When should an employee choose a
401k Rollover?
An employee should choose a 401k
rollover if he wants to refrain from having to look after and manage multiple
401k accounts and also pay extra in terms of the account charges towards
administration of all those accounts. In this way, the account owner can
continue to achieve decades of tax-deferred compounding that his invested funds
earn in a 401k account. A major advantage of a 401k-retirement plan is that the
employee has an option to retain it throughout his career. When changing a
job/employer, the investor can choose any of the four alternatives:
1.) Leave the
funds in the old employer’s 401k plan – An employee can choose to leave his
funds in the old employer’s 401k plan by paying record keeping and other
charges to the account administrator to manage the account. The current
employment of an employee does not affect continuing the 401k-account with a
previous employer. If the employee has switched jobs several times over, it can
lead to multiple 401k accounts leading to complexity in managing them as well
as incurring their separate management fee by the employee.
2.) Undertake
a 401k rollover to the new employer’s 401k plan – An employee can refrain from
having to look after multiple 401k accounts by choosing to rollover to the new
employer’s 401k plan. This becomes possible if the employee gets a new job
offer before leaving his current employer. Choosing this option tends to
simplify things for an employee. However, before going for a rollover, the
account owner must check the investment options of the new 401k-plan into which
he is rolling over his previous account. The employee can even choose to
rollover into an IRA account.
3.) Undertake
a 401k rollover into an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) – Choosing to
rollover a 401k account is considered the best alternative for those employees
who are interested in building up a comfortable retirement fund as it allows an
employee’s savings to continue compounding tax-deferred while providing total
control at the same time over asset allocation. This is how a rollover is
undertaken: The account owner orders a distribution of his current 401k plan
assets (this is reported in the
IRS
Form 1099-R.) After receiving his assets, the account owner must put them into
a new retirement plan within a span of sixty days; such a deposit must be
reported in the
IRS
Form 5498. An account owner cannot undertake more than one 401k rollover within
a span of twelve months.
4.)
Withdraw the funds, pay a10% penalty fee and the taxes on amount withdrawn – If an employee decides to withdraw the proceeds, he has to pay a 10%
penalty on a disincentive for undertaking a withdrawal. Moreover, the proceeds
invite regular income tax rates. This makes the withdrawal process all the more
expensive to the account owner. It is deliberately designed in such a manner to
dissuade employees from using up their 401k funds before the age of retirement.
In such a situation, the financial loss comes from the decades of tax-deferred
compounding that the invested funds could have earned had the account owner not
chosen to withdraw the proceeds.