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Rollover IRA: How It Works

Rollover IRA: How It Works
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Rollover IRA: How It Works
Many, or all, of the products featured on this page are from our advertising partners who compensate us when you take certain actions on our website or click to take an action on their website. However, this does not influence our evaluations. Our opinions are our own. Here is a list of our partners and here's how we make money.
The investing information provided on this page is for educational purposes only. NerdWallet, Inc. does not offer advisory or brokerage services, nor does it recommend or advise investors to buy or sell particular stocks, securities or other investments.
What is a rollover IRA?
Why consider a rollover IRA?
Rollover IRA: How to do it in 3 steps
1. Choose an IRA account type
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Traditional IRAs can net you a tax deduction on contributions in the year they are made, but withdrawals in retirement are taxed. If you go this route, you won't pay taxes on the directly rolled-over amount until retirement.
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Roth IRAs don’t offer an immediate tax deduction for contributions. Rolling into a Roth means you’ll pay taxes on the rolled amount, unless you’re rolling over a Roth 401(k). The upside is that qualified withdrawals in retirement are tax-free after age 59½ and you've held the account for at least five years.
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If you want to keep things simple and preserve the tax treatment of a 401(k), a traditional IRA is an easy choice.
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A Roth IRA may be good if you wish to minimize your tax bill in retirement. The caveat is that you'll likely face a big tax bill today if you go with a Roth — unless your old account was a Roth 401(k).
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If you need cash from the rollover to foot the tax bill today, a Roth IRA could open you up to even more tax complications.
2. Choose a rollover IRA provider
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An online broker may be a good fit if you want to manage your investments yourself. Consider looking for a provider that charges low or no account fees, offers a wide selection of low-cost investments and has a reputation for good customer service.
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A robo-advisor may make sense if you want someone to manage your money. A robo-advisor will choose investments and rebalance your portfolio over time — for a fraction of the cost of a human advisor. Check out our explainer on robo-advisors to see if it’s the right choice for you.
3. Move the money
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Contact your former employer’s plan administrator, complete a few forms, and ask it to send a check for your account balance to your new account provider.
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The new account provider should give you pretty explicit instructions for how the check should be made out, what information to include — such as your new IRA account number — and where it should be sent.
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Some providers may allow you to wire the funds instead.
Tax implications for rollover IRAs
1. How long you have to roll over a 401(k): The 60-day rule
2. Taxes are withheld
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For example, say your total 401(k) account balance was $20,000 and your former employer sends you a check for $16,000 (that’s the full account balance, minus 20%). Assuming you’re not planning to go the Roth route, you'd need to come up with $4,000 so that you can deposit the full $20,000 into your IRA.
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At tax time, the IRS will see you rolled over the entire retirement account and will refund you the amount that was withheld in taxes.
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You also avoid a 10% penalty. On the other hand, if you had only put $16,000 into the IRA, the IRS would consider that an early withdrawal of the remaining $4,000. You’d owe the early withdrawal penalty on that $4,000 — and, believe it or not, income tax, too.
Can you contribute to a rollover IRA?
Frequently asked questions
Which IRA rollover investments should I choose?
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For most people, the best choice is to select a few low-cost index mutual funds or ETFs, based on the asset allocation — meaning the way you divide your money among stocks, bonds and cash — that makes sense for your age and risk tolerance.
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If you’re not up for that, there are hands-off options: If you were invested in a target-date fund in your 401(k), you can find a similar (and perhaps less expensive) fund for your IRA at a broker.
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If you opened your new account at a robo-advisor, that company’s computer algorithms will select and rebalance your investments based on questions you answer about your timeline and stomach for risk.