Do 401(k) Transfer From Job to Job? | Rules That Save Taxes

Most plans don’t move automatically; you choose a rollover or transfer to keep the money tax-deferred.

When you switch jobs, your 401(k) doesn’t follow you like a direct deposit. It stays with the old plan until you tell it where to go. That choice can save you taxes, save you fees, or create a mess if you pick the wrong path.

This article walks through what happens in practice to your balance, the safest ways to move it, and the common traps—like 20% withholding and the 60-day clock—so you can keep your retirement money working.

What Happens To Your 401(k) After You Leave

After your last day, your account normally remains in the former employer’s plan. You still own your vested money. You just stop new payroll contributions, and some plan features may change.

Vesting And Employer Match

Your own contributions are yours. Employer match can be partly unvested based on the plan’s schedule. If you leave before you’re fully vested, the unvested slice can be forfeited back into the plan.

Small Balances And Forced Moves

Plans can push small balances out if you don’t respond. The IRS explains that tiny accounts may be cashed out, and certain small balances may be rolled into an IRA in your name under plan rules. That default IRA can come with fees or a default cash position, so it’s smart to track it down quickly. IRS rollover rules for retirement plan distributions summarize the mechanics.

Transferring A 401(k) From Job To Job Without Tax Trouble

A 401(k) can move to a new employer plan or to an IRA. The cleanest move is a direct rollover, where the money goes plan-to-plan (or plan-to-IRA) without passing through your hands.

An indirect rollover—where you receive the money first—can still work, but it adds two risks: a tight deadline and tax withholding.

Direct Rollover To A New Employer’s Plan

If your new plan accepts rollovers, a direct rollover can consolidate everything into one workplace account. Not every plan accepts rollovers, and some accept only certain money sources, so confirm the policy before you start.

Direct Rollover To An IRA

A direct rollover to a traditional IRA keeps pre-tax money tax-deferred. A rollover to a Roth IRA is a conversion and usually creates taxable income that year. Many people like IRAs for broader investment choice, yet the fee schedule varies by provider.

FINRA pushes firms to treat rollover recommendations with care and to weigh factors like fees and services. Those same comparison points help you pressure-test your own decision. FINRA Regulatory Notice 13-45 on IRA rollovers lays out that focus.

Indirect Rollover (Money Paid To You)

If the plan pays the distribution to you, the IRS gives you 60 days to roll it into another plan or IRA. Miss that window and the distribution can become taxable, plus a 10% penalty may apply if you’re under 59½ and no exception fits. IRS termination-of-employment rollover guidance explains the timing.

On top of that, eligible rollover distributions paid to you are commonly subject to 20% federal withholding. To roll over the full balance, you must replace the withheld amount with other cash when you redeposit. If you don’t, the missing amount is treated as a distribution.

How To Pick The Right Home For Your Money

Start with four questions: What are the fees? What are the investment options? Do you need a loan option? Are there special tax angles tied to your account?

Fees: Compare The Whole Stack

Look past the fund list. Employer plans can charge plan-level fees. IRAs can charge account fees, fund fees, and trading costs. Get the fee disclosure from the old plan and the new plan, then compare it to the IRA provider’s schedule.

Investment Options: Menu Quality Beats Menu Size

A huge menu isn’t automatically better. If your old plan offers low-cost index funds and a good target-date series, leaving money there can be fine. If the menu is expensive or thin, rolling out can make sense.

Loans And Access Rules

If you have a 401(k) loan, leaving the job can trigger a repayment deadline under plan rules. If you can’t repay, the unpaid balance can be treated as a distribution and taxed. If keeping loan access matters, rolling into a new employer plan can be a better fit than moving to an IRA.

Sales Pressure And Conflicts

Rollover suggestions can come with conflicts when the person giving the pitch earns more if your money leaves the plan. The Department of Labor’s Prohibited Transaction Exemption 2020-02 spells out conditions for investment-advice fiduciaries who receive compensation tied to rollover advice, including best-interest standards and disclosures. DOL FAQs on PTE 2020-02 explains the guardrails.

Comparison Table: Options After A Job Change

This table covers the choices that show up most often. The “watchouts” column is where people get hit, so read it with care.

Option Good Fit Watchouts
Leave it in the old 401(k) Low fees, good funds, strong plan features No new contributions; plan may force small balances out; harder to track over time
Roll into your new 401(k) You want one workplace account and possible loan access New plan may reject rollovers or restrict money types; menu may be weaker
Direct rollover to a traditional IRA You want broader choice and easier consolidation Fees vary; creditor protection rules differ by state; IRA balance can affect certain tax strategies
Direct rollover to a Roth IRA You’re converting to Roth and can pay the tax from cash Conversion adds taxable income this year; timing rules can limit early access
Indirect rollover Direct rollover isn’t available due to plan processing limits 60-day deadline; 20% withholding; missing the redeposit creates taxable income
Cash out Emergency only Income tax due; 10% penalty may apply; large retirement setback
Split move (part to plan, part to IRA) You want employer-plan features for some money and IRA choice for the rest More accounts to track; confirm each destination accepts each money source

Steps For A Direct Rollover That Stays Clean

A direct rollover is the lowest-drama path. The goal is simple: keep the check payable to the receiving trustee, track it, then invest the cash once it lands.

Start With A Source Breakdown

Ask the old plan for a breakdown of pre-tax, Roth, match, and after-tax sources. That prevents mixing money types in the wrong destination and makes tax reporting smoother.

Confirm Acceptance, Then Start The Paperwork

Get the receiving plan’s rollover form or open the IRA first. Confirm the exact payee name and mailing address. If a check is mailed to you for forwarding, make sure it’s payable to the receiving trustee “for benefit of” you, not payable to you.

Reinvest Promptly

Transfers often land in a cash sweep position. Log in and pick your investments so the rollover doesn’t stall in cash by accident.

Table: One-Page Rollover Checklist

Work through this list once, then file it with your confirmation emails and final statements.

Step What You Need Finish Line
Confirm vested balance Latest statement; vesting percentage Vested amount matches plan records
List money sources Pre-tax, Roth, match, after-tax breakdown You know which destination fits each source
Compare fees and funds Old plan fee disclosure; new plan fees; IRA fee schedule You can name the main fees you’ll pay
Set destination New plan rollover rules or IRA account number Destination confirms it accepts your rollover
Request direct rollover Payee name; addresses; forms; account numbers Transfer is initiated and trackable
Verify deposit Confirmation email or posted transaction Balance shows in the receiving account
Invest the cash Your target allocation Cash position is intentional, not default
Update beneficiaries Current beneficiary details Beneficiary form is saved on the new account

Edge Cases Worth A Quick Pause

Two details deserve extra care: Roth money and after-tax contributions. Roth 401(k) dollars should land in a Roth IRA or a plan that accepts Roth rollovers. After-tax contributions have a basis, while earnings are pre-tax, so a sloppy move can blur the paperwork.

If your plan holds a lot of employer stock, there can be special tax treatment called net unrealized appreciation (NUA) in some distributions. If company stock is a large share of your balance, read the plan’s distribution rules before you move anything.

A Practical Wrap-Up: The Choice Most People Regret Least

If you want the lowest risk of tax trouble, choose a direct rollover, keep the check payable to the receiving trustee, and reinvest promptly. If your old plan is low cost and easy to manage, leaving it can still be a solid choice. The one move that tends to bite people is taking the money into their own hands and letting the clock or withholding do damage.

References & Sources