
Direct Rollover
A direct rollover is a qualified distribution of eligible assets from a qualified plan, 403(b) plan, or a governmental 457 plan into a traditional IRA, qualified plan, 403(b) plan, or a governmental 457 plan. A direct rollover is a qualified distribution of eligible assets from a qualified plan, 403(b) plan, or a governmental 457 plan into a traditional IRA, qualified plan, 403(b) plan, or a governmental 457 plan. For example, if an individual decides to switch employers and move her retirement assets built up over time in the first employer’s retirement plan, she must coordinate with the plan administrator, often an asset management firm like Fidelity or Vanguard, to close the account and write a check for the account balance to the new IRA custodian. A direct rollover can also be a distribution from an IRA to a qualified plan, 403(b) plan or a governmental 457 plan. These include an employer taking a tax deduction for contributions they make to the plan, employees taking a tax deduction on their own contributions, and earnings on all contributions being tax-deferred until withdrawn. The two major types of qualified plans are defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans.

What Is a Direct Rollover?
A direct rollover is a qualified distribution of eligible assets from a qualified plan, 403(b) plan, or a governmental 457 plan into a traditional IRA, qualified plan, 403(b) plan, or a governmental 457 plan.
A direct rollover can also be a distribution from an IRA to a qualified plan, 403(b) plan or a governmental 457 plan. A direct rollover effectively allows a retirement saver to transfer funds from one retirement account to another without penalty and without creating a taxable event.




How Direct Rollovers Work
A rollover occurs when one withdraws cash or other assets from one eligible retirement plan and contributes all or a portion of this to another eligible plan. The account owner may be subject to a penalty if the transaction is not completed within 60 days. The rollover transaction isn't taxable, unless the rollover is to a Roth IRA, but the IRS requires that account owners report this on their federal tax return.
To engineer a direct rollover, an account holder needs to ask his plan administrator to draft a check and send it directly to the new 401(k) or IRA. In IRA-to-IRA transfers, the trustee from one plan sends the rollover amount to the trustee from the other plan. If an account holder receives a check from his existing IRA or retirement account, they can cash it and deposit the funds into the new IRA. However, they must complete the process within 60 days to avoid income taxes on the withdrawal. If they miss the 60-day deadline, the IRS treats the amount like an early distribution.
How They're Made Payable
Direct rollover assets are made payable to the qualified plan or IRA custodian or trustee and not to the individual. The distribution may be issued as a check made payable to the new account. For example, if an individual decides to switch employers and move her retirement assets built up over time in the first employer’s retirement plan, she must coordinate with the plan administrator, often an asset management firm like Fidelity or Vanguard, to close the account and write a check for the account balance to the new IRA custodian.
Some firms charge fees for this service although they are usually not substantial. On the other end, firms often charge small fees to open new accounts. If an employee is beginning a new job, often this new employer will assume the cost of setting up the new retirement account. Sometimes, the employee will have to wait several years or a vesting period before she may be eligible to open a new retirement account and have her employer begin making contributions.
Direct Rollover and Qualified Retirement Plans
As noted above, direct rollovers apply to qualified retirement plans. These are plans that meet certain criteria, such as non-discrimination among employees, to be eligible for certain tax benefits. These include an employer taking a tax deduction for contributions they make to the plan, employees taking a tax deduction on their own contributions, and earnings on all contributions being tax-deferred until withdrawn.
Defined Benefit vs. Defined Contribution
The two major types of qualified plans are defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans. A defined benefit plan is a more traditional pension plan in which benefits are based on a specific formula, often including the number of years of employee service times a salary factor. Defined contribution plans allocate money to plan participants, based on a percentage of each employee's earnings. The longer the employee participates in the plan, the higher the account balance grows, also based on investment earnings.
Related terms:
403(b) Plan
A 403(b) plan is similar to a 401(k) but is designed for certain employees of public schools and tax-exempt organizations among other differences. read more
457 Plan
457 plans are non-qualified, tax-advantaged, deferred compensation retirement plans offered by state, local government and some nonprofit employers. read more
Asset Management
Asset management is the practice of increasing wealth over time by acquiring, maintaining, and trading investments that can grow in value. read more
Conduit IRA
A conduit IRA is an account used to roll over funds from a qualified retirement plan to another qualified plan. read more
Defined-Benefit Plan
A defined-benefit plan is an employer-sponsored retirement plan where benefits are calculated on factors such as salary history and duration of employment. read more
Defined-Contribution Plan
A defined-contribution plan is a retirement plan in which employees contribute part of their paychecks to an account intended to fund their retirements. read more
Direct Transfer
A direct transfer is a transfer of assets from one type of tax-deferred retirement plan or account to another. read more
Eligible Rollover Distribution
An eligible rollover distribution is a distribution from one qualified plan that is able to be rolled over to another eligible plan. read more
Excess Accumulation Penalty
The excess accumulation penalty is due to the IRS when a retirement account owner fails to withdraw the required minimum amount for the year. read more
IRA Rollover
An IRA rollover is a transfer of funds from a retirement account into a Traditional IRA or a Roth IRA via direct transfer or by check. read more