Browse the types of IRAs
1. Traditional IRA
- Contribution limits of $7,500 for 2026 ($8,600 if aged 50 and older). Contributions may be deductible, thus lowering your taxable income for the year. It all depends on your current income plus whether you or your spouse has a workplace retirement plan.
- Investment earnings are not taxed as long as the money remains in the protection of the account.
- Withdrawals in retirement are taxed at your tax rate at that time.
2. Roth IRA
- While contributions are not deductible — meaning there’s no upfront tax break — withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free.
- The maximum annual contribution is $7,500 for 2026 ($8,600 if aged 50 and older). There are income limits to contribute to a Roth IRA, but if you earn too much to contribute, there’s a completely legal way to open one anyway via a backdoor Roth.
- Roth IRA withdrawal rules are more lenient, allowing tax- and penalty-free withdrawals of contributions at any time. Taxes and penalties apply to withdrawing earnings before retirement, with a few exceptions.
3. SEP IRA
- Annual contribution limits are much higher than what’s allowed in other tax-favored retirement accounts — The SEP IRA contribution limit is the lesser of 25% of compensation or $72,000 in 2026.
- An employer must contribute equally (on a percentage basis of salary) to all employee accounts, including their own.
- Contribution size may vary year to year based on the business’s cash flow but must always be equal for all eligible workers.
- Employer contributions are due by the federal income tax return date (usually mid-April) or by the extension deadline if a timely extension is filed.
- Employees are not allowed to contribute to the plan via salary deferral; they must have worked for the employer in at least three of the last five years and must have earned at least $750 in compensation during the year to be eligible.
- Sole proprietors can open a SEP IRA for themselves.
- Catch-up contributions for workers 50 and older are not allowed.
4. Nondeductible IRA
- Contributions are made with after-tax dollars and, as the name makes clear, are not deductible. But ...
- You still get the perk of tax-deferred growth on earnings within the account.
- Taxes in retirement are due on any earnings growth you withdraw, but not the principal, since the account was funded with already taxed dollars.
5. Spousal IRA
- Couples must file a joint tax return and have taxable compensation to be eligible.
- Contribution limits are the same as for a traditional or Roth IRA: the nonworking spouse can contribute up to $7,500 for 2026 ($8,600 if aged 50 and older). The working spouse can contribute the same amount to their own IRA.
- The total amount contributed to both IRAs must be the lesser of your joint taxable income or double the annual IRA contribution limit.
- The account can be funded with money from either spouse’s earnings but must be opened in the nonworking spouse’s name using their Social Security number.
6. SIMPLE IRA
- Contribution limits are lower than for 401(k)s — $17,000 in 2026. Because of the Secure 2.0 Act, some plans allow for an increased contribution limit of $18,100.
- Employers are generally required to kick in a matching uniform contribution for all employees of up to 10% of compensation or a maximum of $5,000 — whichever is less. This contribution is due by the tax deadline, or extension deadline, if applicable.
- To qualify to participate in a SIMPLE IRA, an employee must have earned at least $5,000 during any two years before the current calendar year and expect to receive at least that amount in the current year.
- Unlike the SEP, catch-up contributions are allowed. People age 50 and older can make an additional SIMPLE IRA catch-up contribution of $4,000 in 2026. If you are eligible for the higher deferral limit due to the Secure 2.0 Act, that catch-up contribution limit is $3,850. The higher catch-up limit for those who are 60, 61, 62 or 63 is $5,250.
- Unlike most workplace plans, participants can roll the money from the account into a traditional IRA after two years of participation in the SIMPLE IRA plan.
- Early withdrawals from a SIMPLE IRA within the first two years of contributing to the account may be subject to an additional tax of 10% or 20% (on top of regular income taxes).
7. Self-directed IRA
- Setting a self-directed IRA requires a trustee or custodian who specializes in the less typical types of investments you’re interested in holding in the account.
- The IRS does not allow holding things like collectibles and life insurance in the account.
- There are many prohibited “self-dealing” transactions within a self-directed IRA (e.g., mowing the lawn or fixing the faucet in a rental property owned in the IRA) that the IRS deems equivalent to taking a distribution. These can trigger taxes and penalties on the entire account.
Article sources
- 1. IRS.gov. Simplified Employee Pension plan (SEP). Accessed Dec 9, 2025.
- 2. IRS.gov. Kay Bailey Hutchison Spousal IRA Limit. Accessed Dec 9, 2025.










