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The $7,000 Roth IRA Myth, Why It Is a Bigger Deal Than People Think
Many people look at the $7,000 annual Roth IRA limit and immediately dismiss it. Too small, not impactful, not worth the hassle. Big mistake! Let’s use a simple example. A husband and wife each contribute $7,000 a year, so $14,000 total, from age 30 to 60. That is 30 years of steady investing at an assumed 8 percent return. Total contributions come to $420,000. By age 60, that Roth balance grows to about $1.6 million. Roughly $1.16 million of that is pure growth, and it comes out tax free. If you live in a no state tax environment, you just avoided federal long term capital gains and the extra 3.8 percent surtax on investment income, already a meaningful number. Now layer in a high tax state. At an 8 percent state tax rate, that same $1.16 million of gains would have faced another large haircut (actually like $411K tax savings). The Roth just simply protects such a big chunk of your gain. The following are results from our Investment Return Calculator: And it does not stop there. Most people do not touch Roth money first. They let it keep compounding while spending from pre tax or taxable accounts. Let that same Roth grow another 10 years, untouched, at the same 8 percent. By age 70, it is worth roughly $3.9 million. Now you are looking at close to $3.3 million of gains that will never be taxed. In a zero state tax scenario, that already avoids a large federal tax bill. In an 8 percent state tax scenario, the difference becomes even more dramatic: a $1 million savings. This is where people underestimate the impact. The contribution feels small. The tax free compounding over decades is not. This is real money, not theoretical. High income earners often respond with another objection. Fine, but my income is too high to contribute to a Roth IRA anyway. Not really. This is where the backdoor Roth comes in. The process is simple in concept. You contribute to a traditional IRA using after tax dollars, since there is no income limit on contributions. Then you convert that contribution to a Roth IRA. If done correctly and promptly, there is little to no tax cost. The key rule is that you cannot have other pre tax IRA balances sitting around, including SEP or SIMPLE IRAs, or the conversion becomes partially taxable. Many people solve this by rolling old IRAs into a 401(k) first. Once set up, this becomes a repeatable annual process. So the real question is not whether the Roth is too small to matter. It is whether you want to keep paying taxes on millions of dollars of future growth, or quietly opt out while you still can.
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Ultimate 2026 Retirement Playbook for 401(k)s & IRAs
Extremely use tips to maximizing 401(k) match, RMDs and IRA tactics
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Retirement Plan Contribution Limits in 2026
Comprehensive retirement plans (401(k), 403(b, 457(b), Solo 401(k), SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, IRA, Roth IRA, TSP, HSA etc.) contribution limits for 2026
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Retirement Plan Contribution Limits in 2025
Comprehensive retirement plans (401(k), 403(b, 457(b), Solo 401(k), SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, IRA, Roth IRA, TSP, HSA etc.) contribution limits for 2025




