Get help doing this if you feel you need it.
ROLLOVERS and DISTRIBUTIONS are (2) DIFFERENT things. Make sure you understand the difference.
A ROLLOVER is just where you are moving a specific amount out of your TRADITIONAL 401K to a TRADITIONAL IRA.
There are various ways to actually physically do the rollover - doing it in a direct method where you never touch the money at all is probably the easiest and isn't taxed.
This IRS link describes the process in detail - read all of it but I have copied and pasted a few noted items below the link in italics so you will understand the (NO) tax consequences on a traditional ROLLOVER - 401K > IRA.
IRS.gov - Rollovers of Retirement Plan and IRA Distributions
from the link:
How do I complete a rollover?
- Direct rollover – If you’re getting a distribution from a retirement plan, you can ask your plan administrator to make the payment directly to another retirement plan or to an IRA. Contact your plan administrator for instructions. The administrator may issue your distribution in the form of a check made payable to your new account. No taxes will be withheld from your transfer amount.
- Trustee-to-trustee transfer – If you’re getting a distribution from an IRA, you can ask the financial institution holding your IRA to make the payment directly from your IRA to another IRA or to a retirement plan. No taxes will be withheld from your transfer amount.
- 60-day rollover – If a distribution from an IRA or a retirement plan is paid directly to you, you can deposit all or a portion of it in an IRA or a retirement plan within 60 days. Taxes will be withheld from a distribution from a retirement plan (see below), so you’ll have to use other funds to roll over the full amount of the distribution.
IRA one-rollover-per-year rule
You generally cannot make more than one rollover from the same IRA within a 1-year period. You also cannot make a rollover during this 1-year period from the IRA to which the distribution was rolled over.
Beginning after January 1, 2015, you can make only one rollover from an IRA to another (or the same) IRA in any 12-month period, regardless of the number of IRAs you own. The limit will apply by aggregating all of an individual’s IRAs, including SEP and SIMPLE IRAs as well as traditional and Roth IRAs, effectively treating them as one IRA for purposes of the limit.
The one-per year limit does not apply to:
- rollovers from traditional IRAs to Roth IRAs (conversions)
- trustee-to-trustee transfers to another IRA
- IRA-to-plan rollovers
- plan-to-IRA rollovers
- plan-to-plan rollovers
Will taxes be withheld from my distribution?
- IRAs: An IRA distribution paid to you is subject to 10% withholding unless you elect out of withholding or choose to have a different amount withheld. You can avoid withholding taxes if you choose to do a trustee-to-trustee transfer to another IRA.
- Retirement plans: A retirement plan distribution paid to you is subject to mandatory withholding of 20%, even if you intend to roll it over later. Withholding does not apply if you roll over the amount directly to another retirement plan or to an IRA. A distribution sent to you in the form of a check payable to the receiving plan or IRA is not subject to withholding.
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Now some people decide to do a CONVERSION to a ROTH IRA rather than a ROLLOVER to a TRADITIONAL IRA - In the case of such a CONVERSION, ALL taxes based on your own tax rate will be due in the year of the CONVERSION on such an amount because a ROTH is an after tax retirement plan and the subsequent earnings (after 5-years in the plan) grow tax free.
DISTRIBUTIONS come directly to you for your use from your retirement plan.
Any DISTRIBITION from your TRADITIONAL 401K OR your TRADITIONAL IRA are coded as DISTRIBUTIONS and thus taxes have to be paid on this distributed amount - you will pay taxes on this DISTRIBUTION amount at your ordinary income tax rate.
Make sure you understand the terminology
ROLLOVER
DISTRIBUTION
CONVERSION
It's Always Something . . . . Roseanna Roseannadanna