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Make a 5-slide Visual Explainer titled "Roth vs Traditional IRA: 5 Minutes to De

Generated time: May 21 · 5:03 AM
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Prompt

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Make a 5-slide Visual Explainer titled "Roth vs Traditional IRA: 5 Minutes to Decide". Slide 1: opening — "Two IRAs, which one's for me?" An image of a family at the kitchen table discussing finances. Slide 2: Traditional IRA = pay tax later. Contributions are pre-tax, the money compounds tax-free, you pay tax at withdrawal at your retirement tax rate. Slide 3: Roth IRA = pay tax now. Contributions are post-tax, money compounds tax-free, withdrawals at retirement are 100% tax-free. Slide 4: two parallel timelines — a hypothetical couple, age 35, contributing $6500/year for 30 years. If current rate 22% = retirement rate 22%: tie. If retirement rate lower: Traditional wins. If retirement rate higher: Roth wins. Slide 5: how to choose — young + low income years = Roth; high earning years = Traditional; unsure = open both, split contributions. Closing takeaway: the decision isn't "which is better" — it's "will your future tax rate be higher or lower than today's". Requirements: - Slide 4 is the core; two parallel timelines with money-bag icons showing amounts - Style: clean infographic + cartoon family characters - English, avoid tax-law jargon

reference-imageReference Image1-3 minGPT Image 216:9English

Script & Visuals

Choosing between a Roth and Traditional IRA can feel overwhelming, but the decision comes down to one simple question about your future taxes. Many people wonder which retirement account type actually works better for their situation—Traditional, where you pay taxes later, or Roth, where you pay taxes now. Here's how they work. With a Traditional IRA, your contributions are pre-tax, meaning you get an immediate tax deduction.

Your money grows tax-free, and you pay taxes only when you withdraw it in retirement at whatever your tax rate is then. With a Roth IRA, it's the opposite.

You contribute post-tax dollars—no immediate deduction—but your money compounds completely tax-free, and every withdrawal in retirement is 100% tax-free. Now here's the key: imagine a couple at age 35, contributing $6,500 per year for 30 years. If their tax rate stays the same, it's a tie.

If their retirement tax rate is lower than today, Traditional wins because they'll owe less tax later. If their retirement tax rate is higher, Roth wins because they locked in today's lower rate. The real choice is predicting whether your future tax rate will be higher or lower than now.

If you're young with low income, Roth usually makes sense. If you're in high earning years, Traditional often works better. Still unsure? You can split contributions between both. The key is thinking ahead about your taxes.