There isn't really a single correct answer to this question, in part because tax brackets change annually, are different for married vs. single people, etc. So your answer is going to be different depending on whether you want to retire in 20 years or 30, whether you're single but hope to be married when you retire, whether your spouse has or is going to have income, whether you think major tax legislation is likely to become law before you retire, etc. You kind of have to ballpark it no matter what, given all of those factors.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Apr 24, 2023 2:49 amCould you elaborate? What are the break-even points here? At this risk of sounding financially illiterate, I have no sense of retirement age/annual expenditure and what it means in terms of what account to use.Wanderingdrock wrote: ↑Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:24 amGenerally the argument in favor of traditional is that you're probably in a higher tax bracket in your earning years than during retirement, so you're getting the advantage of that arbitrage. However, if you think you're going to reach retirement age rich enough to have significant taxable income, then maybe paying taxes on your income now (particularly as a junior associate) makes sense, with the freedom and flexibility of having tax free money in a Roth account later.
But you can look up the tax brackets now, see which one you're in, and kind of guess what you think you'll be in when you retire and begin pulling funds from your retirement accounts. Chances are, though, that you'll put yourself in the best situation by maxing traditional contributions and then doing Roth.