401(k)-to-IRA Rollovers Can Trigger 10% Penalties for Retirees Under 59 1/2
Updated
Updated · Money · Jul 6
401(k)-to-IRA Rollovers Can Trigger 10% Penalties for Retirees Under 59 1/2
3 articles · Updated · Money · Jul 6
Summary
Early retirees who leave work at 55 or older can tap a former employer’s 401(k) or 403(b) without the usual early-withdrawal penalty, but that protection generally disappears once the money is rolled into an IRA.
The rule of 55 applies only to workplace plans, making a rollover a costly mistake for people retiring between 55 and 59 1/2 who expect to draw on savings before standard penalty-free IRA access begins.
Plan design also matters: some 401(k)s allow flexible partial withdrawals, while others are more restrictive, so retirees may need to keep enough money in the employer plan to bridge those years.
Workers still building that bridge in 2026 can contribute up to $24,500 to workplace plans, plus an $8,000 catch-up at ages 50-59 or 64+, or a $11,250 super catch-up at ages 60-63.