Are IRAs Protected From Bankruptcy? | The Rules That Shield

Most traditional and Roth IRAs are protected in U.S. bankruptcy, usually up to a federal dollar cap, with extra room for certain rollovers.

If you’re weighing bankruptcy and you have retirement money, the worry is plain: will an IRA get taken to pay creditors? In many filings, your own IRA is shielded. Still, the details matter—account type, where the money came from, and which exemption rules apply on your filing date.

This article walks through the federal rules that cover IRAs, the current cap amount, and the situations that can weaken protection. It also gives a checklist you can bring to a bankruptcy lawyer so the advice you get is based on real numbers and clean records.

How IRA Protection Works In Bankruptcy

When you file bankruptcy, your property is gathered into a legal bucket called the bankruptcy estate. You then claim exemptions—items the law lets you keep. If an asset is exempt, it stays yours as long as the exemption is claimed correctly.

Retirement accounts get special treatment. Federal bankruptcy law lets many filers exempt “retirement funds” held in certain tax-favored accounts, including IRAs. The core language and the retirement-funds exemption are in 11 U.S.C. § 522 exemptions.

Chapter 7 Versus Chapter 13: Why It Changes The Stakes

In Chapter 7, a trustee can sell non-exempt property to pay creditors. Your exemptions do a lot of the heavy lifting.

In Chapter 13, you keep property and pay through a court-approved plan, often over three to five years. Exemptions still shape the math, since non-exempt value can raise the amount you must repay.

Federal Exemptions And State Exemptions: The Choice Issue

Some states let you choose between the federal exemption list and a state list. Other states require the state list. State rules also matter for special cases like inherited IRAs, where state law may fill gaps left by federal law.

Are IRAs Protected From Bankruptcy? What The Law Covers

For most people, yes. A traditional IRA and a Roth IRA you own are usually treated as exempt retirement funds in bankruptcy, as long as the account is a tax-exempt IRA under federal tax law.

There’s a twist: the protection for IRAs is not always unlimited. A separate Bankruptcy Code provision places a dollar cap on the total value of certain IRA assets you can exempt. That cap is updated every three years and changes based on the date you file.

The Federal IRA Cap And The Current Amount

For cases filed on or after April 1, 2025, the cap in 11 U.S.C. § 522(n) is $1,711,975. The Judicial Conference published the updated figure in the Federal Register. You can see the new amount in the Federal Register notice on adjusted bankruptcy dollar amounts.

The cap applies to many IRA balances built from normal contributions. The law also carves out certain rollover dollars from the cap, which is why paperwork matters when a large IRA balance began life inside a 401(k) or similar workplace plan.

Rollover IRAs: Why Tracing Can Raise The Protected Amount

Rollover money can be treated differently when it can be traced to a qualifying workplace plan. The cleanest situation is a rollover IRA that received a direct transfer from the plan and was kept separate from later IRA contributions.

Bankruptcy courts often lean on records. If the trail is clear, the rollover portion may keep the same bankruptcy shelter it had inside the workplace plan, even if your overall IRA balance is above the cap.

Inherited IRAs: Where Federal Protection Often Stops

Inherited IRAs are a separate category. If you inherited an IRA and you are not the spouse who treated it as your own IRA, federal bankruptcy protection is much weaker. The Supreme Court held that funds in an inherited IRA are not “retirement funds” for the federal bankruptcy exemption that protects ordinary IRAs. Clark v. Rameker (2014) Supreme Court opinion is the governing case.

State exemption laws sometimes protect inherited IRAs, sometimes not. If an inherited IRA is in the picture, your state’s rules can drive the outcome.

Common Ways IRA Protection Gets Weaker

Even when an IRA is generally exempt, trustees and creditors can challenge the claim when the facts look off. These are the patterns that come up most often.

Large Last-minute Contributions

Big contributions made right before filing can trigger questions about intent. If money was shifted into an IRA after creditors started pressing, a trustee may test whether the move was meant to put cash out of reach.

Mixing Rollover Money With Normal Contributions

If a rollover IRA later receives normal IRA contributions, tracing can get messy. A clean, separate rollover account makes it easier to show which dollars came from a workplace plan.

Taking Distributions Before Filing

Once funds are paid out to you, they often stop looking like protected retirement funds. Money sitting in a checking account can be treated like ordinary cash under state exemption limits.

When IRA money must move, direct transfers between custodians create a cleaner record than a check paid to you. The IRS page on rollovers of retirement plan and IRA distributions explains direct transfers and 60-day rollovers, which can affect both tax results and paper trails.

At-a-glance IRA Protection By Account Type

This table gives a working view of how protection usually plays out under federal law, plus what can change the answer. Use it to label your accounts before you meet with a lawyer.

Account Type Typical Bankruptcy Treatment What To Check
Traditional IRA Often exempt as retirement funds, subject to the § 522(n) cap for many balances Filing date, total IRA value across accounts, contribution history
Roth IRA Often exempt as retirement funds, subject to the same cap rules Ownership, statements showing IRA status
SEP IRA Often treated like an IRA for exemption purposes Plan paperwork and statements
SIMPLE IRA Often treated like an IRA for exemption purposes Employer plan paperwork and statements
Rollover IRA (from 401(k) or similar) Exempt; rollover portion may be protected beyond the cap if traceable Rollover confirmation, source plan statements, separate accounting
Inherited IRA (non-spouse) Not exempt under the federal retirement-funds rule; state law may still help Account title, state exemption options
Inherited IRA (spouse who treats it as own) Often becomes the spouse’s IRA and can regain ordinary IRA treatment Paperwork showing the spouse election
IRA Funds Withdrawn To A Bank Account Often lose retirement-funds status once distributed Where the money sits now, withdrawal dates

How To Figure Out If The Cap Applies To You

Start with a simple inventory. Make a list of every IRA you own, then write down the balance you expect around your filing date. Markets move, and filing date controls which exemption amounts apply.

Add Up Your Total Across All IRAs

The cap applies in the aggregate. Spreading money across multiple IRAs does not change the total. Add traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs, SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs you own.

Mark Any Rollover Dollars

If any IRA began as a rollover from a workplace plan, pull the original rollover confirmation and the source plan’s statement that shows the outgoing transfer. If you can show a direct plan-to-IRA transfer, your lawyer has a stronger basis to argue the rollover portion is outside the cap.

Flag Any Inherited IRA Right Away

If you hold an inherited IRA, treat it as its own bucket. Federal law treats inherited IRAs differently, and state law can change the result.

What If Your IRA Balance Is Above The Cap

Being above the cap does not mean you lose the whole IRA. It means the amount above the exempt limit may be treated as non-exempt, depending on which exemption route applies and how much of the balance is traceable rollover money.

When the numbers are close, bankruptcy planning becomes a math problem. A lawyer may compare several angles: whether your state lets you pick federal exemptions, whether your state list provides broader retirement coverage, how strong your rollover tracing is, and whether Chapter 13 is a better fit to protect value while paying through a plan.

Chapter 7 And Chapter 13 When Retirement Balances Are High

This table compares how the two chapters tend to feel when an IRA balance is near or above the federal cap. It’s a plain-language lens you can use during your case review.

Factor Chapter 7 Chapter 13
Non-exempt IRA amount Trustee may seek turnover of the non-exempt portion You keep the IRA, but plan payments may rise based on non-exempt value
Timeline Often months from filing to discharge Three to five years of plan payments
Pressure on monthly budget Lower ongoing payments after discharge, if you qualify Plan payment can be tight, yet it can protect assets
Record clarity Messy records can lead to disputes over what is exempt Can reduce liquidation risk while you sort out documentation
Fit when rollover tracing is clean Clean proof can reduce what is treated as non-exempt Still useful, yet the plan may already solve the asset-risk issue
Fit when inherited IRAs exist State exemption rules may drive the result State rules still matter, plus plan terms can ease asset pressure

Documents To Bring To Your Lawyer

A short meeting goes smoother when you bring a tight packet. These items answer most trustee questions before they get asked.

  • Your latest statement for each IRA you own
  • A one-page total of all IRA balances
  • Any rollover confirmations and the source plan statement showing the outgoing transfer
  • Proof of how an inherited IRA is titled, if you have one
  • A list of any IRA distributions taken in the past year and where the money went

With those documents, you can get a straight answer on whether your IRAs are fully protected, capped, or partly exposed, based on your state, your filing date, and your account history.

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