The Core Difference: When You Pay Taxes
Every retirement account question reduces to one fundamental choice: do you want to pay taxes now, or later?
- Traditional 401(k): Contribute pre-tax dollars (reduces taxable income today). Pay taxes when you withdraw in retirement.
- Roth IRA: Contribute after-tax dollars (no tax break today). Qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free — including all the growth.
If your tax rate is higher today than it will be in retirement, the traditional 401(k) wins. If your tax rate will be higher in retirement, the Roth wins. Since most people don't know their future tax rate, diversifying across both is a popular strategy.
2025 Contribution Limits
- 401(k): $23,500/year ($31,000 if age 50+)
- Roth IRA: $7,000/year ($8,000 if age 50+)
- These limits are separate — you can max both in the same year
- Roth IRA limits phase out for high earners: $150,000–$165,000 (single), $236,000–$246,000 (married, 2025)
Who Should Choose the Traditional 401(k)?
The traditional 401(k) is likely your better primary vehicle if:
- You're in a high tax bracket today (32%+) and expect to be in a lower bracket in retirement
- You want to reduce taxable income now — especially helpful if you're near a bracket cutoff
- You expect significant deductions in retirement (mortgage interest, charitable giving) that will reduce your effective tax rate
- You have a pension or guaranteed income that will fill lower brackets in retirement, meaning your first dollar of 401(k) withdrawal hits a low rate
- You earn too much for Roth IRA contributions
Example: You're in the 24% bracket now. In retirement, you project being in the 12% bracket. Every $1 you put in a traditional 401(k) saves you $0.24 in taxes today and will cost you $0.12 on withdrawal. Net tax benefit: $0.12 per dollar — the traditional 401(k) wins.
Who Should Choose the Roth IRA?
The Roth IRA excels when:
- You're early in your career and currently in a low tax bracket (12% or lower)
- You expect to be in a higher bracket in retirement (due to required minimum distributions, pension income, or significant savings)
- You want flexibility — Roth IRA contributions (not earnings) can be withdrawn penalty-free at any time
- You want to leave a tax-free inheritance to heirs
- You're concerned about future tax rate increases (tax diversification)
- You want to avoid Required Minimum Distributions (Roth IRAs have no RMDs in retirement)
Roth 401(k): The Best of Both Worlds?
Many employers now offer a Roth 401(k) option alongside the traditional 401(k). This gives you the higher contribution limits of a 401(k) with the tax-free growth of a Roth. The Roth 401(k):
- Has the same contribution limit as a traditional 401(k) ($23,500)
- Has no income limits — anyone can contribute regardless of income
- Employer matches go into a traditional (pre-tax) account, giving you automatic diversification
- Can be rolled into a Roth IRA at retirement to eliminate RMDs
The Backdoor Roth IRA
If your income is too high for direct Roth IRA contributions, the "backdoor Roth" is a legal workaround:
- Contribute to a traditional IRA (non-deductible, since you're over the income limit)
- Convert it to a Roth IRA
- Pay taxes only on any earnings during the brief holding period (usually minimal)
The backdoor Roth is legal and widely used by high earners. Be aware of the "pro-rata rule" — if you have other traditional IRA balances, the conversion may be partially taxable.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Traditional 401(k) | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 Limit | $23,500 | $7,000 |
| Tax on contributions | Pre-tax (deducted) | After-tax (no deduction) |
| Tax on withdrawals | Taxed as ordinary income | Tax-free (qualified) |
| Income limits | None | Phases out $150k–$165k (single) |
| Early withdrawal | 10% penalty + taxes before 59½ | Contributions anytime; earnings penalized before 59½ |
| Required Min. Distributions | Yes, starting at age 73 | No RMDs (great for estate planning) |
| Employer match | Yes | Not available (IRA is individual) |
| Best for | High earners today; expect lower rate in retirement | Low/mid earners; expect higher rate in retirement; want flexibility |
The Recommended Strategy: Use Both
For most people, the ideal approach isn't choosing one — it's using both strategically:
- Always capture the employer match first. Contribute enough to your 401(k) to get the full match. This is a 50–100% instant return.
- Max out a Roth IRA if you're eligible. The $7,000 annual limit is modest — max it out before increasing 401(k) beyond the match.
- Go back and increase 401(k) contributions toward the $23,500 limit.
- If both are maxed and you have more to save: taxable brokerage accounts or HSA.
This "waterfall" approach gives you employer match money, tax diversification (some pre-tax, some post-tax), flexibility for early access if needed, and maximum compound growth.
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Related guides: Retirement Planning Basics | FIRE Movement & Early Retirement