3 People Who Benefit from a Roth (and 2 Who Don't)

Who should go with a Roth and who should go with a traditional IRA or 401(k)? If you don't want to pay more in taxes than necessary, choose wisely.

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Let’s say you’re working and saving for retirement and you have a choice between a traditional IRA or 401(k) or a Roth version of the same type of account. How do you choose?

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ProfileExample*Likely Benefits From
Young person in a low tax bracket who is likely to be in a higher bracket laterEarns $50,000; 12% tax bracket (single). Next higher bracket is 22%.Roth
Someone who already has large pretax balances and wants to minimize RMDs in retirementEarns $160,000; 22% tax bracket (married). Approaching retirement with a $3.2 million 401(k) balance. RMD (around $171,000 at age 80) plus Social Security is more than spending need, and could bump household into 24% tax bracket.Roth
A prodigious saver who can afford to contribute the IRS maximum either wayEarns $130,000; 24% tax bracket today (single), with uncertain outlook for future tax rate. Can comfortably save $18,500 in a 401(k). After-tax savings are effectively $4,440 higher per year with Roth contributions.Roth
Person in peak earnings years who could be in a lower bracket during retirementHousehold income $360,000; near bottom of 32% tax bracket (married). The next lower tax bracket is 24%.Pretax
Someone with tight cash flow who wants the company 401(k) match while maximizing paychecksEarns $30,000; 12% tax bracket (single). Contributes 6% to 401(k) to get full company match. Pretax savings provide $216/year more net pay.Pretax
Disclaimer

This article was written by and presents the views of our contributing adviser, not the Kiplinger editorial staff. You can check adviser records with the SEC or with FINRA.

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Roger A. Young, CFP®
Senior Financial Planner, T. Rowe Price

Roger Young is Vice President and senior financial planner with T. Rowe Price Associates in Owings Mills, Md. Roger draws upon his previous experience as a financial adviser to share practical insights on retirement and personal finance topics of interest to individuals and advisers. He has master's degrees from Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Maryland, as well as a BBA in accounting from Loyola College (Md.).