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Should You Stay In Your Old 401(K) Or Roll It Over Into An Ira?
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Every year millions of workers
who are either retiring or changing jobs struggle
with a difficult decision regarding their old
employer’s 401(k) or similar defined-contribution
retirement plan.
They know they don’t
want to cash in their account because of the
income taxes, potential penalties, and loss
of tax-deferred growth. Yet they’re unsure
whether to leave their money in the old plan,
roll it into a new employer’s defined-contribution
plan if available, or roll it over into an individual
retirement account. Each option has its benefits
and disadvantages, depending on their personal
situation.
Advantages of staying
with old employer’s plan or joining new
plan. Roughly one in three workers
leave their money behind in old employers’
401(k) plans, according to the Employee Benefits
Research Institute. Often it is because they
don’t want to fuss with the rollover paperwork
or they’re afraid of making a costly mistake.
Nonetheless, staying put in the old employer’s
plan or rolling it into a new employer’s
plan does offer some advantages.
One is creditor protection.
Federal law prohibits creditors from invading
401(k) accounts. The law does not protect IRAs,
though some states shield IRAs from creditors.
If you leave work due to termination
or retirement, you usually can begin withdrawing
from a 401(k) as early as age 55 without the
ten-percent early withdrawal penalty. With rare
exceptions, you have to wait to age 59 1/2 for
penalty-free withdrawals from an IRA.
Two-thirds of 401(k) plans
offer stable-value mutual funds, which are less
commonly offered in IRAs. These funds appeal
to conservative investors because they tend
to offer healthier yields than money markets
but with the same stable principal. Investment
choices are more limited in a 401(k). Why might
this be an advantage? Some studies show that
investors who trade a lot hurt their personal
returns more than those who don’t trade
as much. IRAs typically offer a much bigger
universe of investment choices than 401(k) plans.
Thus, investors tempted to trade, or who are
so overwhelmed by too many investment choices
they do nothing, may actually be better off
sticking with their 401(k). But the option to
stay will depend in part on the quality of the
investment options your particular 401(k) offers
compared with an IRA.
You can borrow from a 401(k)
if you’re working for that employer, but
you can’t from an IRA. Financial planners
generally discourage borrowing from a 401(k)—the
borrowed money no longer grows tax deferred
and there’s a risk you won’t be
able to repay it in time, resulting in heavy
taxes and penalties. Still, it is an option
that often beats borrowing from a credit card.
If you want to leave your money
in the 401(k), be sure it will stay there. Currently,
employers can cash out defined-contribution
accounts valued at $5,000 or less if the employee
fails to take action. That’s changing
beginning on March 28, 2005, however. For accounts
valued from $1,000 to $5,000 the employer must
automatically roll the money into a default
IRA unless the employee wants the cash or requests
a rollover.
Advantages of rolling
into an IRA. For prudent investors,
one of the biggest attractions of IRAs is their
wider universe of investment choices, particularly
if the choices are superior to those available
in their old or new employer’s plan. And
you don’t have to worry about future investment
options changing, as they often do in employers’
plans.
Workers who change jobs frequently
may find themselves accumulating a lot of employer
retirement accounts and may risk losing track
of some accounts. Also, it’s easier to
manage a single IRA than multiple employer plans
accounts. Or you might consolidate into your
current employer’s plan if it’s
good quality.
Another major benefit for the
IRA option is the potential for significant
tax savings. With an IRA, you can designate
a younger nonspousal beneficiary and “stretch
out” the minimum withdrawals over that
person’s lifetime. A 401(k) plan probably
will insist that the account be immediately
cashed out if the heir is not a spouse, resulting
in a much larger tax bite and loss of further
tax deferral.
With a rollover IRA, you may
also be a position to convert to a Roth IRA
if that conversation makes financial sense for
you.
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