Roth IRA Growth From Age 45 to 60
Based on default contribution and return assumptions. Use the calculator below to adjust any input.
Tax-Free Balance at Age 60
$231,084
Example
Starting at age 45 with $20,000 saved and contributing $7,000 per year, your Roth IRA could grow to approximately $231,084 tax-free by age 60 — $30,301 more than the same contributions would be worth in a comparable taxable brokerage account at a 22% marginal tax rate.
Your Contributions
$125,000
Investment Growth
$106,084
Vs. Taxable Account
+$30,301
Years to Grow
15 yrs
Balance at retirement, split by source
- Your Contributions: $125,000
- Investment Growth: $106,084
What is a Roth IRA?
A Roth IRA is a type of Individual Retirement Arrangement that provides tax-free growth and tax-free income in retirement. Contributions are made with after-tax dollars, meaning you get no upfront tax deduction, but qualified withdrawals — including all investment growth — are never taxed again.
This is the opposite tradeoff of a traditional IRA or 401(k), which give you a tax deduction today but tax withdrawals in retirement. Because a Roth's growth is never taxed, it tends to be most valuable for savers who expect to be in the same or a higher tax bracket by the time they retire.
Roth IRA vs. taxable brokerage account, by age
Year-by-Year Balance Schedule
| Age | Roth IRA Balance | Taxable Account Balance |
|---|---|---|
| 45 | $20,000 | $20,000 |
| 46 | $28,400 | $28,092 |
| 47 | $37,388 | $36,626 |
| 48 | $47,005 | $45,626 |
| 49 | $57,296 | $55,117 |
| 50 | $68,306 | $65,126 |
| 51 | $80,088 | $75,682 |
| 52 | $92,694 | $86,814 |
| 53 | $106,182 | $98,554 |
| 54 | $120,615 | $110,935 |
| 55 | $136,058 | $123,992 |
| 56 | $152,582 | $137,762 |
| 57 | $170,263 | $152,284 |
| 58 | $189,181 | $167,599 |
| 59 | $209,424 | $183,750 |
| 60 | $231,084 | $200,783 |
How Is Roth IRA Growth Calculated?
Each year, your contribution (capped at the IRS annual limit) is added to your balance, which then grows at your expected annual investment return with no tax drag. For comparison, this calculator also grows the same contributions in a taxable account, where investment gains are reduced each year by your marginal tax rate.
Why Tax-Free Growth Compounds So Powerfully
In a taxable account, a portion of every year's gain is lost to taxes before it can compound further. In a Roth IRA, the full gain keeps compounding untaxed for decades, which is why the gap between a Roth balance and an equivalent taxable balance widens every year, especially over long time horizons.
Contribution Limits Are Lower Than a 401(k)
The IRS caps Roth IRA contributions well below 401(k) limits — $7,500 per year for savers under 50, and $8,600 for those 50 and older, for 2026. High earners may also be phased out of contributing directly to a Roth IRA above certain income thresholds.
Roth vs. Traditional: It's About When You Pay Tax
A Roth IRA taxes contributions today and nothing later; a traditional IRA deducts contributions today but taxes withdrawals later. Choosing between them usually comes down to whether you expect your tax rate to be higher now or in retirement — Roth tends to win when you expect rates to rise or your income to grow substantially.
Example — Your Current Inputs
Starting at age 45 with $20,000 saved and contributing $7,000 per year, your Roth IRA could grow to approximately $231,084 tax-free by age 60 — $30,301 more than the same contributions would be worth in a comparable taxable brokerage account at a 22% marginal tax rate.
Additional Example — Starting at 25
A 25-year-old with no starting balance who contributes $6,500 a year at a 7% average return would have roughly $1.16 million saved, tax-free, by age 65 — compared to about $890,000 in an equivalent taxable account at a 22% marginal tax rate, a difference of over $270,000 purely from tax treatment.
About These Parameters
- Current Age & Retirement Age
- These set the number of years your Roth IRA has left to grow tax-free. Starting even a few years earlier meaningfully increases the final balance due to compounding.
- Current Balance & Annual Contribution
- Your starting balance grows alongside new contributions, which are automatically capped at the IRS annual limit for your age each year.
- Expected Annual Return
- Should reflect your actual investment mix — stock-heavy portfolios have historically returned more on average, with more year-to-year volatility, than bond-heavy ones.
- Marginal Tax Rate
- Used only for the taxable-account comparison, to estimate how much of that account's annual gains would be lost to income or capital gains tax each year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I withdraw Roth IRA contributions early?
Yes — you can withdraw your original contributions (not earnings) at any time, tax-free and penalty-free, since you already paid tax on that money. Withdrawing earnings before age 59½ generally triggers taxes and a 10% penalty, with some exceptions.
Is there an income limit to contribute to a Roth IRA?
Yes — the ability to contribute directly phases out above certain modified adjusted gross income thresholds, which rise slightly most years for inflation. High earners sometimes use a "backdoor Roth" conversion strategy instead.
Does a Roth IRA have required minimum distributions?
No — unlike traditional IRAs and 401(k)s, Roth IRAs have no required minimum distributions during the original owner's lifetime, making them useful for legacy and estate planning as well as retirement income.