529 vs. Roth IRA for Kids: Which Long-Term Account Wins?
Both are tax-advantaged. They optimize for completely different futures — here's the honest tradeoff.
When parents start thinking about long-term investing for kids, the two most common starting points are a 529 plan and a Roth IRA. Both are tax-advantaged. Both have decades to compound. And they look superficially similar.
They're not. They optimize for completely different futures, and the choice between them is mostly a question about what you think your kid will need money for at 25.
The one-sentence summary
A 529 is a college savings account. A Roth IRA is a retirement account. The 529 assumes your kid is going to use the money in 10–18 years. The Roth IRA assumes they won't touch it for 50+.
Side-by-side
| Feature | 529 Plan | Roth IRA (Custodial) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual contribution cap | Up to $18,000+ per year (gift-tax limit) | $7,000 — but only up to the child's earned income |
| Tax treatment | Tax-free growth + tax-free withdrawals for education | Tax-free growth + tax-free withdrawals after 59½ |
| What it can pay for | Education only (with penalty exceptions) | Retirement, with first-home and education exceptions |
| Earned-income requirement | None | Required — child must have W-2 or self-employment income |
| Best for | College/grad school | Lifelong wealth-building |
| Flexibility | Beneficiary can be changed to another family member | Locked to the child whose income funded it |
The earned-income gotcha
A custodial Roth IRA can only be funded with money the child earned. Allowance doesn't count. Money you give them as a gift doesn't count. The IRS wants real, documented income — typically a W-2 from a part-time job or self-employment income from a small business (lawn-mowing, babysitting, modeling, content creation).
For young kids, this is the #1 reason families skip the Roth IRA route. A 6-year-old rarely has earned income. By 14 or 15, when many kids start their first job, the Roth IRA suddenly becomes one of the most powerful financial moves a parent can make.
The math is brutal in a good way:
- A 14-year-old contributing $3,000/year from age 14 to 18 (5 years, $15,000 total) ends up with roughly $435,000 at age 65 at 7% returns.
- That same $15,000 contributed at age 30 instead grows to about $115,000 by 65. Same dollars in. Quarter the result.
- Time is the secret weapon. A Roth IRA started at 14 is the most overpowered move in personal finance.
The 529 case
A 529 plan optimizes for a single, very predictable expense: college. If you're confident your kid is going to college (or your state offers a deduction for 529 contributions, which most do), the 529 is hard to beat:
- You can front-load: gift up to 5 years of contributions at once without triggering gift tax.
- Many states offer a state income tax deduction on contributions.
- The new SECURE 2.0 rules let unused 529 funds roll into a Roth IRA (lifetime cap of $35,000) — so even if your kid skips college, the money isn't stranded.
- K–12 tuition (up to $10,000/year) and trade school programs now qualify too.
The Roth IRA case
The Roth IRA optimizes for the long game:
- Decades of tax-free growth. Money put in at 14 has 50+ years to compound before retirement age.
- Contributions can be withdrawn anytime, tax-free. If your kid needs the money for a down payment at 30, the contributions (not earnings) come out penalty-free.
- $10,000 first-home exception. Earnings can be used for a first home purchase without the 10% penalty.
- Education exception. Earnings can pay for qualified higher-education expenses without the early-withdrawal penalty (though they're still taxed).
Most families end up with both
The honest answer for most families: it's not a choice. It's a sequencing problem.
- From birth to age 13, fund the 529. Capture state tax deductions, build the college runway.
- The first year your kid earns real income, open the custodial Roth IRA. Match what they earn (up to the $7,000 cap) so they can experience "saving" without losing all their earnings.
- Continue the 529 in parallel as long as you can afford to.
- If college costs less than expected, the SECURE 2.0 Roth-rollover rule lets you move up to $35,000 from the 529 to the kid's Roth IRA. The two accounts essentially merge into a single long-term wealth vehicle.
Where MemoryBank fits
The case for showing both accounts to your kid through one dashboard is strongest exactly here. A 529 looks like a number on a Vanguard statement. A Roth IRA looks like a number on a Fidelity statement. Both are abstract. Neither feels like "mine" until your kid can see them growing, side by side, on a screen they own.
Showing a 14-year-old that their first $1,500 from a summer job is now $1,612 because they own 4 shares of VOO and Apple just announced earningsis the kind of moment that turns a teenager into a lifelong investor. That's the bet MemoryBank is built on.
See it in one place
MemoryBank shows your kid's UTMA, 529, Roth IRA, brokerage, and savings — across every institution — in a dashboard they can actually understand.
Related guides
Trump Accounts: Your Child Has $1,000 Waiting. Here's How to Claim It.
$1,000 federal seed accounts for kids — eligibility, deadlines, and how to claim before the window closes.
UTMA Accounts Explained: A Parent's Guide to Custodial Investing
What a UTMA is, when control passes to your kid, and how it stacks up against a 529.
Teaching Kids to Invest, By Age: From 4 to 18
Concrete, age-appropriate ways to introduce investing — from compound interest at 6 to picking their first ETF at 14.
MemoryBank is a display and education tool, not a financial advisor. Nothing here is investment, tax, or legal advice. Verify program details with the IRS, your tax advisor, or a licensed financial professional before making decisions.