  • Traditional IRA Mechanics
  • Roth IRA Mechanics
  • Traditional vs. Roth: The Decision Framework
  • Income Limits and Phase-Out
  • The Backdoor Roth Strategy
  • Roth Conversion Strategy
  • Withdrawal Rules: When Can You Access Money?
  • The Long-Term Math: Which Wins?
  • Action Items: Choose Your IRA Strategy
◆ Related reading
  • How Income Tax Works: Understanding the US Tax System
  • What Is Effective Tax Rate?
  • What Is a Traditional IRA?
  • Backdoor Roth Conversions: High-Income Earners' Secret to Tax-Free Growth
All Tax & Retirement →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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