It depends on your contribution goals, retirement horizon, and estimates of your retirement tax rate. The simplest aspect to consider it that while the Traditional IRA may or may not be more tax advantaged depending on your situation, the Roth is still tax advantaged compared to normal investments, and you can contribute more to the Roth IRA than the Traditional IRA.
"Back of the envelope" example:
Pre-tax income limit of a Traditional IRA = $5,500
Pre-tax income limit of a Roth IRA in your situation = ($5,500/(1 - .25)) = $7333.33
Both will result in $5,500 in your IRA account, but the Roth contribution will never be taxed again as it was contributed post-tax, which is analogous to being allowed a larger contribution.
However, other factors may outweigh this consideration.
To fully evaluate the situation, you should estimate your retirement income/tax rate/date and prepare a scenario analysis of Roth vs. Traditional (you could reuse this spreadsheet each year).