Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer Rules for 457(b) Rollovers
A trustee-to-trustee transfer is a movement of retirement assets directly between two financial institutions acting as trustees or custodians, with no distribution to the account holder at any point. The term is used in IRS guidance to describe both IRA-to-IRA direct transfers and direct rollovers from qualified plans to IRAs β emphasizing that the funds flow institution-to-institution without passing through the participant's hands. This guide explains how the Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer applies specifically to 457(b) accounts β including IRS mechanics, withholding rules, deadlines, and step-by-step instructions.
1How the Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer Works
The term 'trustee-to-trustee transfer' is used in IRS Publication 590-A to describe the cleanest form of IRA movement. In practice, it encompasses two distinct mechanics: (1) For IRA-to-IRA: the receiving custodian sends a transfer request to the sending custodian β no participant action beyond signing the transfer form. (2) For qualified plan to IRA: the plan administrator issues payment to the new IRA custodian directly β the participant provides the custodian's FBO details. In both cases, the defining feature is that funds never enter the participant's bank account or personal possession.
Method Profile β Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer
- Legal Classification
- For IRA-to-IRA: non-reportable transfer (no Form 1099-R, no Form 5498 rollover entry). For qualified plan to IRA: direct rollover (Form 1099-R Code G, Form 5498 rollover entry). Both involve funds moving institution-to-institution with no participant access.
- Also Known As
- Direct Transfer, Institution-to-Institution Transfer, Custodian-to-Custodian Transfer, Direct Rollover (when from qualified plan to IRA)
- Funds Pass Through You
- No β institution-to-institution
- IRS Reporting
- No Form 1099-R Β· No Form 5498
- Works For
- Qualified Plans (401k, 403b, TSP) Β· IRA-to-IRA
- Roth Conversion
- Permitted (taxable event)
The trustee-to-trustee transfer is the IRS's ideal mechanism for retirement asset portability β the system it built to allow participants to move money freely between institutions without creating taxable events, withholding complications, or administrative deadlines. The fact that it is underused relative to indirect rollovers reflects a gap in participant education, not a gap in the mechanism itself. Understanding the difference between a trustee-to-trustee transfer and an indirect rollover is arguably the single most valuable piece of retirement account procedural knowledge a participant can have.
2457(b) β Specific Considerations
Separation from service, attainment of age 70Β½ (for governmental plans), an unforeseeable emergency, or plan termination. Governmental 457(b) plans also allow rollovers at any age after separation.
Rollover Deadline
60 Days
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.
Tax Treatment
Pre-Tax
Pre-tax deferrals; Roth 457(b) option available in some governmental plans
Early Withdrawal Penalty
NO 10% early
NO 10% early withdrawal penalty β this is the 457(b)'s defining advantage over 401(k) and 403(b) plans
RMD Start Age
Age 73
Governmental 457(b) plans are subject to RMD rules beginning at age 73, the same as 401(k) and 403(b) plans. Non-governmental 457(b) plans have their own distribution rules defined in the plan document, which may differ from standard RMD rules.
The 457(b) is the only retirement account type that imposes no 10% early withdrawal penalty β at any age. This makes it uniquely powerful for early retirees and bridge-income strategies between retirement and age 59Β½. However, the plan comes in two fundamentally different versions β governmental and non-governmental β that have almost nothing in common from a rollover portability standpoint.
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.
3Withholding Rules
β Withholding Bypass
No Mandatory Withholding β 0% β the trustee-to-trustee mechanism fully bypasses federal and state withholding in all its forms
The withholding bypass is structural β because funds never pass to the participant, the legal trigger for withholding under IRC Section 3405 never occurs. This applies whether the transfer is IRA-to-IRA (no reporting at all) or qualified plan to IRA (direct rollover with Code G β no withholding required).
4Step-by-Step Rollover Process
Follow these steps to execute a Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer from a 457(b) correctly and avoid common errors.
β± Typical Timeline
IRA-to-IRA: 3β10 business days. Qualified plan to IRA: 7β21 business days depending on plan administrator.
5Best Use Cases vs. When to Avoid
Ideal For
Moving an IRA from any custodian to any other custodian β the default, preferred mechanism
Ideal For
Rollover from a qualified plan (401k, TSP, 403b) to an IRA β the direct rollover form of trustee-to-trustee
Ideal For
Consolidating multiple IRAs from different custodians into a single account
Ideal For
Moving assets to a self-directed IRA custodian for alternative investments
Ideal For
Any movement where the participant wants zero IRS footprint and no withholding
Not Ideal For
Roth conversions (traditional-to-Roth) β those are taxable events regardless of transfer method
Not Ideal For
Assets held in non-transferable formats (some annuities must be surrendered rather than transferred)
Many state and local government employees are unaware they hold a 457(b) in addition to a pension. These plans are frequently accumulated alongside defined-benefit pension plans, creating a retirement income stack that requires careful coordination to avoid unnecessary RMD bunching at age 73.
6Common Mistakes to Avoid
Accepting a distribution check even when a trustee-to-trustee transfer was intended
Some plan administrators default to issuing a check even when the participant requests a direct rollover β particularly smaller employer plans and older 401(k) platforms. If you receive a check in your name (not in the new custodian's name FBO you), contact both institutions immediately. You may be able to return the check and have it reissued correctly. If you deposit it, you are in a 60-day indirect rollover with 20% already withheld.
Initiating a transfer from the sending institution instead of the receiving institution
For IRA-to-IRA transfers, the transfer request should always be initiated by the receiving custodian β they send the transfer request to the sending institution. If you call the sending institution and ask them to 'send the funds' to the new custodian, they may issue a distribution check rather than a transfer. Always initiate from the receiving end using the receiving custodian's Transfer Request Form.
Assuming the trustee-to-trustee mechanism works for Roth conversions
A traditional-to-Roth conversion cannot be executed as a non-taxable transfer, regardless of how the mechanics are structured. If you initiate what you believe is a 'trustee transfer' from your traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, the pre-tax amount is a taxable conversion in the year of transfer. The trustee-to-trustee mechanism does not change the tax character of the transaction β it only determines whether funds pass through the participant's hands.
Governed under IRC Section 457(b). The IRS clarified rollover eligibility in Revenue Ruling 2004-12, which confirmed that governmental 457(b) plans qualify as 'eligible retirement plans' for rollover purposes. Non-governmental 457(b) plans were explicitly excluded from this classification.
7Frequently Asked Questions
What is a trustee-to-trustee transfer and is it the same as a direct rollover?
They are similar but not identical. A trustee-to-trustee transfer is IRA-to-IRA movement with no IRS reporting β completely invisible to the tax system. A direct rollover is a qualified plan (401k, TSP) to IRA movement that generates a Form 1099-R with Code G β reportable but non-taxable. Both avoid the 20% withholding and the 60-day deadline. The trustee-to-trustee transfer is the cleaner mechanism with zero tax footprint.
Does a trustee-to-trustee transfer count against my one rollover per year limit?
No β the one-rollover-per-12-months limit applies only to 60-day indirect IRA rollovers. Trustee-to-trustee transfers are explicitly excluded from this limitation. You can execute unlimited trustee-to-trustee transfers in a single year across all your IRA accounts.
Can a trustee-to-trustee transfer be done from a 401(k) directly to a Roth IRA?
Yes β a direct rollover from a traditional 401(k) to a Roth IRA is permitted and can be structured as a trustee-to-trustee movement. However, the pre-tax amount is fully taxable as a Roth conversion in the year of transfer β the trustee-to-trustee mechanism does not eliminate the tax. It only eliminates the withholding and the 60-day deadline. You will owe income tax on the converted amount at filing.
Does the one-rollover-per-year rule apply to 457(b) Trustee-to-Trustee Transfers?
No β the one-rollover-per-12-months limitation does not apply to the Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer. The one-rollover-per-12-months rule was specifically designed to limit 60-day indirect rollovers β it has no application to trustee-to-trustee transfers. This distinction is codified in IRS Announcement 2014-15, which clarifies that trustee-to-trustee transfers between IRA custodians are excluded from the limitation.
What IRS form is generated when I use the Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer for my 457(b)?
IRA-to-IRA: no forms generated. Qualified plan to IRA: Form 1099-R Code G + Form 5498 rollover entry.
8IRS References & Regulatory Authority
- Primary Publication
- IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to IRAs) β Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer section
- Secondary Reference
- IRS Announcement 2014-15 (one-rollover-per-year clarification)
- Governing IRC Section
- IRC Section 408(d)(3)(A) (IRA rollover rules); IRC Section 401(a)(31) (qualified plan direct rollover)
- Account: Primary Reference
- IRS Publication 4484 (Choose a Retirement Plan for Employees of Tax-Exempt and Government Entities)
- Distribution Form
- Form 1099-R
- Contribution Confirmation
- Form 5498