Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA: The One Decision That Could Save Gen Z $100K in Taxes

At 23, I sat down with a 45-minute YouTube video to understand the difference between a Roth IRA and Traditional IRA. By the end, I was more confused than when I started. Both accounts invest in the same things. Both have the same $7,000 contribution limit. The difference — which everyone says matters "a lot" — comes down to whether you pay taxes now or later. But how do you know which is better when you can't see the future?

I've since worked through the math dozens of times and I want to give you the clearest, most direct answer possible: for most Gen Z earners, the Roth IRA wins by a significant margin. Here's exactly why — and the specific situations where Traditional makes more sense.

The Core Difference in Plain English

Both a Roth IRA and Traditional IRA are individual retirement accounts that let you invest money with special tax advantages. The difference is entirely about when the government taxes your money:

  • Traditional IRA: Contribute pre-tax dollars today (get a tax deduction now), pay taxes when you withdraw in retirement
  • Roth IRA: Contribute after-tax dollars today (no deduction now), pay zero taxes on growth or withdrawals in retirement

Same contribution limit ($7,000/year in 2026, $8,000 if you're 50+). Same investment options. Radically different tax treatment.

Why "Pre-Tax vs. After-Tax" Is the Decision

The fundamental question is: will you be in a higher tax bracket now or in retirement? If higher now → Traditional IRA saves more in taxes. If higher later → Roth IRA saves more. For most people in their 20s starting careers, the answer is almost always: higher later. You're likely at one of the lowest tax brackets of your career right now.

The Numbers: How Much the Roth IRA Advantage Is Worth

Let's make this concrete. Say you're 24, in the 22% tax bracket, and you invest the $7,000 annual maximum every year until 65.

Scenario A: Traditional IRA

  • Tax deduction now: $7,000 × 22% = $1,540 back in your pocket each year
  • Account value at 65 (7% return, 41 years): approximately $1.74 million
  • Taxes owed on withdrawal (assuming 24% bracket in retirement): $417,600
  • After-tax retirement value: ~$1.32 million

Scenario B: Roth IRA

  • No tax deduction today — you pay taxes on the $7,000 contribution at 22% already
  • Account value at 65 (same 7% return, 41 years): approximately $1.74 million
  • Taxes owed on withdrawal: $0
  • After-tax retirement value: ~$1.74 million

Difference: ~$420,000 more in retirement from the Roth IRA — assuming your tax rate in retirement is similar to or higher than today. For many Gen Z earners who are early in their careers and expect income to grow, that assumption is highly reasonable.

The Tax Rate Bet: Why Roth Usually Wins for Young Earners

In 2026, the federal income tax brackets are: 10% (up to $11,600), 12% ($11,601–$47,150), 22% ($47,151–$100,525), 24% ($100,526–$191,950). Most Gen Z earners in their early-to-mid 20s are in the 12% or 22% bracket. As careers progress and income grows, moving into the 24% or 32% bracket is common. Paying 12% or 22% tax now to avoid paying 24% or 32% tax later is a strong trade.

Gen Wealth Tip

The Roth IRA has a unique flexibility that the Traditional IRA lacks: you can withdraw your contributions (not earnings) at any time, for any reason, without penalties or taxes. This makes it a hybrid emergency fund / retirement account — a degree of liquidity that makes the Roth IRA even more valuable for young investors who are still building their financial foundation.

Roth IRA Rules You Need to Know

Income Limits

Not everyone can contribute to a Roth IRA. In 2026, contributions phase out at $146,000–$161,000 for single filers, and $230,000–$240,000 for married filing jointly. If you're under $146K single, you're fully eligible — which covers the vast majority of Gen Z earners. If you're over the limit, look into the "backdoor Roth IRA" strategy.

Contribution Deadline

You can make Roth IRA contributions for the current tax year until Tax Day (April 15 of the following year). You have until April 15, 2027 to contribute for 2026. Don't leave this until the last minute.

The 5-Year Rule

Roth IRA earnings can only be withdrawn tax-free after the account has been open for at least 5 years AND you're 59½ or older. The clock starts January 1 of the first year you contribute. Open the account and contribute even $1 as soon as possible to start the 5-year clock — even if you plan to invest more later.

When Traditional IRA Makes More Sense

High-Income Earners (Now)

If you're currently earning $150,000+ as a single filer and expect to retire at a lower income — say, $60,000–$80,000/year in distributions — the Traditional IRA's immediate tax deduction at 32–35% may be worth more than the Roth's tax-free growth.

Near-Retirement Contributions

If you're over 50 and expect to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement than you are now, the Traditional IRA becomes more competitive. This scenario rarely applies to Gen Z, but worth knowing for the long view.

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Can You Have Both a Roth and Traditional IRA?

Yes — but your combined contributions cannot exceed $7,000/year (2026 limit). Some people split contributions across both accounts as a "tax diversification" strategy: contributing to a Traditional IRA in high-income years and a Roth IRA in lower-income years. For most Gen Z earners just starting out, the simplest and typically best approach is to max the Roth IRA exclusively.

Roth IRA vs. 401(k): Which First?

The standard financial planning recommendation:

  1. 401(k) contributions up to the employer match (free money, always first)
  2. Max your Roth IRA ($7,000/year in 2026)
  3. Continue 401(k) contributions beyond the match
  4. Open a taxable brokerage account for additional investing via Traderise

What to Invest Inside Your Roth IRA

Opening the account isn't enough — you need to actually invest the money. Many people open IRAs and leave the cash sitting uninvested, earning nothing. The most recommended approach for long-term Roth IRA investing:

  • Target Date Fund (e.g., 2060 or 2065 fund): Auto-adjusts allocation as you age. Best for pure hands-off investing.
  • 3-fund portfolio: US total market index + International index + Bond index. Simple, diversified, low-cost.
  • S&P 500 index fund: VOO, FXAIX, or SWTSX. Single-fund strategy that many experts swear by.

Whatever you choose, the principle is the same: low fees, broad diversification, and consistent contributions over decades. The Roth IRA's tax-free growth makes every basis point of fees and every year of delay more costly than in a taxable account. Start early, stay consistent, let compound growth do the work.

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