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Financebrokerage account vs IRARoth IRA contribution limits 2026IRA vs brokerage tax advantages

Brokerage Account vs IRA: Which Opens First?

Updated May 11, 2026: refreshed all market anchors to live FRED data (10-year Treasury 4.41%, Fed funds 3.64%, VIX 17.19, S&P 500 at 7,399), added a Tax-Drag Math section modelling $50K and $200K portfolios across the 0%, 15%, and 20% long-term capital gains brackets, and added a five-scenario Decision Framework for when a brokerage account legitimately beats a Roth IRA. Nearly half of American households own zero retirement accounts. The other half argue endlessly about which account to fund first. Here is the straightforward answer: it depends on exactly three things — your tax bracket today, your tax bracket in retirement, and whether you need the money before 59 and a half. A standard brokerage account and an IRA solve different problems, and opening them in the wrong order costs real money every single year you delay. With 2026 IRA contribution limits now at $7,500 (up from $7,000 in 2025), a 10-year Treasury yielding 4.41%, the VIX collapsed back to 17 after the spring volatility regime, and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act making the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act rates permanent, the math behind this decision has shifted. This guide breaks down brokerage accounts versus IRAs — Traditional and Roth — so you can decide which account deserves your next dollar. By the end you will know the precise dollar gap between funding the wrong account first at $50K, $200K, and $500K balances, and the five specific scenarios where a brokerage account legitimately beats a Roth IRA.

May 11, 2026Read More