Roth IRA: How It Works, Tax Benefits & Who Should Use One
How a Roth IRA Works
You contribute money you’ve already paid income tax on. Inside the account, your investments — stocks, bonds, ETFs, mutual funds — grow without generating any taxable events. No tax on dividends, no tax on capital gains, no tax on interest. When you withdraw in retirement (after age 59½ and the account has been open at least 5 years), everything comes out tax-free.
That tax-free compounding is the core advantage. The longer your time horizon, the more valuable it becomes. A dollar that compounds for 30 years at 8% turns into ~$10 — and in a Roth IRA, you keep all of it. In a taxable account, the tax drag along the way means you’d keep noticeably less.
2025 Contribution Limits
| Category | 2025 Limit |
|---|---|
| Under age 50 | $7,000 |
| Age 50 and older | $8,000 |
These limits are shared with a Traditional IRA. You can split between both, but the total across all IRAs can’t exceed $7,000 (or $8,000 with catch-up).
Income Limits — Who Can Contribute
Unlike a 401(k), the Roth IRA has income restrictions. If you earn too much, your contribution is reduced or eliminated entirely:
| Filing Status | Full Contribution | Phase-Out Range | No Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single / Head of Household | Under $150,000 | $150,000 – $165,000 | Above $165,000 |
| Married Filing Jointly | Under $236,000 | $236,000 – $246,000 | Above $246,000 |
Withdrawal Rules — The Roth IRA’s Hidden Superpower
This is where the Roth IRA stands apart from every other retirement account. The rules are more flexible than most people realize:
| What You’re Withdrawing | Tax | Penalty | Conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Your contributions | None | None | Anytime, any reason, any age |
| Conversions | None | 10% if within 5 years of conversion | Each conversion has its own 5-year clock |
| Earnings (qualified) | None | None | Age 59½ + account open 5+ years |
| Earnings (non-qualified) | Income tax | 10% penalty | Exceptions: first home ($10K), disability, death |
The ability to withdraw contributions anytime, penalty-free, makes the Roth IRA a partial safety net. It doesn’t replace an emergency fund, but it means your retirement savings aren’t entirely locked up.
No Required Minimum Distributions
A Traditional IRA and traditional 401(k) force you to start taking money out at age 73. A Roth IRA has no RMDs during the owner’s lifetime. You can let it compound tax-free for as long as you live, making it an exceptional tool for estate planning — your heirs inherit the account and (under current rules) take distributions over 10 years, still tax-free.
What to Invest in Inside a Roth IRA
Because gains are tax-free, the optimal strategy is to put your highest-growth investments in the Roth. Think growth stocks, small-cap funds, and equity-heavy index funds. Investments that throw off heavy taxable income — like bonds — can go in traditional tax-deferred accounts. This concept is called tax-efficient asset location.
Common allocations inside a Roth IRA include a total stock market index fund, an S&P 500 fund, or an international equity fund. Keep the expense ratio low and let compounding do the heavy lifting.
Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA
| Feature | Roth IRA | Traditional IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Tax deduction on contributions | No | Yes (if eligible) |
| Tax on withdrawals | Tax-free (if qualified) | Taxed as ordinary income |
| Income limits to contribute | Yes | No (but deduction may be limited) |
| RMDs during lifetime | None | Required starting at age 73 |
| Contribution withdrawal | Anytime, tax- and penalty-free | Taxed + 10% penalty before 59½ |
| Best for | Expect higher taxes in retirement | Expect lower taxes in retirement |
For a deeper breakdown, see our full Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA comparison.
Key Takeaways
- Roth IRA contributions are after-tax, but all growth and qualified withdrawals are completely tax-free.
- 2025 contribution limit is $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+), subject to income phase-outs.
- You can withdraw contributions (not earnings) at any time without tax or penalty.
- No required minimum distributions — the account can compound for your entire life.
- High earners can still access Roth benefits through the backdoor Roth strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I have both a Roth IRA and a 401(k)?
Absolutely. They’re separate accounts with separate limits. A common strategy is to contribute enough to your 401(k) to capture the employer match, then max out a Roth IRA, then go back and fill up the remaining 401(k) space.
What’s the 5-year rule for Roth IRAs?
To withdraw earnings tax-free, your Roth IRA must have been open for at least 5 years and you must be 59½ or older. The clock starts January 1 of the year you make your first contribution (or conversion). This only applies to earnings — you can always withdraw your contributions.
Is a Roth IRA worth it if I’m in a high tax bracket now?
It depends on where you expect your tax rate to be in retirement. If you believe tax rates will rise or you’ll have high retirement income, paying tax now at known rates and getting tax-free withdrawals later could be advantageous. Many high earners use the backdoor Roth even at top brackets for the no-RMD and estate planning benefits.
What happens to my Roth IRA when I die?
Beneficiaries inherit the account tax-free. Spouses can treat it as their own Roth IRA. Non-spouse beneficiaries must generally empty the account within 10 years under the SECURE Act, but distributions remain tax-free — making it one of the best assets to leave to heirs.