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401(k) rollover options explained

Changing jobs leaves a decision behind: what to do with the old 401(k). You have four options — three keep your money growing tax-deferred, and one quietly costs the most.

Your four options

The tax trap: direct vs indirect rollover

If you roll over (options 2 or 3), always do a direct rollover — the funds move provider-to-provider and are never taxed. Avoid the indirect rollover, where the check comes to you: the plan withholds 20%, and you must redeposit the full original amount (making up that 20% from your own pocket) within 60 days — or the shortfall is taxed and may be penalized. Same destination, far more risk.

Why cashing out is so expensive

A cash-out is taxed as ordinary income, adds a 10% early-withdrawal penalty if you’re under 59½, and — the biggest cost — permanently removes that money from decades of compounding. Run a balance through our compound interest calculator to see what cashing out today gives up by retirement.

Traditional or Roth on the way?

A rollover is also a chance to think about tax treatment. Rolling pre-tax 401(k) money into a Roth IRA (a “Roth conversion”) is possible but creates a tax bill now — worth it only in the right years. See why tax diversification matters and compare Traditional vs Roth.

Frequently asked questions

What can I do with my old 401(k)?
Leave it, roll it to your new plan, roll it to an IRA, or cash out. The first three stay tax-deferred; cashing out is usually taxed and penalized.
Direct vs indirect rollover?
Direct moves money provider-to-provider, never taxed. Indirect sends you a check with 20% withheld and a 60-day redeposit deadline — riskier. Choose direct.
Should I cash out?
Rarely — ordinary income tax, a 10% penalty under 59½, and lost compounding make it the most expensive option.
Get the rollover right

A rollover is easy to fumble — and costly to undo.

A licensed advisor can help you pick the right option, execute a clean direct rollover, and weigh whether a Roth conversion fits your tax situation.

Request a free consultation

Keep exploring: 401(k) calculator · Roth IRA calculator · Backdoor Roth IRA

Educational only; not financial or tax advice. Rollover and tax rules have exceptions; confirm specifics with a professional before acting.