60-Day Rollover Rules for Traditional IRA Rollovers
The 60-day rollover rule allows an individual who has received a distribution from a retirement plan or IRA to avoid taxation by redepositing the funds into an eligible retirement account within 60 calendar days of receipt. It is the IRS-established mechanism that converts an otherwise taxable distribution into a non-taxable rollover β but only if executed correctly and completely within the deadline. This guide explains how the 60-Day Rollover applies specifically to Traditional IRA accounts β including IRS mechanics, withholding rules, deadlines, and step-by-step instructions.
1How the 60-Day Rollover Works
A retirement plan or IRA issues a distribution to the account holder. The account holder has exactly 60 calendar days from the date the funds are received to redeposit the distribution (or any portion of it) into an eligible retirement account. The redeposited amount is not taxed β only the amount not redeposited within 60 days is taxable. For qualified plan distributions, the plan withholds 20% β the account holder must replace this from personal funds to execute a complete rollover.
Method Profile β 60-Day Rollover
- Legal Classification
- Eligible rollover distribution β redeposited within 60-day window. Reported on Form 1099-R as a distribution, then excluded from taxable income on Form 1040 if redeposited. The IRS tracks the original distribution and the subsequent rollover contribution through the 1099-R and 5498 cross-reference.
- Also Known As
- Indirect Rollover, 60-Day Rule, 60-Day Rollover Contribution
- Funds Pass Through You
- Yes β account holder handles funds
- IRS Reporting
- Form 1099-R issued Β· Form 5498 issued
- Works For
- Qualified Plans (401k, 403b, TSP) Β· IRA-to-IRA
- Roth Conversion
- Permitted (taxable event)
The 60-day rollover rule was designed as a safety valve β a mechanism that allows participants to correct an unintended distribution or temporarily access funds without permanent tax consequences. In practice, it has become the source of more unintended retirement account taxation than any other IRS retirement rule, primarily because qualified plans withhold 20% of the gross distribution before issuing the check, leaving participants with a cash shortfall that many cannot fill within the deadline.
2Traditional IRA β Specific Considerations
Traditional IRAs can receive rollovers at any time. There is no triggering event required β you can initiate a rollover from another IRA or from a qualified plan at any point.
Rollover Deadline
60 Days
Rollovers between traditional IRAs are processed as trustee-to-trustee transfers (preferred) or as 60-day rollovers. Trustee-to-trustee transfers are not reported on Form 1099-R and do not count against the one-rollover-per-12-months rule. This is a critical distinction from qualified plan rollovers.
Tax Treatment
pre-tax (if deductible) or after-tax (non-deductible)
Contributions may be fully deductible, partially deductible, or non-deductible depending on income, filing status, and workplace plan coverage. Non-deductible contributions create 'basis' tracked on Form 8606.
Early Withdrawal Penalty
10% federal penalty
10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax on pre-tax amounts withdrawn before age 59Β½
RMD Start Age
Age 73
Traditional IRAs are subject to RMDs beginning April 1 of the year following the year you turn 73. Unlike workplace plans, RMDs from multiple traditional IRAs can be aggregated β you calculate the total RMD across all traditional IRAs and can take the full amount from any one account.
The traditional IRA is the primary destination for most rollover assets β it is the most common IRA type by total assets. However, it is also the most misunderstood from a tax basis perspective. Millions of Americans hold traditional IRAs with a 'mixed basis' β some contributions were deductible and some were not β without maintaining the required Form 8606 records. Rolling additional qualified plan assets into a mixed-basis traditional IRA can permanently complicate the tax calculation on every future distribution.
Anyone with earned income can contribute to a traditional IRA, but the deductibility of contributions depends on income level and access to a workplace retirement plan. The rollover of qualified plan assets to a traditional IRA is always permitted regardless of income β but future Roth conversions of the rolled amount will be fully taxable.
3Withholding Rules
4The 60-Day Deadline
5One-Rollover-Per-12-Months Rule
6Step-by-Step Rollover Process
Follow these steps to execute a 60-Day Rollover from a Traditional IRA correctly and avoid common errors.
β± Typical Timeline
Account holder controls the timeline β 60-day window is the outer limit. Target deposit by day 50.
7Best Use Cases vs. When to Avoid
Ideal For
Receiving an IRA distribution where $0 withholding was elected β redeposit is straightforward with no cash gap
Ideal For
Temporary liquidity need where the account holder is confident the funds can be redeposited within 60 days
Ideal For
Correcting an erroneous distribution from an IRA before the 60-day window closes
Ideal For
Situations where a direct rollover or trustee transfer was attempted but failed administratively
Not Ideal For
Large qualified plan distributions where the 20% withholding creates a personal cash flow gap
Not Ideal For
Participants who have already performed an IRA-to-IRA rollover in the past 12 months
Not Ideal For
Participants under age 59Β½ where any rollover failure triggers the 10% penalty
Not Ideal For
Any situation where a direct rollover or trustee transfer is available β those methods eliminate all risk
The traditional IRA is the destination of choice for participants rolling out of 401(k), 403(b), and TSP plans in retirement. For the 55β75 demographic, the primary decision is whether to convert to a Roth IRA (and pay taxes now) versus maintaining the traditional IRA structure (and facing RMDs later). This decision is the most consequential retirement tax planning choice most individuals will face.
8Common Mistakes to Avoid
Counting the 60-day window from the check date instead of the receipt date
The 60-day clock starts when the account holder receives the distribution β not when the plan issued the check, not the postmark date. A check mailed on January 1st and received on January 7th starts the 60-day clock on January 7th β making the deadline March 7th, not March 1st. Document the date of receipt (keep the envelope, note the delivery date) and count from that date.
Attempting a second IRA-to-IRA 60-day rollover within 12 months of the first
Many participants manage multiple IRA accounts and believe the one-rollover-per-year limit applies per account. It does not. It applies per person β across all traditional IRAs owned. If you rolled IRA #1 into IRA #2 using a 60-day rollover in March, you cannot roll IRA #3 into IRA #4 using a 60-day rollover in November. The November rollover is fully taxable as a distribution. Use a trustee-to-trustee transfer for all IRA movements β it is unlimited.
Using the 60-day window as a short-term loan without a repayment plan
Some participants intentionally take a 60-day distribution intending to use the funds temporarily and redeposit before the deadline. This strategy often fails: unexpected expenses arise, the 20% withholding creates a cash shortfall larger than anticipated, or the 60-day deadline is miscalculated. Any shortfall is a permanent, taxable, potentially penalized distribution. If you need temporary access to retirement funds, a 401(k) plan loan β available while employed β is a far safer mechanism.
Governed under IRC Section 408(a) and IRS Publication 590-A (contributions) and Publication 590-B (distributions). The 'pro-rata rule' under IRC Section 408(d)(2) determines the taxable portion of any distribution from a traditional IRA that contains both deductible and non-deductible contributions.
9Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if I miss the 60-day rollover deadline?
The entire amount not redeposited becomes a taxable distribution in the year received. You cannot undo it after day 60 without an IRS-approved waiver. You may be eligible for a self-certification waiver under Revenue Procedure 2020-46 if the delay was caused by a financial institution error, serious illness, natural disaster, or other qualifying hardship. If your situation does not qualify for self-certification, you can request a private letter ruling from the IRS β but this costs $10,000+ and takes months.
Can I do a 60-day rollover from an IRA to avoid the 20% withholding?
Yes β IRA distributions are not subject to mandatory 20% withholding. When you request a distribution from a traditional IRA, you can elect $0 withholding, receiving 100% of the requested amount. You then have 60 days to redeposit into an eligible IRA. This avoids the cash gap problem that makes qualified plan indirect rollovers so risky. However, the one-rollover-per-12-months limit still applies.
Does the 60-day rule apply to rollovers from a 401(k) to an IRA?
Yes β if the distribution is paid to you personally (indirect rollover), the 60-day rule applies. You must redeposit 100% of the gross distribution β including the 20% withheld by the plan β within 60 days to avoid a taxable distribution. To avoid this risk entirely, request a direct rollover instead: the plan sends the funds directly to the IRA custodian, bypassing both the 20% withholding and the 60-day deadline.
Does the one-rollover-per-year rule apply to Traditional IRA 60-Day Rollovers?
Yes β An individual may perform only one 60-day IRA-to-IRA rollover in any rolling 12-month period across ALL traditional IRAs they own β not per account. This rule was clarified in Bobrow v. Commissioner (2014) and IRS Announcement 2014-15. Violating this limit converts the second rollover into a fully taxable distribution plus, for those under 59Β½, a 10% early withdrawal penalty. This rule does NOT apply to qualified plan distributions rolled over to IRAs β only to IRA-to-IRA 60-day rollovers.
What IRS form is generated when I use the 60-Day Rollover for my Traditional IRA?
Form 1099-R (distribution year); Form 5498 (rollover contribution confirmation, following January); Form 1040 Line 5a/5b
10IRS References & Regulatory Authority
- Primary Publication
- IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to IRAs) β 60-Day Rollover Rule
- Secondary Reference
- IRS Revenue Procedure 2020-46 (Self-Certification for Late Rollovers)
- Governing IRC Section
- IRC Section 402(c)(3) (60-day rollover from qualified plans); IRC Section 408(d)(3) (60-day IRA rollover rule); IRS Announcement 2014-15 (one-rollover-per-year)
- Account: Primary Reference
- IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements)
- Distribution Form
- Form 1099-R
- Contribution Confirmation
- Form 5498