If you’re leaving your job and you have a retirement plan (other than a defined benefit (pension) plan), you generally have four options for your account balance:
1. Leave your money in the plan. You may want to keep the balance in your old plan, especially if:
If your account balance is less than $5,000, your employer may require you to move it. In this case, consider rolling it over to your new employer’s plan or to an IRA.
2. Rollover to a new employer’s plan
Check if your new employer’s retirement plan allows you to move the balance from your old plan into the new plan. You should also consider the following:
3. Withdraw the balance
You can withdraw your balance by requesting a lump-sum distribution. However, you:
If you withdraw your balance, you can always decide to roll it over to a new
employer’s plan or to an IRA within 60 days of receiving the distribution. The IRS
may waive the 60-day rollover requirement in certain situations if you missed the
deadline because of circumstances beyond your control. (See FAQs: Waivers of the 60-Day Rollover Requirement)
4. Rollover to an IRA
You can roll over the old plan’s balance to a traditional or a Roth IRA. Most IRAs offer a wide range of low-cost investment options. By rolling over your plan balance to an IRA, you can consolidate all your investments into one account and track them more easily.
If you roll over to a Roth IRA, you must include the untaxed amount in your gross income for the year in which you do the rollover. Withdrawals from a Roth IRA could eventually be tax-free if you meet certain conditions.
How to roll over the balance to a new plan or an IRA?
There are two ways to move your old plan’s balance to a new plan or to an IRA. You can:
The old plan usually withholds 20 percent for federal income taxes from the distributed amount, so unless you make up the withheld amount when you deposit the distribution into the new plan or IRA, you:
If your distribution includes property, you can either roll over the property to the new plan or IRA or sell the property and roll over the proceeds. In either case, you must deposit into the new plan or IRA within 60 days of receiving the distribution or qualify for a waiver of the 60-day rollover requirement.
Below are helpful resources on retirement plans and IRAs on IRS.gov.