Independent Publication β€” Not Affiliated with the IRS or Any Government AgencyContent cross-referenced against IRS Publication 575, 590-A & IRC Section references cited below
βœ“ IRS Preferred MethodLow Risk

Direct Rollover Rules for Roth IRA Rollovers

A direct rollover is a tax-reporting event in which retirement plan funds are transferred directly from a distributing plan or IRA to a receiving plan or IRA, without the funds ever passing through the account holder's hands. The check is made payable to the new custodian β€” not to the individual. This guide explains how the Direct Rollover applies specifically to Roth IRA accounts β€” including IRS mechanics, withholding rules, deadlines, and step-by-step instructions.

0%Federal Withholding
NoneIRS Deadline
No LimitRollovers Allowed
7–21 business days from request to funds credited at receiving institutionTypical Timeline
LowRisk Level
βœ…
IRS-Recommended MethodThe legal basis for the withholding bypass is precise: IRC Section 3405(c) requires 20% withholding only on eligible rollover distributions paid directly to the employee. Because a direct rollover is paid to the receiving custodian β€” not to the employee β€” the withholding statute does not apply. This is not a loophole; it is the statutory design of the direct rollover mechanism.

1How the Direct Rollover Works

The account holder instructs the distributing plan to send the funds directly to the receiving institution. The distributing plan issues a check made payable to the new custodian 'for the benefit of' (FBO) the account holder β€” for example, 'Fidelity FBO Jane Smith IRA.' The check is either mailed directly to the custodian or mailed to the account holder for forwarding. The account holder never has access to or control over the cash.

Method Profile β€” Direct Rollover

Legal Classification
Eligible rollover distribution β€” direct. Reported on Form 1099-R with Distribution Code G (to a qualified plan) or Code G (to an IRA). The transaction does not appear as income on the account holder's tax return.
Also Known As
Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer (when both are IRAs), Direct Transfer, Plan-to-Plan Transfer
Funds Pass Through You
No β€” institution-to-institution
IRS Reporting
Form 1099-R issued Β· Form 5498 issued
Works For
Qualified Plans (401k, 403b, TSP)
Roth Conversion
Permitted (taxable event)

The direct rollover is the only rollover method where the IRS's mandatory 20% withholding requirement does not apply β€” and it is the method the IRS explicitly designates as the preferred approach in its Publication 575 guidance. Despite this, millions of retirement plan participants each year initiate indirect rollovers β€” with 20% withheld β€” simply because they did not specifically request a direct rollover when contacting their plan administrator. The plan's default is frequently the indirect method; the participant must actively request the direct alternative.

2Roth IRA β€” Specific Considerations

No triggering event required for Roth IRA to Roth IRA rollovers or transfers. Rollovers INTO a Roth IRA from a pre-tax source (traditional IRA, 401(k), etc.) are treated as Roth conversions and are fully taxable.

πŸ“…

Rollover Deadline

60 Days

Roth-to-Roth trustee-to-trustee transfers are non-taxable and not reported on Form 1099-R. When rolling a Roth 401(k) or Roth 403(b) to a Roth IRA, the 5-year holding period clock does NOT restart β€” the original Roth IRA 5-year period controls, which is a significant advantage for participants who established their Roth IRA many years ago.

πŸ’Έ

Tax Treatment

post-tax (contributions are after-tax; qualified distributions are tax-free)

All contributions are made with after-tax dollars. Qualified distributions of both contributions and earnings are completely tax-free.

⚠️

Early Withdrawal Penalty

Contributions can be

Contributions can be withdrawn at any time, tax-free and penalty-free. Earnings withdrawn before age 59Β½ AND before the 5-year holding period are subject to income tax plus the 10% penalty.

⚠️
Indirect Rollover Risk for Roth IRARoth IRA indirect rollovers are subject to the one-rollover-per-12-months rule, the same as traditional IRAs. Unlike traditional IRA or qualified plan indirect rollovers, there is no mandatory 20% withholding on Roth IRA distributions β€” because qualified Roth distributions are tax-free by definition.

The Roth IRA is the only retirement account type with no Required Minimum Distributions during the owner's lifetime. Combined with tax-free growth and tax-free qualified distributions, this makes the Roth IRA the most powerful long-term wealth accumulation vehicle available β€” if funded early enough. For the 55–75 demographic, the Roth IRA's value is primarily as a tax-free inheritance vehicle and as a hedge against future tax rate increases.

Direct Roth IRA contributions are subject to income limits ($161,000–$176,000 for single filers; $240,000+ for married filing jointly in 2026). However, rollovers TO a Roth IRA (Roth conversions) from qualified plans and traditional IRAs have no income limit. High-income individuals who cannot contribute directly to a Roth IRA can still accumulate Roth assets through the conversion process.

3Withholding Rules

βœ… Withholding Bypass

No Mandatory Withholding β€” 0% β€” mandatory 20% federal withholding does NOT apply to direct rollovers from qualified plans

Because the funds never pass through the account holder's hands, the plan is not legally required to withhold. The 20% mandatory withholding requirement under IRC Section 3405(c) applies only to eligible rollover distributions paid directly to the participant β€” not to direct rollovers.

πŸ›
State WithholdingState income tax withholding is also bypassed on direct rollovers. Some states require withholding on distributions to participants, but direct rollovers to a custodian avoid this requirement entirely.

4Step-by-Step Rollover Process

Follow these steps to execute a Direct Rollover from a Roth IRA correctly and avoid common errors.

Step 1
Open the receiving IRA or plan account and obtain the new custodian's exact account number and FBO instructions before contacting the distributing plan.
Step 2
Contact the distributing plan administrator and request a 'direct rollover' β€” provide the receiving custodian's name, address, and FBO account information in writing.
Step 3
The plan issues a check payable to '[Custodian Name] FBO [Your Name] IRA' β€” verify the payee before accepting the check.
Step 4
If the check is mailed to you for forwarding: do not endorse it, do not deposit it, and deliver it to the receiving custodian promptly.
Step 5
Log in to the receiving custodian's portal and submit the rollover contribution form β€” specify it as a 'rollover contribution,' not a regular IRA contribution.
Step 6
Confirm the funds are posted and verify the Form 5498 is issued the following January β€” it confirms the rollover was processed correctly.

⏱ Typical Timeline

7–21 business days from request to funds credited at receiving institution

5Best Use Cases vs. When to Avoid

βœ…

Ideal For

All rollover scenarios β€” direct rollover is the IRS-preferred method in every situation

βœ…

Ideal For

Large balances where the 20% withholding trap would create a significant tax problem

βœ…

Ideal For

Participants under age 59Β½ where an incorrect indirect rollover would trigger the 10% early withdrawal penalty

βœ…

Ideal For

TSP rollovers (the FRTIB processes direct rollovers through its own form system)

βœ…

Ideal For

Any rollover to a Gold IRA, SDIRA, or alternative asset account where precise timing matters

❌

Not Ideal For

Situations where the participant wants to use the distributed funds temporarily (though this is generally inadvisable)

❌

Not Ideal For

Plans that do not offer a direct rollover option (rare, but verify with plan administrator)

For pre-retirees aged 55–65, the primary Roth IRA strategy is the 'Roth conversion ladder' β€” systematically converting traditional IRA assets to Roth during low-income years (typically early retirement, before Social Security begins and before RMDs start at 73). This strategy can dramatically reduce lifetime tax liability and simplify estate planning.

6Common Mistakes to Avoid

01

Accepting a check made payable to yourself instead of the new custodian

When the distributing plan makes the check payable to you personally β€” even if you intend to forward it to the new custodian β€” it is legally classified as an indirect rollover, not a direct rollover. The plan must apply 20% federal withholding to the gross amount. You now have a check for 80% of the original balance and must fund the remaining 20% from personal savings within 60 days. If you cannot, the 20% becomes a taxable distribution.

02

Not opening the receiving IRA account before initiating the direct rollover

The plan administrator needs the receiving custodian's account number and FBO information to process the direct rollover. Many participants call their plan to initiate the rollover before opening the receiving IRA β€” and then discover they cannot complete the request without an existing account number. The receiving account must exist first. Open it online (10 minutes at Fidelity, Schwab, or Vanguard) before making any call to the distributing plan.

03

Coding the deposited check as a 'regular contribution' instead of a 'rollover contribution'

When the check arrives at the receiving custodian β€” whether mailed to you for forwarding or directly to the custodian β€” it must be deposited as a 'rollover contribution.' If coded as a regular annual contribution, it counts against your $7,000 IRA limit and creates an excess contribution subject to a 6% annual excise tax. Most custodians have a dedicated rollover deposit workflow β€” use it and confirm the Form 5498 reflects the deposit in the rollover box, not the contribution box.

Governed under IRC Section 408A. The Roth IRA 5-year rule (IRC Section 408A(d)(2)) governs when earnings become tax-free. There are actually two separate 5-year rules: one for qualified distributions of earnings, and one for converted amounts distributed before age 59Β½. They operate independently and are frequently confused.

7Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a direct rollover and a trustee-to-trustee transfer?

Both avoid the 20% withholding and the 60-day deadline, but they differ in what triggers Form 1099-R reporting. A direct rollover from a qualified plan (401k, TSP) to an IRA generates a Form 1099-R with Code G β€” it is reportable but non-taxable. A trustee-to-trustee transfer between two IRAs generates no Form 1099-R at all β€” it is completely off the tax reporting radar. Both are safe; the terminology differs by account type.

Can I do a direct rollover from a 401(k) to a Roth IRA?

Yes β€” you can direct rollover a pre-tax 401(k) directly to a Roth IRA in a single step. The IRS allows this as a direct conversion. The rolled amount is fully taxable in the year of the conversion. No 20% withholding applies because it is a direct rollover β€” but you will owe income tax on the converted amount at filing. Many people prefer a two-step approach: roll to a traditional IRA first, then convert gradually over multiple years.

How do I request a direct rollover from my 401(k)?

Call or write to your plan administrator and use the words 'direct rollover' explicitly. Provide the receiving custodian's name, address, and account number (FBO your name). Request that the check be made payable to the new custodian β€” not to you personally. Get the request in writing and keep a copy. Most major plans also have an online distribution request form where you can specify the direct rollover option.

Does the one-rollover-per-year rule apply to Roth IRA Direct Rollovers?

No β€” the one-rollover-per-12-months limitation does not apply to the Direct Rollover. The one-rollover-per-12-months limitation that applies to IRA-to-IRA rollovers does NOT apply to direct rollovers from qualified plans (401k, 403b, TSP, etc.) to IRAs. It also does not apply to trustee-to-trustee transfers between IRA custodians. This rule is limited to 60-day (indirect) IRA rollovers.

What IRS form is generated when I use the Direct Rollover for my Roth IRA?

Form 1099-R (Code G β€” direct rollover); Form 5498 (rollover contribution confirmation)

8IRS References & Regulatory Authority

Primary Publication
IRS Publication 575 (Pension and Annuity Income) β€” Direct Rollover section
Secondary Reference
IRS Notice 2009-68 (Safe Harbor Explanations for Eligible Rollover Distributions)
Governing IRC Section
IRC Section 401(a)(31) (direct rollover requirement); IRC Section 3405(c) (withholding on eligible rollover distributions)
Account: Primary Reference
IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements)
Distribution Form
Form 1099-R
Contribution Confirmation
Form 5498

Editorial Independence: RolloverGuidance.com is an independent educational publication. Content is derived from IRS publications, IRC sections, and publicly available regulatory guidance. This article does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional before making retirement account decisions.

Last reviewed: March 2026 Β· Governing authority: IRC Section 401(a)(31) (direct rollover requirement); IRC Section 3405(c) (withholding on eligible rollover distributions)