Can You Rollover a SEP IRA as a Nonprofit Employee?
Nonprofit employees work for organizations exempt from federal income tax under IRC Section 501(c) β including hospitals, charities, religious organizations, foundations, social service agencies, arts organizations, and associations. Nonprofits offer retirement plans structured under different IRC sections than both for-profit employers (401(k)) and governmental employers (457(b) and 403(b) government). Ensure you understand exactly how your SEP IRA conforms to your sector's distinct rules before performing a rollover.
1Expert Sector Analysis
A customized perspective for Nonprofit Employees. The non-governmental 457(b) plan is one of the most dangerous hidden risks in nonprofit retirement planning. Nonprofit executives and highly compensated employees who accumulate large balances in a non-governmental 457(b) plan often don't realize until separation that the plan cannot be rolled to an IRA β the entire balance is taxable in the year of distribution (unless transferred to another non-governmental 457(b)), and the assets have always been technically owned by the employer, not the employee. The 2024β2025 wave of nonprofit financial distress has made this risk concrete for thousands of employees of struggling charities and hospitals.
The SEP IRA is handled very differently across sectors. The critical first step for any nonprofit employee planning a rollover is identifying which plan type they hold. A 403(b) account looks similar to a non-governmental 457(b) on most account statements β both show a balance, both allow contributions, and both offer investment options. The difference is in the legal structure and portability rights. Ask the HR department directly: 'Is this account a 403(b) or a 457(b)? And if it's a 457(b), is it a governmental or non-governmental plan?'
Nonprofit employees in the 55β70 age range who have participated in executive non-governmental 457(b) plans for many years face a significant tax planning challenge at retirement: the entire non-governmental 457(b) balance will be distributed as ordinary income in the distribution year(s), regardless of rollover intentions. The only tax management tool is spreading distributions over multiple years β distributions can often be structured over 5, 10, or 15 years depending on the plan document, which distributes the tax burden.
2SEP IRA Eligibility & Governing Rules
Rules you must follow to successfully roll over as a Nonprofit Employee.
Rollover Trigger
When to Act
Direct Rollover
IRS Allowed
Any self-employed individual, sole proprietor, partnership, LLC, or S-corporation owner can establish a SEP IRA. Employees are eligible if they are at least 21 years old, have worked for the employer in at least 3 of the last 5 years, and have received at least $750 in compensation. The self-employed individual can establish and fund a SEP IRA as late as the tax return due date (including extensions) β typically up to October 15 of the following year.
3Tax & Penalty Implications
How the IRS views your rollover based on your employment status.
- Tax Treatment: 403(b) direct rollover to traditional IRA: non-taxable. Non-governmental 457(b) distribution: always fully taxable as ordinary income in the year of distribution β there is no rollover option. Roth conversion from 403(b): fully taxable.
- Early Withdrawal Penalty context: 403(b) standard 10% penalty before age 59Β½ with age-55 exception. Non-governmental 457(b): the standard 10% early withdrawal penalty may apply β this is a key difference from governmental 457(b) plans, which have no penalty at any age. Confirm with the plan whether the 10% penalty applies to your non-governmental 457(b) distributions.
- General SEP IRA penalty rules: 10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax for distributions before age 59Β½
4Costly Mistakes to Avoid
Mistakes specific to evaluating a rollover from a SEP IRA as a Nonprofit Employee.
Attempting to roll a non-governmental 457(b) to a traditional IRA
This is a categorical error with severe consequences. The IRS treats a non-governmental 457(b) distribution that is not transferred to another non-governmental 457(b) as a fully taxable distribution in the year received. A nonprofit executive with $300,000 in a non-governmental 457(b) who 'rolls' it to a traditional IRA will receive a taxable distribution of $300,000 β adding the full amount to ordinary income in that year, potentially at the 35β37% bracket, with no rollover credit. There is no 60-day window remedy, no IRS waiver, and no correction mechanism. The assets must remain in the non-governmental plan or transfer to another eligible non-governmental plan.
Not recognizing the employer insolvency risk in a non-governmental 457(b)
Employees who accumulate large non-governmental 457(b) balances may not realize that the assets are technically owned by the employer and held on the employee's behalf as a general employer obligation β not as segregated trust assets. If the nonprofit becomes insolvent or files for bankruptcy, the 457(b) balances may be at risk as unsecured creditor claims. This risk is not theoretical: nonprofit hospitals, charities, and associations have faced financial distress, and employees have faced partial or complete loss of non-governmental 457(b) balances. For large accumulated balances, understanding this risk is essential.
Not realizing there are no catch-up contributions for SEP IRAs
Unlike traditional IRAs (which allow $1,000 catch-up contributions for those 50+) or 401(k) plans ($7,500 catch-up), SEP IRAs have no age-based catch-up provision. The contribution is capped at the lesser of 25% of net self-employment income or $70,000. Self-employed individuals who want additional catch-up savings capacity should consider adding a solo 401(k) alongside their SEP IRA.
5Frequently Asked Questions
Can a nonprofit employee roll over a 403(b) to an IRA?
Yes β a nonprofit 403(b) plan can be rolled to a traditional IRA in a non-taxable direct rollover at any time after separating from the nonprofit employer. Watch for annuity surrender charges if the 403(b) is funded through an insurance contract β these are separate from IRS penalties and deducted from the distribution amount. After surrender-charge-free status is confirmed, the rollover process is identical to any other 403(b) or 401(k) rollover.
Can a nonprofit employee roll over a 457(b) to an IRA?
Only if the 457(b) is a governmental 457(b) held by a governmental entity. Nonprofits do not sponsor governmental 457(b) plans β their 457(b) plans are non-governmental. A non-governmental 457(b) distribution cannot be rolled to an IRA, a 401(k), or any other qualified plan. It can only be transferred to another eligible non-governmental 457(b) plan. Any distribution from a non-governmental 457(b) that is not transferred to another non-governmental 457(b) is fully taxable as ordinary income in the year received.
Can I roll over a SEP IRA to a solo 401(k)?
Yes β if the solo 401(k) plan document accepts incoming rollovers (most do). Rolling SEP IRA assets to a solo 401(k) can be advantageous if you want access to plan loans (solo 401(k) plans may offer loans; SEP IRAs do not) or if you want to implement a 'backdoor Roth' strategy (the pro-rata rule applies to SEP IRA assets when doing Roth conversions β moving them to a solo 401(k) removes them from the IRA aggregation calculation).