Tax & Retirement Planning
UK
CANADA
AUSTRALIA
INDIA
What Is a Roth IRA? (Tax-Free Growth Explained)
A Roth IRA is a retirement account funded with money you’ve already paid tax on. In exchange, everything the account earns — dividends, interest, capital gains — comes out completely tax-free in retirement. Not deferred. Zero.
A Traditional IRA works the opposite way: you get a tax deduction on your contribution today, but every dollar you withdraw in retirement is taxed as ordinary income. The real question isn’t which account is “better” — it’s when you want to pay the tax bill.
Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA: The Real Math
Say you’re 30 years old and contribute $6,500 to a Roth IRA this year. Growing at a 7% average annual return over 35 years, that single contribution is worth roughly $69,000 by age 65 — and every dollar of it is tax-free.
Put that same $6,500 in a Traditional IRA, and it grows to the same $69,000. But if you’re in the 22% tax bracket in retirement, you’d owe roughly $15,000 in tax on withdrawal. That’s the cost of a single year’s contribution — multiply it across 30 years of contributing and the gap becomes substantial.
Who Should Use a Roth IRA?
- Early in your career — if your income (and tax rate) is lower now than it’s likely to be later, pay the tax today while the rate is low.
- Younger investors — the longer your money compounds, the more valuable tax-free withdrawals become.
- Already maxing a workplace retirement plan — a Roth IRA is typically the next tax-advantaged account to fill.
Income Limits and the Backdoor Roth
Not everyone can contribute directly to a Roth IRA. In 2026, single filers with a modified adjusted gross income above $165,000 see their contribution limit start to phase out, and above $180,000 direct contributions aren’t allowed at all.
A “backdoor Roth IRA” lets high earners contribute to a Traditional IRA, then immediately convert it to a Roth. Conversions have no income limit — only direct contributions do.
If you already hold funds in a Traditional IRA, the IRS “pro-rata rule” can complicate a backdoor conversion and create an unexpected tax bill. Talk to a qualified tax professional before converting.
The 401k + Roth IRA Combo Strategy
Most people frame this as an either/or decision. It isn’t. The order that works for most beginners:
- Step 1 — Contribute enough to your employer’s 401k (or workplace plan) to get the full match. That’s an instant 100% return — never leave it on the table.
- Step 2 — Max out your Roth IRA. The 2026 limit is $7,000/year ($8,000 if you’re 50+).
- Step 3 — Still have money to invest? Go back to your 401k or open a taxable brokerage account.
This order works because the employer match is unbeatable, and a Roth IRA adds tax diversity — some retirement income pre-tax, some post-tax — giving you flexibility later that a single account type can’t.
Beginner’s Roth IRA Checklist
- Open an account at Vanguard, Fidelity, or Charles Schwab — takes about 15 minutes.
- Fund it — even $100 to start is fine.
- Pick one broad index fund — an S&P 500 ETF like VOO, or a total market fund like VTI. You don’t need to be a stock picker.
- Automate contributions — $100/month, $500/month, whatever is consistent. Automation removes the decision.
Roth IRA
The account covered in this guide. 2026 contribution limit: $7,000/year ($8,000 if 50+). Growth and qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free. Income limits apply to direct contributions, with a legal backdoor conversion route for high earners.
Stocks & Shares ISA
The UK’s closest equivalent is a Stocks & Shares ISA. You contribute after-tax income (up to £20,000/year), and all growth, dividends, and withdrawals are entirely tax-free — with no age restriction on when you can withdraw, unlike a Roth IRA’s retirement framing.
TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account)
Canada’s TFSA works similarly to a Roth IRA — after-tax contributions, tax-free growth, and tax-free withdrawals at any time. Unused contribution room carries forward every year, which rewards starting early even with small amounts.
Superannuation (Voluntary Contributions)
Australia’s system runs through superannuation. Voluntary after-tax (non-concessional) contributions grow in a low-tax environment, and withdrawals after your preservation age are generally tax-free — though access is locked until then, unlike a Roth IRA.
PPF (Public Provident Fund)
India’s PPF carries “EEE” tax status — contributions, interest, and maturity proceeds are all tax-exempt. It has a 15-year lock-in and a lower annual contribution cap (₹1,50,000) than a Roth IRA, but offers a comparable tax-free growth structure.
Roth IRA vs Global Tax-Free Equivalents
| Country | Account | Annual Limit | Withdrawal Access | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | Roth IRA | $7,000 ($8,000 50+) | Age 59½ for full tax-free growth | Tax-free growth & withdrawal |
| UK | Stocks & Shares ISA | £20,000 | Any time | Tax-free growth & withdrawal |
| Canada | TFSA | ~CAD $7,000 (rolling room) | Any time | Tax-free growth & withdrawal |
| Australia | Superannuation (voluntary) | Varies by cap type | Preservation age | Low-tax growth, tax-free after preservation age |
| India | PPF | ₹1,50,000 | 15-year lock-in | Tax-free (EEE status) |
Tax-Free Growth Estimator
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