Yes—many workplace pension distributions can be moved into an IRA by direct rollover, so tax is usually due only when you later withdraw.
If you’re leaving a job, retiring, or cashing out a pension option, a rollover can keep your retirement money in one place and keep the tax deferral intact. The catch is that “rollover” is not one single action. It’s a set of rules, deadlines, and payee details that decide whether the move stays tax-deferred.
You’ll get the rules that matter, plus the checks that keep the move tax-deferred.
What counts as a pension plan for rollover purposes
People use “pension” to mean a few different workplace plans. The rollover rules often apply across these, but plan documents still matter:
- Defined-benefit pensions: a plan that can pay a monthly benefit, sometimes with a lump-sum option.
- Defined-contribution plans: plans like 401(k), 403(b), and similar workplace accounts that hold an individual balance.
If your plan offers a lump sum, it often can be rolled into an IRA. If it pays a lifelong monthly benefit only, there may be nothing to “roll,” since it’s not a lump-sum distribution. Your plan administrator’s distribution packet is the source of truth for what your plan offers.
Can A Pension Plan Be Rolled Over To An IRA? The two paths
There are two common ways money moves from a workplace plan to an IRA:
- Direct rollover: the plan sends the money straight to the IRA custodian (or sends a check payable to the custodian). You don’t take possession of the funds.
- 60-day rollover: the plan pays you, then you deposit the distribution into an IRA within 60 days.
Most people are safest with a direct rollover. It reduces paperwork risk and helps you avoid mandatory withholding that can apply when the plan pays you. The IRS lays out the rollover rules, the 60-day deadline, and the withholding trap in its official rollover guidance. IRS rules for rollovers of retirement plan and IRA distributions is the reference page for the “what can roll where” basics.
Rolling a pension plan into an IRA with fewer tax surprises
A rollover can fail for one small reason: the check is made out wrong. Treat the payee line like the whole game.
Direct rollover steps that work in the real world
- Open the receiving IRA first. You’ll need the custodian name, the mailing address for rollover checks, and your new IRA account number.
- Ask the plan how the check will be titled. Aim for a check payable to the IRA custodian, not payable to you.
- Confirm how each “bucket” will move. Pre-tax money, Roth money, and after-tax (non-Roth) contributions can have different handling.
- Request the distribution as a direct rollover in writing. Keep the confirmation page or email.
- Track the tax forms. You’ll usually receive a Form 1099-R from the plan and a Form 5498 from the IRA custodian later.
After the deposit lands, confirm it’s invested the way you intended.
When the 60-day rollover comes into play
A 60-day rollover can happen on purpose, or it can happen by accident when a plan mails a check to you. If that’s the situation, you’re on a clock. Miss the deadline and the payout can become taxable, with early-withdrawal penalties also possible if you’re under the applicable age rules.
Also watch the withholding math. When a workplace plan pays you directly, federal withholding can be mandatory. If 20% is withheld and you roll over only the net check amount, the withheld part may be treated as a taxable distribution. To roll over the full gross amount, you’d need to replace the withheld portion with other cash.
If you want a plain-language overview of rollovers and reporting, the IRS also summarizes the concept in Topic No. 413. IRS Topic No. 413 on rollovers from retirement plans is a good cross-check when the plan packet feels dense.
Which money usually rolls cleanly, and what needs extra care
Not every distribution is eligible for rollover, and not every dollar inside the distribution is treated the same. The plan’s paperwork should break your payout into categories. These are the categories that most often decide whether you need extra steps:
Pre-tax pension or plan money
Pre-tax contributions and earnings generally roll into a traditional IRA by direct rollover without current tax. The tax is generally due when you withdraw later.
Roth money inside a workplace plan
Designated Roth balances in a workplace plan can often roll into a Roth IRA. Keep Roth and pre-tax amounts separated so reporting stays clean.
After-tax (non-Roth) employee contributions
After-tax contributions can be rolled, but basis tracking matters. If basis gets lost, you can end up paying tax twice on the same dollars. Ask the plan administrator how after-tax contributions will be reported on the 1099-R, then keep that record with your IRA paperwork.
Employer stock and special tax rules
Employer stock inside a plan can bring special tax treatment in some cases. Rolling stock to an IRA can erase those plan-only tax paths. If you hold a meaningful amount of employer stock, pause and verify your options before rolling.
What you might give up by moving from a plan to an IRA
An IRA can bring wider investment menus, yet workplace plans can offer plan-only perks. Before you request a payout, scan your plan for these items so you don’t trade them away by accident:
- Plan pricing: some plans offer low-cost institutional funds or plan-level pricing you can’t get in a retail IRA.
- Loan access: many workplace plans allow participant loans; IRAs don’t.
- Withdrawal options: plans can offer installment payouts or plan-specific rules that differ from IRA rules.
You can often leave money in a former employer plan while you compare fees, rules, and access.
Decision table: Match your goal to the cleanest move
Use this table to pick the rollover method that fits what you’re trying to do, then spot the traps before they show up.
| Situation | Move that fits | What to watch |
|---|---|---|
| You want to avoid mandatory withholding | Direct rollover to an IRA | Check payee should be the IRA custodian |
| You got a check payable to you | 60-day rollover to an IRA | Deadline is strict; withholding may apply |
| You have Roth money in the plan | Rollover Roth portion to a Roth IRA | Keep Roth and pre-tax records separate |
| You have after-tax contributions | Rollover with basis tracking | Save proof of after-tax basis from the plan |
| You may need a plan loan option | Leave money in the plan | IRAs can’t do participant loans |
| You’re comparing fees and funds | Price out plan vs IRA side by side | Include admin fees, not only fund expenses |
| You hold employer stock in the plan | Verify stock tax options first | A rollover can shut off plan-only stock tax paths |
| You’re leaving a job with a small balance | Choose your rollover destination fast | Plans may move small balances into an IRA if you do nothing |
Sales pressure and fee confusion: How to protect yourself
Rollover moments attract sales calls. Some are helpful. Some are not. Your best defense is a short set of questions you can repeat until you get plain answers.
Ask what the total yearly cost will be
Get the ongoing cost in writing. That means account fee, fund expenses, and any advisory fee. If the answer is “it depends,” ask for a range in dollars using your account balance.
Ask how the person gets paid if you roll over
Some advisers earn more when you move assets. That doesn’t make the rollover wrong. It does mean you should ask for the compensation details so you can weigh incentives.
Know what standards apply to retirement advice
The U.S. Department of Labor has been updating the rules around who counts as a fiduciary when giving retirement advice. Its plain-language page for investment advice providers explains the rule package, timing, and conflict-related conditions. DOL overview of the Retirement Security Rule for advice providers is the official reference when you want to know what “fiduciary” means in this setting.
How rollovers show up on tax forms
Even when the rollover is tax-deferred, you’ll still see tax forms. That’s normal. The goal is to keep your documents matched and your reporting consistent.
- Form 1099-R: sent by the workplace plan. It reports the distribution amount and a code that describes the transaction.
- Form 5498: sent by the IRA custodian. It reports the rollover contribution received by the IRA.
Keep your plan distribution packet, the rollover request confirmation, and any check stub. If a code on the 1099-R looks off, you’ll want your backup documents handy.
Table: A print-friendly rollover checklist
Run this checklist before you start, then run it again after the money lands in the IRA.
| Step | Confirm | Proof to save |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Your payout is eligible for rollover | Plan distribution notice |
| 2 | The IRA is open and labeled to receive a rollover | IRA account confirmation |
| 3 | Check payee is the IRA custodian (direct rollover) | Copy of request or check image |
| 4 | Roth and after-tax amounts are identified correctly | Plan breakdown and your notes |
| 5 | Money arrives and is invested as intended | Account screenshot or trade confirmations |
| 6 | Tax forms match the rollover story | 1099-R and 5498 |
Choosing the right IRA account type for the rollover
“Rollover IRA” is often a label, not a separate tax category. The real decision is what type of IRA will receive each part of the distribution.
Traditional IRA
Pre-tax plan money commonly rolls into a traditional IRA, keeping it tax-deferred until later withdrawals.
Roth IRA
Roth money from a workplace plan can roll into a Roth IRA. Moving pre-tax money into a Roth IRA is a conversion and can create taxable income for the year. If you’re not sure what portion is Roth vs pre-tax, get the plan’s breakdown first.
For a plain overview of retirement account types and how they differ, FINRA’s retirement accounts overview is a solid starting point.
Common mistakes that turn a rollover into a taxable event
- Taking possession of the money: depositing the check into your bank account can muddy the trail.
- Missing the deadline: the 60-day rule is strict when you use an indirect rollover.
- Rolling over only the net check: withholding can leave part of the distribution taxable.
- Losing after-tax basis records: basis mistakes can create double taxation.
- Assuming every payment is eligible: certain payments aren’t eligible for rollover, so verify before you request a payout.
Practical next steps
Start by asking your plan administrator: “Can you process a direct rollover to an IRA custodian, and how will the check be made out?” If a check is payable to you, treat the 60-day deadline and any withholding as your two big constraints.
References & Sources
- Internal Revenue Service (IRS).“Rollovers of retirement plan and IRA distributions.”Official rules on direct and 60-day rollovers, withholding, and allowable rollover transactions.
- Internal Revenue Service (IRS).“Topic No. 413, Rollovers from retirement plans.”IRS overview of rollover timing, taxation basics, and handling after-tax amounts.
- U.S. Department of Labor (EBSA).“Understanding the Retirement Security Rule: Investment advice providers.”Explains fiduciary status, conflicts, and timing notes for the Retirement Security Rule package.
- Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).“Retirement Accounts.”Overview of common retirement account types and how they work at a high level.