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 MethodVery Low Risk

Trustee Transfer Rules for 457(b) Rollovers

A trustee transfer (also called a direct transfer or custodian-to-custodian transfer) is a non-reportable movement of IRA assets from one IRA custodian to another IRA custodian of the same account type, without the funds ever touching the account holder's hands. Unlike a direct rollover from a qualified plan, a trustee transfer between IRAs generates no Form 1099-R and creates no IRS reporting obligation. This guide explains how the Trustee Transfer applies specifically to 457(b) accounts β€” including IRS mechanics, withholding rules, deadlines, and step-by-step instructions.

0%Federal Withholding
NoneIRS Deadline
UnlimitedRollovers Allowed
3–10 business days for standard brokerage IRAs; 14–30 days for annuity-based IRAs or IRAs with non-standard assetsTypical Timeline
Very lowRisk Level
βœ…
IRS-Recommended MethodThe legal basis for the zero-reporting treatment is that a trustee transfer is not a 'distribution' under IRC Section 408 β€” no assets are ever paid to the account holder. Because no distribution occurs, no Form 1099-R is triggered, no withholding obligation exists, and the one-rollover-per-year rule β€” which applies only to distributions redeposited within 60 days β€” never comes into play.

1How the Trustee Transfer Works

The account holder instructs the receiving IRA custodian to initiate the transfer by sending a transfer request to the current (sending) custodian. The sending custodian liquidates or transfers the assets and sends them directly to the receiving custodian. The account holder signs a transfer form authorizing the movement β€” but never receives a check, never has possession of the funds, and has no role in the physical transfer of assets.

Method Profile β€” Trustee Transfer

Legal Classification
Non-reportable IRA transfer. Not classified as a rollover or a distribution for IRS purposes. No Form 1099-R is issued. No Form 5498 rollover box is checked. The transaction is invisible to the IRS at the federal tax return level.
Also Known As
Direct Transfer, Custodian-to-Custodian Transfer, Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer (IRA-specific usage)
Funds Pass Through You
No β€” institution-to-institution
IRS Reporting
No Form 1099-R Β· No Form 5498
Works For
IRA-to-IRA
Roth Conversion
Not Applicable

The trustee transfer is the most administratively elegant IRA movement mechanism β€” it generates zero IRS reporting, bypasses all withholding, has no deadline, and is unlimited in frequency. Despite these advantages, many IRA holders default to the indirect rollover (60-day method) out of unfamiliarity with the transfer process. The trustee transfer is also the only way to move IRA assets an unlimited number of times per year β€” a critical capability for participants consolidating multiple inherited IRAs or executing an annual IRA rebalancing strategy across custodians.

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.

πŸ“…

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.

πŸ’Έ

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

πŸ—“

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.

⚠️
Indirect Rollover Risk for 457(b)For governmental 457(b) plans, the 20% withholding applies to indirect rollovers under the same rules as 401(k) plans. For non-governmental 457(b) plans, distributions cannot be rolled to an IRA at all β€” the distinction between governmental and non-governmental is critical and frequently misunderstood.

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

βœ… Withholding Bypass

No Mandatory Withholding β€” 0% β€” no withholding of any kind. The funds move entirely between institutions.

Because no distribution occurs and no funds pass through the account holder, the withholding statute (IRC Section 3405) never applies. The transfer is invisible to the withholding mechanism entirely.

πŸ›
State WithholdingNo state withholding applies. The absence of any distribution eliminates all withholding at both the federal and state level.

4Step-by-Step Rollover Process

Follow these steps to execute a Trustee Transfer from a 457(b) correctly and avoid common errors.

Step 1
Open the receiving IRA account at the new custodian β€” confirm it is the same account type (traditional-to-traditional, Roth-to-Roth).
Step 2
Obtain a 'Transfer Request Form' or 'TOA (Transfer on Account)' form from the receiving custodian β€” most are available online.
Step 3
Complete the form with: your name, Social Security number, the sending custodian's name and address, and your account number at the sending institution.
Step 4
Specify whether you want an 'in-kind' transfer (assets move as-is) or a 'liquidation transfer' (assets sold, cash sent) β€” in-kind is faster if the receiving custodian supports the same investments.
Step 5
Submit the form to the receiving custodian β€” they contact the sending custodian directly.
Step 6
The sending custodian processes the request (typically 3–10 business days for liquid assets; longer for annuities or alternative assets).
Step 7
Confirm the transfer is complete and account balance is correct at the receiving institution.

⏱ Typical Timeline

3–10 business days for standard brokerage IRAs; 14–30 days for annuity-based IRAs or IRAs with non-standard assets

5Best Use Cases vs. When to Avoid

βœ…

Ideal For

Consolidating multiple IRAs from different custodians into a single account

βœ…

Ideal For

Moving an IRA from a high-fee institution to a low-fee custodian

βœ…

Ideal For

Moving an IRA to a self-directed IRA custodian to access alternative assets

βœ…

Ideal For

Any situation where you want to move IRA funds without any IRS reporting or tax consequences

βœ…

Ideal For

Participants who have already used their one allowed indirect rollover in the past 12 months

❌

Not Ideal For

Moving funds from a qualified plan (401k, 403b, TSP) to an IRA β€” that requires a direct rollover, not a trustee transfer

❌

Not Ideal For

Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA β€” that is a Roth conversion, not a transfer

❌

Not Ideal For

Plans that hold non-transferable assets (certain annuity contracts must be surrendered, not 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

01

Requesting a check from the sending custodian instead of initiating a transfer

When an account holder calls a custodian and says 'I want to move my IRA,' the custodian may issue a distribution check rather than initiating a transfer β€” particularly if the account holder does not use the words 'trustee-to-trustee transfer' or 'direct transfer.' The moment a check is issued to the account holder, it becomes an indirect rollover subject to the 60-day deadline and the one-rollover-per-year rule. Always initiate the transfer through the receiving custodian's transfer form, not by requesting a distribution from the sending custodian.

02

Attempting to transfer a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA as a 'transfer'

A traditional-to-Roth move is a taxable Roth conversion β€” regardless of how it is initiated or what the custodian calls it. If a participant submits a transfer form moving a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA and the receiving custodian codes it as a non-taxable transfer, the IRS will still classify the pre-tax amount as a taxable conversion. Confirm the receiving account type matches the sending account type before initiating any transfer.

03

Not confirming the transfer does not trigger a surrender charge on annuity-based IRAs

IRAs funded through annuity contracts β€” common in 403(b) plans that were subsequently rolled to an IRA, or in insurance-company IRAs β€” often carry surrender charges during the initial contract period (typically 7–10 years). Initiating a transfer out of an annuity-based IRA before the surrender period expires triggers these charges β€” which are separate from and additional to any IRS penalties. Always request the surrender charge schedule from the sending custodian before initiating a transfer.

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

How is a trustee transfer different from a rollover?

A trustee transfer involves no distribution to the account holder β€” funds move directly between custodians, generating no Form 1099-R, no withholding, and no 60-day deadline. A rollover (direct or indirect) involves a distribution from the sending plan that is subsequently redeposited. For IRA-to-IRA movements, the trustee transfer is always preferable β€” it is simpler, safer, and generates zero IRS reporting.

Is there a limit on how many trustee transfers I can do in a year?

No β€” trustee transfers between IRAs are unlimited. The one-rollover-per-12-months restriction applies only to 60-day indirect rollovers, not to trustee transfers. You can transfer your IRA from one custodian to another as many times as you want in a single year with no IRS restriction.

Can I transfer my 401(k) to an IRA using a trustee transfer?

No β€” moving a qualified plan (401k, 403b, TSP) to an IRA requires a direct rollover, not a trustee transfer. The trustee transfer mechanism is specific to IRA-to-IRA movements. A direct rollover from a qualified plan to an IRA is functionally similar (no withholding, no 60-day deadline), but it generates a Form 1099-R with Code G and is classified as a rollover rather than a transfer.

Does the one-rollover-per-year rule apply to 457(b) Trustee Transfers?

No β€” the one-rollover-per-12-months limitation does not apply to the Trustee Transfer. The one-rollover-per-12-months rule specifically applies to 60-day (indirect) IRA rollovers and does NOT apply to trustee-to-trustee transfers. An account holder can execute an unlimited number of trustee transfers in a single year across as many IRA accounts as they hold. This makes the trustee transfer the appropriate mechanism for IRA account consolidation projects.

What IRS form is generated when I use the Trustee Transfer for my 457(b)?

No Form 1099-R generated. No Form 5498 rollover box checked. Transfer appears only in custodian records.

8IRS References & Regulatory Authority

Primary Publication
IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to IRAs) β€” Transfers section
Secondary Reference
IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs)
Governing IRC Section
IRC Section 408(d)(3)(A) (IRA rollover rules); Revenue Ruling 78-406 (trustee-to-trustee transfer treatment)
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

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 408(d)(3)(A) (IRA rollover rules); Revenue Ruling 78-406 (trustee-to-trustee transfer treatment)