FinspireFinspire Solutions
RetirementAug 10, 2023 · 7 min read

IUL vs Roth IRA: Which Wins?

Both offer tax-free income in retirement, but they work very differently. Here's how to choose the right one.

Pranav Desai, Founder and Licensed Insurance Agent at Finspire Solutions
Founder & Licensed Insurance Agent · Finspire Solutions

Indexed Universal Life (IUL) and the Roth IRA are both prized for the same reason: tax-free income later. But they are built differently, and for most people the honest answer is not "either/or", it is "in what order."

The Roth IRA

  • Funded with after-tax dollars; qualified growth and withdrawals are tax-free
  • No lifetime RMDs for the original owner
  • 2024 contribution limit is $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+), and high earners are phased out by income
  • Simple, low-cost, fully invested, and fully exposed to market losses

Indexed Universal Life

  • Permanent life insurance with cash value linked to an index and a 0% floor
  • No IRS income limits and no set contribution cap (within IRS funding rules)
  • Tax-free access to cash value via policy loans, plus a tax-free death benefit
  • Costs of insurance and caps on growth are the trade-off for the protection

How to choose

If you qualify for a Roth and want low-cost market growth, fund the Roth first, it is hard to beat. If you are a high earner phased out of the Roth, want downside protection, need more tax-free capacity than the Roth allows, or want a death benefit and legacy component, IUL can extend your tax-free bucket where the Roth stops.

The wealthiest retirement plans usually use both: the Roth for efficient growth, the IUL for protected, uncapped-contribution tax-free income and legacy. The right split depends on your income, health, and time horizon, which is exactly the conversation to have before you commit.

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This article is general educational information, not tax, legal, investment, or individualized insurance advice. Rules and figures change; verify current details with a qualified professional, IRS.gov, or Medicare.gov before acting.