IRA Basics

An Individual Retirement Account (IRA) is a tax-advantaged account for retirement savings. In 2025, you can contribute up to $7,000/year ($8,000 if you're 50 or older). Both account types hold the same investments — stocks, bonds, ETFs — but differ in when you get the tax benefit.

The Roth IRA

You contribute after-tax dollars. Your money grows tax-free, and qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free — including all the gains.

Income limits apply. In 2025, single filers above $161,000 and joint filers above $240,000 cannot contribute directly. A "backdoor Roth" conversion is available for higher earners.

The Traditional IRA

Contributions may be tax-deductible now, reducing your current taxable income. But withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income.

Deductibility phases out at certain income levels if you or your spouse also have a workplace retirement plan.

Key insight: Roth vs. Traditional is ultimately a bet on your future tax rate. If you're young and early-career, your income will likely be higher later — Roth usually wins in that scenario.

Side-by-Side

How to Decide

Most important rule: Don't let the decision paralyze you. Either account, invested consistently, is infinitely better than waiting for certainty.