About Research Education
Retirement Calculator · 2026 Limits

Pay taxes now, pay them later, or pay them on every gain?

Traditional and Roth IRAs shield your growth from taxes. A regular brokerage account doesn't — every gain gets taxed along the way. Run your numbers and see which of the three actually puts the most after-tax dollars in your pocket at retirement.

Traditional VS Roth VS Brokerage
The Verdict After 40 years at 7%
Roth IRA wins
$0 more after taxes
Roth$0
Traditional$0
Brokerage$0
! Adjust the controls to see how your tax bracket and timeline change the winner.
Traditional
Winner
Tax break now, taxes due at withdrawal.
$0
After-tax balance
Contributed$0
Grows to (pre-tax)$0
Tax savings pocketed$0
Taxes at withdrawal−$0
Roth
Winner
Pay tax now, withdraw 100% tax-free.
$0
After-tax balance
Contributed$0
Grows to$0
Taxes at withdrawal$0
Phase-out statusFull
Brokerage
Winner
No tax shelter — gains taxed as you go.
$0
After-tax balance
Contributed$0
Gross return7%
Effective yield5.5%
Lost to tax drag−$0
Growth over time · After-tax
Roth Traditional Brokerage
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Quick rule of thumb
Both IRAs almost always beat a taxable brokerage because tax drag compounds against you for decades. Between the two IRAs: if your retirement tax bracket will be higher than today, Roth wins. Lower, Traditional wins.
How this is calculated

All three accounts get the same annual dollar contribution. Traditional and Roth compound at your expected return. The taxable brokerage compounds at an effective after-tax yield of return × (1 − marginal rate) — a simplification of ongoing taxes on dividends and realized gains.

At retirement, Traditional is taxed at your estimated retirement rate, then the cumulative tax savings you pocketed from each year's deduction are added back uncompounded (matching the original FinMango model). Roth withdraws tax-free. Brokerage keeps what it has.

Your marginal rate is auto-detected from 2026 IRS brackets. Your retirement rate is estimated as your current marginal rate minus 2 percentage points — a common rule of thumb, but not a prediction. Income grows 3% per year; once it crosses the 2026 Roth MAGI phase-out ($153K–$168K single / HoH, $242K–$252K joint), Roth contributions phase down proportionally while Traditional and Brokerage keep going. The model assumes constant contribution limits and doesn't model state tax, ACA subsidies, or required minimum distributions on Traditional at age 73.

The Battle Explained

Same goal, different timing.

Both IRAs let your money grow without paying tax on the gains every year. A regular brokerage doesn't — and that drag compounds against you for decades.

Traditional IRA

Tax break today

Contribute pre-tax dollars and lower this year's tax bill. The money grows untouched by the IRS for decades — but every dollar you withdraw in retirement is taxed as income.

Pay later
+Lower taxable income now. A $7,500 contribution at the 22% bracket saves you $1,650 this April.
+No income limit. Anyone with earned income can contribute, regardless of how much they make.
Required withdrawals at 73. The IRS forces you to start drawing down (and paying taxes) whether you need the money or not.
Roth IRA

Tax-free forever

Contribute money you've already paid taxes on. It grows tax-free, and every dollar you withdraw in retirement — including decades of investment gains — is yours, untouched by the IRS.

Pay now
+Zero taxes in retirement. What you see in the account is what you spend. No surprises, no bracket math.
+Pull contributions anytime. Your contributions (not gains) come out penalty-free — a built-in safety net.
Income limits apply. In 2026, single filers earning over $168,000 are phased out (MAGI). Joint filers cap at $252,000.
And the third option · Taxable brokerage

No shelter, but total flexibility.

A regular brokerage account (Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, Robinhood) has no income limits, no contribution limits, and no withdrawal restrictions — but the IRS taxes your dividends every year and your capital gains every time you sell. Over 30+ years, that drag typically costs you tens of thousands compared to an IRA.

Pay every year
🌱
Choose Roth if

You're early in your career

You're in a low bracket today and your income (and tax rate) will probably climb. Locking in today's lower rate is a steal.

📊
Choose Traditional if

You're at peak earning years

You're in a high bracket now and expect to spend less in retirement. The deduction today is worth more than the future tax bill.

🔮
Choose Roth if

You think tax rates will rise

National debt, demographics — there's a reasonable case future rates climb. Roth locks in today's rate and never owes more.

2026 Limit
$7,500
Under age 50
2026 Limit · 50+
$8,600
Includes $1,100 catch-up
Roth Cap · Single
$168K
Phase-out begins at $153K
Roth Cap · Joint
$252K
Phase-out begins at $242K