What is higher priority for 24yo, Roth IRA or 403b (job)
Last updated: April 1, 2026
Key Facts
- Employer 403b matches typically represent 3-6% immediate returns—impossible to achieve elsewhere
- Roth IRA contributions ($7,000/year in 2024) grow tax-free forever, with tax-free withdrawals in retirement
- 403b funds are locked until age 59.5 with few exceptions; Roth IRA allows penalty-free withdrawal of contributions anytime
- Roth conversions become difficult at higher incomes, making early maxing out more valuable at age 24
- Combined tax savings: a 24-year-old in the 22% bracket investing $15,500 annually saves ~$3,410/year in current taxes
Employer Match Priority
The first rule of retirement planning is capturing free money. If your employer offers a 403b match, contribute enough to get the full match before considering a Roth IRA. A typical 4-6% match represents an immediate 100% return on your investment—impossible to replicate in any market. Leaving this on the table is like declining a raise.
Why Roth IRA Comes Second
After securing your full employer match, the Roth IRA becomes the next priority for most 24-year-olds. At your age, you have 41 years until retirement, allowing compound growth to work dramatically in your favor. Unlike traditional IRAs, Roth contributions grow entirely tax-free. When you withdraw funds in retirement, both contributions and earnings come out without any income tax. For someone in their 20s in a moderate tax bracket, this tax-free growth advantage is typically worth more than the modest immediate deduction from a traditional 403b.
Flexibility Advantages of Roth
A 24-year-old faces life uncertainties: career changes, relocations, emergencies. The Roth IRA provides flexibility that 403b plans cannot match. You can withdraw your contributions (not earnings) penalty-free at any time, making it partially accessible if needed. The 403b, meanwhile, typically locks your funds until age 59.5, with limited exception allowing hardship withdrawals.
Contribution Limits and Income Considerations
The annual Roth IRA contribution limit is $7,000 (2024). A 403b limit is $69,000 (2024) but includes employer contributions. For a 24-year-old earning a typical salary, maxing the Roth IRA ($7,000) plus getting full employer match ($5,000-$8,000) totals $12,000-$15,000 annually—highly achievable with disciplined saving. The Roth IRA income phase-out ($146,000-$161,000 in 2024) won't affect you for years, but higher earners later face restrictions on direct Roth contributions.
Recommended Strategy
Contribute to your 403b enough to capture the full employer match (typically 4-6% of salary). Then contribute $7,000 annually to a Roth IRA. If you have additional savings capacity beyond the Roth limit, contribute more to the 403b. This balanced approach maximizes tax advantages while maintaining flexibility and ensuring you never miss free employer money.
| Feature | 403b | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Employer Match | Available (3-6% typical) | Not available |
| Annual Limit (2024) | $69,000 | $7,000 |
| Tax on Growth | Taxed on withdrawal | Tax-free forever |
| Withdrawal Age | 59.5 (some exceptions) | Contributions anytime, earnings at 59.5 |
| Flexibility | Limited access | High flexibility |
| Income Limits | None | $146-161k (phases out) |
Related Questions
Should a 24-year-old prioritize paying off student loans or investing in retirement?
If your employer offers matching, always capture it first—it's a guaranteed return. Simultaneously pay minimums on student loans with interest below 5-6%. Once matching is maxed, tackle higher-interest debt before aggressive retirement contributions.
What's the difference between Roth IRA and Roth 403b?
Roth 403b is employer-sponsored with the same contribution limit as traditional 403b ($69,000). Roth IRA is individual ($7,000 limit). Both grow tax-free, but Roth 403b requires distributions at 72, while Roth IRA has no lifetime distributions.
Can you contribute to both a 403b and Roth IRA in the same year?
Yes. The $69,000 403b limit and $7,000 Roth IRA limit are separate. You can max both if your income supports it, which is the ideal strategy for building retirement wealth.
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Sources
- IRS - Roth IRA InformationPublic Domain
- IRS - 403(b) PlansPublic Domain
- SEC - Retirement Plans GuidePublic Domain