The decision in one sentence

Traditional now, taxes later. Roth taxes now, tax-free later.

Choose Roth if you expect your tax bracket in retirement to be the same or higher than today. Choose Traditional if you expect it to be lower. The math is that simple — but there’s nuance underneath that can push the decision one way or the other.

How each one works

Traditional

  • Contributions are pre-tax — they reduce your taxable income for the year.
  • The money grows tax-deferred — no taxes on growth each year, but you owe tax later.
  • Withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income.
  • Required minimum distributions (RMDs) start at age 73, forcing you to withdraw whether you need to or not.

Roth

  • Contributions are after-tax — no deduction this year.
  • Growth is tax-free.
  • Qualified withdrawals (after age 59½, account open ≥5 years) are completely tax-free.
  • No RMDs during the original owner’s lifetime — you can leave it alone forever.

Same out-of-pocket cost, different timing

The cleanest way to think about this: assume you contribute the same number of taxable-equivalent dollars to each.

If you’re in the 22% bracket:

  • $1,000 to Traditional = $1,000 in the account, $220 saved on this year’s taxes.
  • $1,000 to Roth = $1,000 in the account, $0 saved on this year’s taxes (because you already paid the $220 on those dollars).

To make the comparison fair, the Traditional case has to invest that $220 tax savings somewhere. If you do (and most people don’t), the math works out as follows:

  • If your retirement tax bracket equals today’s → tie. The two end up identical.
  • If your retirement tax bracket is lower → Traditional wins. You paid tax at the lower rate.
  • If your retirement tax bracket is higher → Roth wins. You paid tax at the lower rate.

Try the calculator below with your numbers:

$
years
% / yr
%
%
Compares same out-of-pocket cost: Roth's full amount after-tax vs. an equivalent gross Traditional contribution.
Roth (after-tax)
Traditional (after-tax)
Roth wins by
over 35 yrs
Your retirement bracket () is higher than today (), so paying tax now at the lower rate wins.
Your retirement bracket () is lower than today (), so deferring tax to the lower future rate wins.
Same bracket now and later, so Roth and Traditional come out mathematically equal. Pick based on flexibility, not math.

Estimates only. Same-out-of-pocket comparison: Roth contributes the input amount as after-tax dollars; Traditional contributes the gross-of-tax equivalent. Real life adds the IRS contribution cap, RMDs, state tax, and unknowable future bracket changes. Plan documents and a CPA beat any calculator.

Why most young adults should lean Roth

You’re probably in a low tax bracket right now and likely to be in a higher one later. That alone tilts toward Roth.

Other reasons:

  • The bracket comparison is incomplete. Even if your income in retirement is lower than today, the tax brackets themselves may be higher. The current low federal brackets are scheduled to revert in 2026 unless extended again. Tax rates are policy choices, and the policy choice for the past 100 years has trended one direction.
  • Roth contributions are flexible. Your contributions (not earnings) can be withdrawn anytime, tax-free and penalty-free. That makes a Roth IRA a backup-emergency-fund and a retirement account at the same time.
  • No RMDs. A Roth can sit untouched for life. Traditional accounts force you to withdraw and pay tax, even if you don’t need the money.
  • Estate planning. Roth accounts pass to heirs tax-free. Traditional accounts pass with a tax bill attached.

Why Traditional sometimes wins anyway

Don’t blanket-Roth your way through life. Traditional has real cases:

  • You’re in a high bracket today. A 35% tax deduction is hard to give up if you reasonably expect to be in a 22% or 24% bracket in retirement. The combination of “high earner now” and “modest spender in retirement” is the sweet spot for Traditional.
  • You’ll do strategic Roth conversions later. Some people max Traditional during peak earning years, then convert to Roth in early retirement (low-income, pre-Social-Security years) at lower tax rates. This is an advanced move but legitimate.
  • You need the deduction this year. If $7,500 of pre-tax contributions is the difference between fitting your budget and not, that’s a real reason. Traditional now beats not-contributing-at-all.
  • You’re a high earner above the Roth IRA income limits ($153,000–$168,000 phase-out for single filers in 2026). You either go Traditional, do a backdoor Roth, or skip the IRA altogether. See the Guide to IRA Plans for details.

The split strategy

You don’t have to pick one forever. A common approach:

  • Roth IRA for the personal account — most flexible, no RMDs, behaviorally clean.
  • Traditional 401(k) at work for the bigger contribution capacity and current-year deduction.

This split gives you tax diversification — when you retire, you’ll have buckets to draw from depending on what tax brackets look like that year. That optionality is itself worth something.

The match always counts as Traditional

Even if you contribute to a Roth 401(k), your employer’s matching contribution always goes into the Traditional side of the account (pre-tax). That’s an IRS rule, not a plan choice. So you’ll already have some Traditional money no matter what — the split happens automatically.

The behavioral angle

The math says “tie” if your tax bracket is the same in both periods. But the behavioral difference is real:

  • Roth feels like real money. Your $7,500 Roth balance is $7,500 you can spend. Your $7,500 Traditional balance is closer to $5,850 after-tax.
  • People rarely invest the deduction. The Traditional case only ties if you actually invest the tax savings. Most people don’t — they spend it. That alone tilts the real-world outcome toward Roth.
  • Roth removes future-tax anxiety. A retiree who knows their balance is theirs makes different (better) decisions than one who has to model marginal tax rates on every withdrawal.

Common mistakes

  • Contributing only to Traditional and spending the tax refund. The math only works if the tax savings get invested. If they don’t, Roth would have been better.
  • Avoiding Roth because “I’d rather have the deduction now.” Sometimes that’s right (high earners). For most young adults in low brackets, it’s leaving money on the table over decades.
  • Treating the decision as permanent. You can change which side you contribute to every year. Re-evaluate when your income changes.
  • Ignoring the employer match’s tax treatment. The match is always Traditional. Plan accordingly.
  • Doing Roth conversions in a high-bracket year. Conversions are taxable in the year you do them. The right time is a low-bracket year — early retirement, sabbatical, gap year — not a peak-earning year.

Where this fits in the order of operations

In our Money Order of Operations:

  • Step 1 (capture the match) is bracket-agnostic — you contribute whatever and the match flows in pre-tax.
  • Step 5 (max your Roth IRA) — for most young adults, Roth wins here. See above.
  • Step 6 (15% to retirement) — this is where the split happens. Most people end up with Roth IRA + Traditional 401(k) at this stage, by default.

Key takeaways

  • The decision is timing: pay tax now (Roth) vs. pay tax later (Traditional).
  • Lower bracket today + higher bracket later = Roth wins.
  • Higher bracket today + lower bracket later = Traditional wins.
  • Most young adults are in the first case and should lean Roth.
  • The employer match is always Traditional, regardless of which side you contribute on.
  • Splitting between Roth and Traditional gives you tax diversification — that’s a feature.
Next step

Want help applying this to your actual paystub and benefits enrollment? Book a free session — bring last year’s tax return if you have one.