Rollover 457 Plan to an IRA
What is a 457 Plan or 457 retirement plans?
A 457 plan or a 457 retirement plan is
a retirement plan offered by state and local governments and
private tax exempt organizations. State and local governments
and private tax exempt organizations may offer retirement
plans to their employees that function similar to 401k
retirement plans in terms of salary reduction contributions and
deferred growth of earnings.
Why is a 457 plan called 457 plan?
The Internal Revenue Code section that
defines the rules is Section 457, hence the name 457 Plan.
How can I rollover 457 plan into an IRA?
Since 457 retirement plans are non qualified
deferred compensation plans, 457 retirement plans were not
eligible for an IRA rollover before 2002.
Can an I rollover a 457 plan into an IRA
now?
Effective 2002, governmental 457 retirement
plans (but not private tax exempt organization 457 retirement
plans) are eligible for IRA rollover into an traditional
IRA, Roth IRA, or a qualified plan, such as a 401k.
What can I do if I am not allowed to
rollover my 457 plan into an IRA?
From a tax standpoint, if you are not
permitted to rollover the 457 Plan over to an IRA, you may wish
to explore the 457 plan distribution options available
(possibly spreading payments out over of a number of years)
under the terms of the 457 Plan to determine the most suitable
method to withdraw their balance.
Are 457 plan distributions subject to the
10% early withdrawal penalty similar to a 401k distribution or
IRA distribution?
No. 457 plan distributions are not subject
to the same 10% early withdrawal penalty as 401k or IRA.
457 plan distributions, including lump sum
amounts, are fully taxable with no 10% penalty even if a 457
plan distribution recipient is under age 59½.
Can a 457 Plan make loans?
No. 457 retirement plans may not allow loans
to participants in the same way a 401k plan allows.
457
Plan Contributions | More information on 457 plans
|