Independent Publication β€” Not Affiliated with the IRS or Any Government AgencyAuthority: IRC Section 401(a)(9)
βœ… Penalty-FreeπŸ“‹ RMD Transitional Age

TSP Rollover Rules After Age 72

Key focus: user is approaching age 72 or 73 and needs to understand the RMD transition rules after SECURE 2.0 changed the starting age

Quick AnswerUnder the original SECURE Act (2019), RMDs began at age 72. SECURE 2.0 (2022) increased the starting age to 73 for those born after 1950. If you turned 72 before 2023, your RMDs already began under the old rules. If you turned 72 in 2023 or later, your RMD start age is 73. This distinction matters significantly for rollover and conversion planning.
NoneEarly Penalty
TransitionalRMD Status
Always FreeDirect Rollover
UnrestrictedRoth Window
AvailableCatch-Up Contribs
βœ…
No Early Withdrawal Penalty at This AgeThe transition from 72 to 73 as the RMD start age is governed by birth year, not by the year the law was passed. SECURE 2.0 is clear: anyone born in 1951 or later has an RMD start age of 73. Anyone born in 1950 or earlier had an RMD start age of 72 (under the SECURE Act of 2019) or 70Β½ (under pre-SECURE rules). Anyone currently between ages 72 and 73 who was born in 1951 or later has not yet reached their RMD start age.
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RMDs Cannot Be Rolled OverThis is the most important rollover rule at age 72+: the RMD amount is not an eligible rollover distribution. The plan is required to distribute the RMD to the account holder (or to a charity in a QCD transaction). The RMD cannot go into an IRA, cannot be rolled to a new plan, and cannot be converted to a Roth IRA. Any attempt to do so creates a taxable excess contribution.

1What After Age 72 Means for Retirement Accounts

Age 72 was the Required Minimum Distribution starting age under the original SECURE Act of 2019 for those born after June 30, 1949. SECURE 2.0 (signed December 2022) moved the RMD age to 73 for those born in 1951 or later. For those born between July 1, 1949 and December 31, 1950, the RMD age was 72. This age threshold is now primarily a transitional reference β€” understanding whether the 72 or 73 threshold applies requires knowing the account holder's birth year.

The transition from 72 to 73 as the RMD start age is governed by birth year, not by the year the law was passed. SECURE 2.0 is clear: anyone born in 1951 or later has an RMD start age of 73. Anyone born in 1950 or earlier had an RMD start age of 72 (under the SECURE Act of 2019) or 70Β½ (under pre-SECURE rules). Anyone currently between ages 72 and 73 who was born in 1951 or later has not yet reached their RMD start age.

The one-year shift from 72 to 73 as the RMD start age creates a planning nuance for those in the transitional cohort. It also extends the Roth conversion window by one year β€” a participant born in 1951 who retires at 62 now has 11 years (62–73) of penalty-free, RMD-free retirement account management rather than 10 years (62–72). Understanding whether the old or new rules apply is essential for anyone currently in the 71–73 age range.

IRS Governing Framework

Primary IRC
IRC Section 401(a)(9) β€” Required Minimum Distribution rules, as amended by SECURE Act (2019) and SECURE 2.0 (2022)
Secondary IRC
IRC Section 408(a)(6) β€” IRA RMD requirements; IRC Section 402(c) β€” eligible rollover distributions (RMDs are never eligible for rollover)
Key Publications
IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs) β€” When Must You Withdraw Assets section; IRS Notice 2023-75 (SECURE 2.0 guidance on RMD age changes)
RMD Start Rule
The first RMD must be taken by April 1 of the year following the year the account holder reaches their RMD starting age (73 for those born 1951+). Subsequent RMDs must be taken by December 31 of each year. Taking the first RMD by December 31 of the RMD year (rather than waiting until April 1 of the following year) avoids having two RMDs in the same tax year.
Penalty Status
βœ… No early withdrawal penalty at this age
βš–

Regulatory Authority

The RMD cannot be rolled over β€” this is the most frequently violated rule at age 72+. Participants who receive a distribution from their IRA or 401(k) and then deposit it into another IRA as a 'rollover' are creating an excess contribution if that distribution was the required RM…

  • πŸ“˜ IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs) β€” Required Minimum Distributions chapter
  • πŸ“˜ IRS Notice 2023-75 (SECURE 2.0 guidance); IRS Notice 2022-53 (transition relief for RMD age changes)
  • πŸ“ Form 1040 Lines 5a and 5b (RMD reported as ordinary income)
  • πŸ“ Form 5329 (50%/25% excise tax on missed RMDs, reduced to 10% if corrected within 2 years)
  • πŸ“‹ IRS Notice 2026-13 (Jan 2026 Safe Harbor β€” SECURE 2.0 penalty exceptions)

πŸ” Expert Insight

The year before RMDs begin is the most valuable single tax year in most retirees' lives. In that year, the account holder has full control over how much taxable income to recognize β€” no forced distributions, no penalty, no constraints beyond their own tax bracket management. A retiree who maximizes Roth conversions in this final clean yea…

2Your TSP β€” Rules at After Age 72

Separation from federal service (retirement, resignation, or removal), or reaching age 59Β½ while still employed (for in-service withdrawals). Special rules apply for required minimum distribution age.

TSP Profile at After Age 72

Tax Treatment
pre-tax (traditional) or post-tax (Roth TSP) β€” Traditional TSP: pre-tax. Roth TSP: after-tax. Both can exist in the same account.
Early Withdrawal
10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax for distributions before age 59Β½
RMD Applies
Yes β€” begins at age 73. The TSP calculates and processes RMDs automatically for participants who have not yet taken a distribution by their required beginning date. This automatic processing is a feature unique to the TSP β€” commercial IRA custodians do not automatically distribute RMDs.
Rollover Deadline
60 days (indirect); direct rollover has no deadline
Direct Rollover
TSP direct rollovers are processed through the TSP's own distribution form (Form TSP-70 for full withdrawal or TSP-77 for partial). The TSP is administered by the FRTIB β€” not a commercial custodian β€” and has its own processing queue. Allow 7–10 business days for the TSP to process the request after receiving complete paperwork.

πŸ“Œ TSP β€” Age-Specific Rules

TSP at After Age 72

TSP RMDs begin at age 73. The TSP automatically calculates and processes RMDs for participants who have reached their RMD start age and have not begun distributions β€” a unique feature. The still-working exception applies to the TSP for federal employees not yet retired.

The TSP is the largest defined-contribution retirement plan in the world, with over $900 billion in assets as of 2025. It offers some of the lowest expense ratios available to any retirement investor β€” the G Fund (government securities) has an expense ratio of approximately 0.04%, compared to the industry average of 0.45%. Despite these advantages, the TSP's limited fund menu (only 5 core index funds plus L Funds) is the primary reason federal retirees roll to an IRA β€” for broader investment options, including Self-Directed IRA alternatives.

Federal employees can access their TSP after separation from service at any age. Retired military members have separate TSP access rules. Civilian FERS employees who separate after age 55 avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty β€” a one-year advantage over the standard age 59Β½ threshold that applies to IRAs and most other qualified plans.

3Rollover Eligibility & Mechanics at After Age 72

Rollovers remain available after age 72, subject to the critical constraint that RMDs cannot be rolled over. The RMD amount for the year must be distributed first before any remaining balance can be rolled over. An account holder who attempts to roll over an RMD amount is making an excess IRA contribution β€” subject to the 6% annual excise tax for each year it remains in the account.

Rollover Quick Reference

Direct Rollover
Always penalty-free (any age)
Indirect Rollover
60-day window; 20% withheld from QRPs
1099-R Code
Code G (rollover) / Code 7 (normal)
Rollover per Year
1 indirect rollover per 12-month period (IRA rule)

4Required Minimum Distributions at After Age 72

For participants born in 1951 or later, being 'after age 72' means you are in the pre-RMD window β€” the final year before mandatory distributions begin at 73. This is your last opportunity to convert without the RMD constraint. For those born in 1950 or earlier, age 72 was the RMD start year β€” distributions were already mandatory.

The annual RMD is calculated by dividing the December 31 account balance of the prior year by the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table factor for the account holder's current age. For a 72-year-old with a $500,000 IRA: factor = 27.4; RMD = $500,000 Γ· 27.4 = $18,248. The factor decreases each year, increasing the RMD as a percentage of account value.

πŸ“…
Last Clean Conversion YearThe year before RMDs begin is the last year for a fully flexible Roth conversion. In the year RMDs begin, the RMD amount must be taken first (and cannot be converted) β€” the remainder can be converted. In subsequent RMD years, the RMD comes first, the remainder can be converted. The pre-RMD year is the last 'clean' conversion year.
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Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD)Participants age 70Β½+ can make Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) directly from an IRA to a qualified charity β€” up to $105,000/year in 2026. A QCD counts toward the RMD for the year and is excluded from taxable income (unlike a regular charitable deduction). QCDs are one of the most tax-efficient strategies for charitably inclined retirees who do not need the full RMD amount for living expenses.
πŸ“‹
SECURE 2.0 Transition β€” Birth Year MattersThe transition from 72 to 73 as the RMD start age is governed by birth year, not by the year the law was passed. SECURE 2.0 is clear: anyone born in 1951 or later has an RMD start age of 73. Anyone born in 1950 or earlier had an RMD start age of 72 (under the SECURE Act of 2019) or 70Β½ (under pre-SECURE rules). Anyone currently between ages 72 and 73 who was born in 1951 or later has not yet reached their RMD start age. Born 1950 or earlier: RMD age was 72. Born 1951 or later: RMD age is 73. Verify your birth year before acting.

RMD Key Rules

Start Age
73 (born 1951+) or 72 (born 1950)
First RMD Deadline
April 1 following RMD start year
Subsequent RMDs
December 31 of each year
Missed RMD Penalty
25% of shortfall (10% if corrected within 2 years)
RMD + Rollover
RMD must come first; cannot be rolled over
Roth IRA
No RMDs during owner's lifetime

5Strategic Opportunities & Cautions at After Age 72

Opportunities unlocked at After Age 72:

βœ… QCDs (Qualified Charitable Distributions) β€” available at 70Β½+, satisfy RMD requirement and exclude the amount from taxable income
βœ… Roth conversions up to the bracket ceiling β€” in the year before RMDs begin, the full conversion amount is flexible; in RMD years, the RMD comes first
βœ… Final full-flexibility Roth conversion year β€” the year before the RMD start age is the last clean conversion year without the RMD-first constraint
βœ… Delaying Social Security to 70 while converting traditional IRA assets during the low-income gap (62–70) and this pre-RMD window (to 73)

Important cautions for After Age 72:

⚠ The RMD cannot be rolled over β€” attempting to do so creates an excess IRA contribution with a 6% annual penalty
⚠ In the RMD start year, the RMD must be taken first before any Roth conversion β€” this reduces the convertible amount
⚠ QCDs must come directly from the IRA to the charity β€” you cannot withdraw the RMD personally, donate it, and claim the QCD exclusion
⚠ Still-working exception: the current employer's 401(k) RMD can be delayed until retirement β€” but IRA RMDs begin regardless
πŸ’°
Catch-Up Contributions AvailableWorkers over 72 who are still employed can continue contributing to their employer's 401(k) or 403(b) at full catch-up limits. IRA contributions are also permitted for those with earned income after the SECURE Act removed the age limit for traditional IRA contributions. However, RMDs must still be taken from existing IRAs even while new contributions are being made.

6All Account Types β€” Rules at After Age 72

Age-based rules interact differently with each plan type. The entry for TSP is highlighted.

401(k)

For those born in 1951+, the 401(k) RMD starts at age 73. Still-working exception: if the account holder is still employed by the sponsoring employer and is not a 5%+ owner, the current employer's 401(k) RMD can be delayed until retirement. The 72-year-old still-working exception no longer applies under SECURE 2.0 β€” the employer plan RMD delay runs to the actual retirement year.

403(b)

Same RMD rules as 401(k) β€” RMDs begin at 73 for those born 1951+, with the still-working exception for the current employer's plan. Pre-1987 403(b) balances have a special grandfather rule allowing RMDs to be delayed until age 75 for those amounts held in annuity contracts.

457(b)

Governmental 457(b) plans are subject to the same RMD rules as 401(k) plans beginning at age 73 for those born 1951+. The still-working exception applies. Non-governmental 457(b) plans have their own distribution rules defined in the plan document.

TSP β—€ Your Account

TSP RMDs begin at age 73. The TSP automatically calculates and processes RMDs for participants who have reached their RMD start age and have not begun distributions β€” a unique feature. The still-working exception applies to the TSP for federal employees not yet retired.

Traditional IRA

Traditional IRA RMDs begin at age 73 for those born 1951+. No still-working exception for IRAs β€” IRA RMDs begin regardless of employment status. All traditional IRA and SEP IRA balances are aggregated for RMD calculation purposes, and the total can be taken from any single IRA.

Roth IRA

Roth IRAs have NO RMDs during the owner's lifetime β€” the primary estate planning advantage. This is unchanged by any SECURE Act provision. Inherited Roth IRAs are subject to the 10-year distribution rule for most non-spouse beneficiaries.

SEP IRA

SEP IRA RMDs follow the same rules as traditional IRA RMDs β€” aggregated with traditional IRA balances, RMD begins at 73, no still-working exception. The large SEP IRA balances of some self-employed individuals can generate substantial RMDs.

SIMPLE IRA

SIMPLE IRA RMDs follow the same IRA rules β€” begin at 73, aggregated with traditional and SEP IRA balances. The 2-year restriction is irrelevant for 72-year-olds (well past the restriction period in all normal circumstances).

Pension Plan

Defined benefit pension annuity payments generally satisfy RMD requirements automatically β€” the plan pays the actuarially determined benefit regardless. If a pension was rolled to a traditional IRA, that IRA is now subject to the standard IRA RMD rules beginning at 73.

7Real-World Scenarios β€” TSP at After Age 72

Dollar-based examples illustrating how these rules play out in practice. The first scenario is drawn directly from the account-specific rules for your plan type.

TSP Specific

TSP β€” After Age 72

TSP RMDs begin at age 73. The TSP automatically calculates and processes RMDs for participants who have reached their RMD start age and have not begun distributions β€” a unique feature. The still-working exception applies to the TSP for federal employees not yet retired.

Scenario 2

SECURE 2.0 Transition β€” Born 1951, Age 72 in 2023

Robert was born in March 1951 and turned 72 in March 2023. Under the original SECURE Act, RMDs would have started for him in 2023 (the year he turned 72). But SECURE 2.0, signed in December 2022, moved the RMD age to 73 for those born in 1951 or later. Robert's RMD start age is now 73 β€” his first RMD is due by April 1, 2025 (the year following the year he turns 73 in 2024). He gained an additional year of penalty-free, RMD-free retirement account management.

Scenario 3

QCD Strategy β€” Satisfying RMD Without Taxable Income

Margaret, age 73, has a $600,000 traditional IRA and a $22,000 annual RMD. She is charitably inclined and does not need the full RMD amount for living expenses. She directs $22,000 directly from her IRA to her local community foundation as a Qualified Charitable Distribution. Result: the RMD is fully satisfied, the $22,000 is excluded from her taxable income (no charitable deduction needed), and her adjusted gross income is $22,000 lower than if she had taken the RMD personally and donated via a regular deduction. This QCD strategy prevents the income from triggering IRMAA surcharges and reduces the taxability of Social Security benefits.

8Expert Analysis

The shift from age 72 to age 73 as the RMD start age under SECURE 2.0 is one of the most consequential β€” and confusing β€” changes in recent retirement tax law. It created a transitional cohort (those born in 1950 vs. 1951) with different RMD rules, and it extended the Roth conversion window for millions of Americans by an additional year. Understanding exactly which rule applies β€” based on birth year, not the current calendar year β€” is the first step in retirement income planning for anyone currently in the 70–75 age range.

The 72–73 age range is the critical RMD transition window for the largest retirement savings cohort in American history β€” Baby Boomers born between 1946 and 1964. Those born 1951–1958 are entering or approaching their RMD start age at 73, with account balances that have grown for 30–40 years. The SECURE 2.0 extension to age 73 gave this cohort an additional year of flexibility β€” but many do not know their RMD start age has changed or how to take advantage of the extended conversion window.

πŸ” Expert Insight

The year before RMDs begin is the most valuable single tax year in most retirees' lives. In that year, the account holder has full control over how much taxable income to recognize β€” no forced distributions, no penalty, no constraints beyond their own tax bracket management. A retiree who maximizes Roth conversions in this final clean year β€” filling the 22% or 24% bracket completely β€” can dramatically reduce the RMD burden in every subsequent year. Each dollar converted in the pre-RMD year reduces future RMDs and their associated Social Security taxability and IRMAA effects by a compounding amount.

πŸ“‹ Compliance Note

The RMD cannot be rolled over β€” this is the most frequently violated rule at age 72+. Participants who receive a distribution from their IRA or 401(k) and then deposit it into another IRA as a 'rollover' are creating an excess contribution if that distribution was the required RMD. The 6% excise tax accrues annually on the excess amount. The IRS's automated systems do not catch this immediately β€” it often surfaces at audit. Separating the RMD component from any rollover component before initiating the transaction is essential.

9Common Mistakes at After Age 72

01

Attempting to roll over an RMD amount into an IRA

The RMD is not an eligible rollover distribution β€” it cannot be deposited into an IRA, cannot be rolled to a new plan, and cannot be converted to a Roth IRA. Depositing an RMD into an IRA creates an excess contribution subject to the 6% annual excise tax for every year it remains in the account. The excess must be withdrawn, and income tax is still owed on the original distribution. Many participants and even some financial advisors are unaware of this restriction.

02

Confusing the SECURE Act (age 72) and SECURE 2.0 (age 73) RMD rules

A participant born in 1950 had an RMD start age of 72 under the SECURE Act. A participant born in 1951 has an RMD start age of 73 under SECURE 2.0. These two people, separated by one birth year, have different RMD obligations. A 1951-born participant who takes unnecessary distributions thinking they must start at 72 is giving up a year of penalty-free IRA accumulation and Roth conversion flexibility. Always verify birth year against the applicable statute.

03

Taking the first RMD in April of the following year and triggering two RMDs in one tax year

Account holders are permitted to delay their first RMD until April 1 of the year following their RMD start age. But this means they must take both their first-year RMD (by April 1) and their second-year RMD (by December 31 of the same year) in the same calendar year. Two RMDs in one year doubles the taxable income for that year, potentially pushing the account holder into a higher bracket and triggering IRMAA surcharges. Taking the first RMD in the RMD start year (by December 31) eliminates this doubling problem.

10Frequently Asked Questions

I'm 72 β€” do I need to take Required Minimum Distributions?

It depends on your birth year. If you were born in 1950 or earlier, your RMD start age was 72 under the SECURE Act of 2019, and your RMDs have already begun. If you were born in 1951 or later, your RMD start age is 73 under SECURE 2.0, and you do not need to take RMDs until the year you turn 73. Verify your birth year against the applicable law before taking any distribution.

Can I roll over my RMD to another IRA to avoid paying taxes on it?

No β€” RMDs are not eligible rollover distributions and cannot be deposited into an IRA, another retirement plan, or converted to a Roth IRA. The RMD must be distributed to you (or to a qualified charity via a QCD). Depositing an RMD into an IRA creates an excess contribution subject to a 6% annual penalty. The income tax on the RMD is unavoidable through rollover β€” but QCDs (for those 70Β½+) can exclude the RMD amount from taxable income if paid directly to charity.

What is the penalty for missing an RMD?

Under SECURE 2.0, the penalty for failing to take a required RMD is 25% of the shortfall (reduced from 50% under prior law). If the missed RMD is corrected within a 2-year correction window, the penalty is further reduced to 10%. For example, if your RMD was $20,000 and you took nothing, the initial penalty is $5,000 (25%). If corrected within 2 years, the penalty drops to $2,000 (10%). The RMD must still be taken, and income tax is still owed on the distribution.

What are the most important TSP rollover rules after age 72?

TSP RMDs begin at age 73. The TSP automatically calculates and processes RMDs for participants who have reached their RMD start age and have not begun distributions β€” a unique feature. The still-working exception applies to the TSP for federal employees not yet retired.

Other Age Thresholds for TSP

Editorial Independence: RolloverGuidance.com is an independent educational publication. Content references IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs) β€” Required Minimum Distributions chapter. This is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Consult a licensed tax advisor for your specific situation.

Last reviewed: March 2026 Β· IRC Section 401(a)(9) (RMD rules as amended by SECURE 2.0)