Plan 003 Roadmap
BMT Tax Research Team avatar
BMT Tax Research Team Reviewed by CPA · Feb 2026

Tax-Free Wealth Roadmap: Roth IRA, Traditional, & HSA

Building wealth isn’t just about earning more; it’s about keeping more. This roadmap combines the three most powerful tax shelters—Roth IRA, Traditional IRA, and HSA—into a single, cohesive strategy for maximum efficiency.

⚡ 30-Second Summary

  • Strategy: Prioritize HSA (Triple Tax) → Roth (Tax-Free Growth) → Traditional (Tax Deduction).
  • Target: Investors who want to minimize lifetime taxes, not just this year’s taxes.
  • Warning: High earners (> $161k single) must use the “Backdoor” method for Roth access.

Strategic Overview

01. The Core Choice: Tax Now vs. Tax Later

Scale balancing immediate tax deduction vs future tax-free growth Figure 1: The eternal trade-off—Deduction Now (Traditional) vs. Tax-Free Later (Roth)

The first decision every investor faces is the “Tax Timing” question. Do you want the tax break today (Traditional) or forever (Roth)? The answer depends entirely on your current marginal tax bracket versus your expected bracket in retirement.

⚖️ Decision Matrix: What should I pick?

  • Low Bracket (10-12%): Go 100% Roth. Paying 12% tax now to lock in tax-free growth forever is a steal.
  • High Bracket (32-37%): Go Traditional. Taking a 37% deduction today is instant guaranteed return.
  • Middle Bracket (22-24%): Split Strategy. Hedge your bets by having both taxable and tax-free buckets.

Roth IRA

  • Tax Timing: Pay tax now, tax-free later.
  • Best For: Young earners, low tax brackets.
  • Flexibility: Principal can be withdrawn anytime.
DEDUCTION

Traditional IRA

  • Tax Timing: Deduct now, pay tax later.
  • Best For: Peak earners, high tax brackets.
  • RMDs: Mandatory withdrawals at age 73+.

02. The “Super-Roth”: HSA Strategy

Many ignore the Health Savings Account (HSA), thinking it’s just for doctor visits. In reality, it is the most powerful retirement vehicle in the tax code—superior even to the Roth IRA because it avoids FICA taxes (if done via payroll) and income taxes.

Why it wins: The HSA is the only account with a “Triple Tax Advantage.”

💎 The Triple Tax Crown

  • Contribution: 100% Tax Deductible (Like Traditional).
  • Growth: 100% Tax-Free (Like Roth).
  • Withdrawal: 100% Tax-Free for medical expenses.

📊 The Math: Spending vs. Investing

Scenario: You have a $3,000 medical bill today. You have the cash to pay it.

  • Option A (Spender): You pay with HSA. You save the tax today, but your account balance drops to $0.
  • Option B (Investor): You pay with cash and leave $3,000 in the HSA invested in the S&P 500 (assuming 8% return).
  • 20 Years Later: That $3,000 grows to ~$14,000 tax-free. You can then reimburse yourself for the original $3,000 bill and keep the $11,000 profit for retirement.

03. Breaking the Ceiling: The Backdoor Roth

If you earn over $161,000 (Single) or $240,000 (Married) in 2026, the IRS forbids you from opening a Roth IRA directly. However, there is a legal bypass.

Opening a massive bank vault door representing financial freedom Figure 2: The “Backdoor” strategy unlocks Roth benefits for high earners.

The Strategy: You contribute to a Traditional IRA (non-deductible) and immediately “convert” it to Roth. This is called the Backdoor Roth IRA.

⚠️ Critical Warning: The Pro-Rata Rule

You cannot do a Backdoor Roth if you have any pre-tax money in any Traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA. The IRS views all your IRAs as one big bucket.

Action Required: Before Dec 31st, you must move all pre-tax IRA money into a current employer’s 401(k) (Reverse Rollover) to empty your IRA “bucket.” Otherwise, you will face a surprise tax bill.

04. Execution Roadmap

Execution Rule: Order matters. Don’t just save randomly; follow the “Waterfall” to maximize mathematical efficiency.

The “Waterfall” Protocol

Step 1. The Match (Free Money)

Contribute to your employer 401(k) only up to the match percentage. This is a guaranteed 100% return.

Step 2. The HSA (Super-Roth)

Max out HSA if eligible ($4,300 Single / $8,550 Family). Treat this as a retirement account, not a spending account.

Step 3. The Roth (Tax-Free)

Max out Roth IRA ($7,000). If income is too high, execute the Backdoor strategy immediately after contribution.

Step 4. The Remainder

Go back to your 401(k) or Solo 401(k) and fill up the remaining space up to the annual limit ($23,500+).

Next: Check your eligibility for each account type.

References (Primary Sources)

  • IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to IRAs)
  • IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs)
  • IRS Publication 969 (HSAs and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans)
  • IRS.gov – Retirement Plans FAQ
✓ Tax Rules Verified: Feb 2026 ✓ Sources: IRS.gov ✓ Next Review: May 2026