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πŸ“œ Specific Employment Rulesβš–οΈ IRS Code IRC Section 401(k)

Can You Rollover a 401(k) as a University Employee?

University employees include faculty, staff, administrators, and researchers at both public universities (governmental employers) and private universities (tax-exempt nonprofit employers). The retirement plan structure differs significantly based on whether the university is public (governmental) or private β€” this distinction determines plan type eligibility and rollover portability rules. Ensure you understand exactly how your 401(k) conforms to your sector's distinct rules before performing a rollover.

401(k)Plan Type
University EmployeeEmployment
AvailableIn-Service Rollover

1Expert Sector Analysis

A customized perspective for University Employees. TIAA Traditional is the only annuity product in the higher education retirement system that carries explicit liquidity restrictions on lump-sum withdrawals β€” making university employee 403(b) rollovers uniquely complex. A faculty member with $500,000 in TIAA Traditional who retires at 65 expecting an immediate full rollover to a self-directed IRA may discover that TIAA requires a multi-year payment schedule before the TIAA Traditional balance can be transferred. Planning a rollover from a university 403(b) must start with a TIAA product audit β€” not a custodian search.

The 401(k) is handled very differently across sectors. The distinction between public and private university employment is crucial for rollover planning. Public university employees have governmental plan treatment (457(b) with no penalty, ERISA exemption). Private university employees have ERISA-governed plans (standard 403(b) rules, ERISA protections, church plan exception possible). The same TIAA-CREF account structure at two different universities may have entirely different rollover eligibility rules based solely on whether the employer is public or private.

University faculty and professional staff in the 58–72 age range often have complex multi-institution retirement histories β€” TIAA accounts from multiple universities, potentially a mix of TIAA Traditional, CREF Stock, and mutual fund choices, plus personal IRAs accumulated independently. The rollover planning challenge is consolidating these accounts while navigating TIAA Traditional's liquidity restrictions and the potential for multiple overlapping contribution histories.

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Critical DistinctionUniversity employees β€” particularly faculty β€” often participate in TIAA-CREF 403(b) plans, the largest retirement system for academic and research institutions. TIAA's unique products (including the TIAA Traditional annuity with a guaranteed credited rate and the option for lifetime annuity income) create distinct rollover considerations not present at other employers.

2401(k) Eligibility & Governing Rules

Rules you must follow to successfully roll over as a University Employee.

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Rollover Trigger

When to Act

Separation from the university employer (retirement, resignation, or end of contract term). For public university employees, in-service distributions from the 457(b) are available at any age after reaching retirement age specified in the plan; in-service 403(b) distributions typically require age 59Β½ and 2 years of plan participation.
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Direct Rollover

IRS Allowed

The plan administrator issues a check made payable directly to the new custodian (e.g., 'Fidelity FBO John Smith'). The mandatory 20% federal withholding does NOT apply to direct rollovers. This is the IRS-preferred method.
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Account Specific Eligibility
Eligibility to roll over a 401(k) is almost always tied to a triggering event: leaving the employer, reaching age 59Β½ (for in-service distributions), or plan termination. The plan document governs β€” not the IRS alone. Some plans allow partial distributions; most require a full lump-sum upon separation.

3Tax & Penalty Implications

How the IRS views your rollover based on your employment status.

  • Tax Treatment: Direct rollover of CREF or mutual fund 403(b) assets to a traditional IRA: non-taxable. TIAA Traditional may have restrictions on direct rollover β€” consult TIAA about the specific transfer process. Rolling to Roth IRA: fully taxable conversion. Private university 403(b) distributions follow ERISA rules; public university 403(b) and 457(b) follow governmental plan rules.
  • Early Withdrawal Penalty context: Standard 10% penalty before age 59Β½ for 403(b) distributions. Age-55 separation exception applies. Public university governmental 457(b): no 10% penalty at any age.
  • General 401(k) penalty rules: 10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax on the distributed amount

4Costly Mistakes to Avoid

Mistakes specific to evaluating a rollover from a 401(k) as a University Employee.

Mistake 01

Expecting immediate lump-sum rollover from TIAA Traditional without checking the liquidity provisions

TIAA Traditional is not a standard mutual fund β€” it is a participating annuity with unique liquidity provisions. Upon separation, TIAA Traditional assets may not be immediately available as a lump-sum rollover to an IRA. Depending on the contract type and plan document, TIAA may offer: (a) a 9-payment schedule paid annually over 9 years into the TIAA Rollover IRA; (b) transfers to CREF accounts which can then be rolled over; or (c) in some contracts, immediate lump-sum availability. Contact TIAA directly and request the specific transfer options for your contract before planning any rollover.

Mistake 02

Rolling a church plan 403(b) to a 401(k) at a new private employer

Faculty moving from a religious private university (operating under a church plan exemption) to a private employer with a 401(k) cannot roll the church plan 403(b) to the new employer's 401(k). Church plan assets can only roll to another church plan or to a traditional IRA. Attempting to roll a church plan 403(b) to a non-church employer's plan creates a taxable distribution. The correct destination for departing church plan 403(b) assets is always a traditional IRA.

Mistake 03

Initiating an indirect rollover instead of requesting a direct rollover

Most participants don't realize they have a choice. When you call your plan and say 'I want to roll over my 401(k),' the default is often an indirect rollover with 20% withheld. You must specifically request a 'direct rollover' or 'trustee-to-trustee transfer' and provide the receiving custodian's details in writing.

5Frequently Asked Questions

Can a professor or university staff member roll over a 403(b) to an IRA?

Yes β€” after separating from the university, a 403(b) account can be rolled to a traditional IRA. For CREF and mutual fund components, this is a standard direct rollover. For TIAA Traditional, contact TIAA first β€” TIAA Traditional may have transfer restrictions requiring a multi-year payout schedule rather than an immediate lump-sum rollover. The TIAA Traditional portion may need to be transferred within the TIAA system before an external IRA rollover is possible.

Does a university employee's 403(b) follow them to a new job?

TIAA-CREF accounts are portable within the higher education system β€” if you move to another institution that uses TIAA, the assets can often remain in the same account structure and new contributions continue without a formal rollover. If you move to an employer outside the TIAA universe, the accumulated account remains with TIAA under the originating plan's rules until you roll it out. The rollover is not required at job change β€” it can wait until retirement or until you specifically want to consolidate.

Can I roll over a 401(k) while still employed at the same company?

Generally no β€” most 401(k) plans prohibit in-service rollovers. The exception is if your plan document allows in-service distributions, which is typically permitted only after age 59Β½. Check your Summary Plan Description (SPD) or contact your HR department to confirm your plan's specific rules.

This guide is provided for educational purposes only. Always verify your sector's rules and your account's plan document with a qualified professional before initiating a rollover. We do not provide investment or tax advice. IRS Reference utilized: IRS Publication 575 (Pension and Annuity Income).