Independent GuidanceWe decode IRS and Plan Document complexities.
🏒 Public Sector Rulesβš–οΈ IRS Code IRC Section 457(b)

Can You Rollover a 457(b) as a Military Service Member?

Military service members include active-duty personnel in all branches of the U.S. Armed Forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Space Force), National Guard and Reserve members, and recently separated veterans. Military members have access to the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) and receive military retirement pay (pension) after 20 years of service. Ensure you understand exactly how your 457(b) conforms to your sector's distinct rules before performing a rollover.

457(b)Plan Type
Military Service MemberEmployment
RestrictedIn-Service Rollover

1Expert Sector Analysis

A customized perspective for Military Service Members. Military service members face a uniquely complex retirement planning landscape β€” one that involves a generous defined-benefit pension (for those who serve 20+ years), a TSP with government matching (BRS members), VA disability compensation (tax-free), and the potential for second-career civilian employer retirement plans. The TSP rollover decision intersects with all of these: the military pension provides an income floor, the TSP rollover provides flexibility, and the VA disability pay affects the taxable income calculation that determines optimal Roth conversion timing.

The 457(b) is handled very differently across sectors. The BRS (Blended Retirement System) fundamentally changed the military retirement calculus for members who joined after 2018 or opted in. Under BRS, members receive both a reduced pension (40% of final pay after 20 years, vs. 50% under Legacy High-3) and TSP matching. Members under the Legacy High-3 system who separated before 20 years received no pension β€” only their TSP contributions. For these Legacy members, the TSP is the entirety of their service-related retirement savings.

Military service members who retire after 20 years in their late 30s or 40s represent a unique demographic: they are eligible for military retirement pay decades before typical retirement age. A member who joins at 18 and retires at 38 has a pension income floor but 20+ years before Social Security eligibility and potentially 30+ years before standard IRA penalty-free access. The TSP rollover and post-military civilian employer retirement plan strategy is critical for this age group.

πŸ’‘
Critical DistinctionMilitary service members have three distinct retirement structures: (1) Legacy High-3 system (defined benefit only β€” 50–100% of final pay after 20+ years); (2) Blended Retirement System (BRS β€” smaller defined benefit + TSP with government matching, for members who joined after January 1, 2018 or who opted in); and (3) Reserve Component retirement (based on point accumulation). The TSP is the rollover-relevant account; the military pension pays as a lifetime annuity.

2457(b) Eligibility & Governing Rules

Rules you must follow to successfully roll over as a Military Service Member.

⏱️

Rollover Trigger

When to Act

Separation from active duty service (discharge, retirement, or transition to reserve component). For active-duty members, TSP in-service withdrawals are available at age 59Β½. For reserve members, TSP accounts may be rolled over upon end of active-duty orders.
πŸ”

Direct Rollover

IRS Allowed

Governmental 457(b) plans follow the same direct rollover rules as 401(k) and 403(b) plans β€” funds roll tax-free via a trustee-to-trustee transfer. Non-governmental 457(b) plans are NOT eligible for direct rollover to an IRA; they can only be transferred to another eligible non-governmental 457(b) plan.
⚠️
Account Specific Eligibility
State and local government employees (police, firefighters, teachers in some states, municipal workers) typically hold governmental 457(b) plans with full IRA portability. Employees of nonprofits, hospitals, and universities may hold non-governmental 457(b) plans β€” which are dramatically less portable and are technically unsecured obligations of the employer, not assets held in trust for the employee.

3Tax & Penalty Implications

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

  • Tax Treatment: Direct rollover of traditional TSP to traditional IRA: non-taxable. Roth TSP to Roth IRA: non-taxable. Rolling traditional TSP to Roth IRA: fully taxable Roth conversion. Military retirement pay (pension) is ordinary income β€” taxable federally, with many states exempting military pension income entirely.
  • Early Withdrawal Penalty context: Standard 10% early withdrawal penalty before age 59Β½ applies to TSP distributions. Important exception: 'qualified reservist distributions' β€” reservists and National Guard members ordered to active duty for at least 180 days can take penalty-free IRA or qualified plan distributions during that active duty period. Additionally, TSP distributions to members who separate from service at age 55 or older qualify for the age-55 exception.
  • General 457(b) penalty rules: NO 10% early withdrawal penalty β€” this is the 457(b)'s defining advantage over 401(k) and 403(b) plans

4Costly Mistakes to Avoid

Mistakes specific to evaluating a rollover from a 457(b) as a Military Service Member.

Mistake 01

Rolling the TSP to an IRA immediately upon military retirement without considering the age-55 exception

A service member who retires from the military at age 40 after 20 years of service and rolls the TSP to a traditional IRA cannot take penalty-free IRA distributions until age 59Β½. If they need TSP income between their military retirement age and 59Β½, they should take distributions directly from the TSP (if they are age 55 or older at separation β€” which is unusual for 20-year retirees) or establish a SEPP/72(t) arrangement. Rolling to an IRA at age 40 locks the funds under IRA penalty rules. For most military retirees who are decades from 59Β½, establishing a SEPP from the TSP or rolled-over IRA is the primary pre-59Β½ access mechanism.

Mistake 02

Not contributing to the Roth TSP from combat zone tax-excluded pay

Military pay earned in a combat zone is excluded from federal income tax. This excluded pay can be contributed to the Roth TSP β€” effectively making the contributions tax-free at the time of contribution AND tax-free on qualified distributions. This is a unique tax arbitrage not available to any civilian investor: the Roth account is funded with money that never appeared in taxable income and the distributions are also tax-free. Service members in combat zones should maximize Roth TSP contributions from combat pay for the duration of the deployment.

Mistake 03

Not verifying whether the plan is governmental or non-governmental before initiating a rollover

A non-governmental 457(b) plan cannot be rolled to an IRA. If you attempt to roll non-governmental 457(b) funds to a traditional IRA, the distribution will be treated as a taxable event with no rollover credit. This is a permanent, irreversible error. Always confirm your plan type in writing with the plan administrator before initiating any distribution.

5Frequently Asked Questions

Can a military service member roll over their TSP to an IRA?

Yes β€” military service members can roll their TSP to a traditional IRA or Roth IRA upon separation from service. The rollover mechanics are identical to civilian federal employee TSP rollovers: request a direct rollover through My Account at tsp.gov using Form TSP-70 (full) or TSP-77 (partial). Roth TSP balances roll to a Roth IRA (tax-free); traditional TSP balances roll to a traditional IRA (non-taxable) or Roth IRA (taxable conversion). Allow 7–14 business days for FRTIB processing.

Can I roll my military retirement pension into an IRA?

No β€” military retired pay (the pension earned after 20+ years of service) is paid as a monthly lifetime annuity and cannot be rolled to an IRA or taken as a lump sum. The only rollover-eligible military retirement account is the TSP. Your retired pay will continue monthly regardless of your TSP rollover decisions.

Can I roll over a 457(b) to an IRA without penalty before age 59Β½?

Yes β€” if it is a governmental 457(b). There is no 10% early withdrawal penalty on 457(b) distributions at any age, making it one of the few accounts where pre-59Β½ rollovers to an IRA carry no penalty. However, the distribution is still subject to ordinary income tax, and the standard 20% withholding applies to indirect rollovers.

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 4484 (Choose a Retirement Plan for Employees of Tax-Exempt and Government Entities).