Can You Rollover a 457(b) After Job Change?
A job change is the most common rollover trigger in the United States — millions of employees change jobs annually and face the same decision about what to do with the former employer's retirement plan. The decision is not urgent from a tax standpoint (no automatic penalties for inaction), but leaving funds in a former employer's plan indefinitely means losing track of the account over time — the Department of Labor estimates there are over $1.
01Eligibility Overview
A Job Change is classified by the IRS as Separation from service — voluntary. Qualifies as an eligible rollover event for all qualified plan types (401k, 403b, 457b, TSP).. Under IRS Publication 4484 (Choose a Retirement Plan for Employees of Tax-Exempt and Government Entities), this qualifies your 457(b) balance as an eligible rollover distribution.
Triggering Event: Job Change
- IRS Classification
- Separation from service — voluntary. Qualifies as an eligible rollover event for all qualified plan types (401k, 403b, 457b, TSP).
- Initiated By
- employee
- Rollover Permitted
- Yes — immediately upon separation
- Waiting Period
- None — eligibility is immediate upon separation. However, the plan administrator may require 30–45 days of processing time after receiving the rollover request.
- Urgency Level
- Moderate
- Decision Deadline
- No strict IRS deadline, but address within 90 days to prevent the plan from acting on your behalf
Source Account: 457(b)
- Governing Code
- IRC Section 457(b)
- Tax Treatment
- pre-tax
- Early Penalty
- NO 10% early withdrawal penalty — this is the 457(b)'s defining advantage over 401(k) and 403(b) plans
- RMD Applies
- Yes — beginning age 73
A job change occurs when an employee voluntarily separates from one employer to begin employment with another. The separation is initiated by the employee. The new employer may or may not offer a retirement plan.
Upon voluntary separation, all vested qualified plan assets become eligible for rollover immediately. The plan must distribute or allow rollover of the vested balance. Most plans also allow you to leave funds in place if the balance exceeds $7,000.
Governmental 457(b) funds are immediately vested. Tax-exempt organization (non-governmental) 457(b) plans may have vesting schedules and, critically, assets remain the property of the employer — not the employee — until distributed. Request a current vested balance statement from the plan administrator before initiating any rollover.
Outstanding plan loans at a job change typically become due within 60–90 days of separation. If the loan is not repaid, the outstanding balance is treated as a distribution — taxable income plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty if under age 59½.
Balances between $1,000 and $7,000 may be automatically rolled into a default IRA by the plan within 12–18 months of separation under safe harbor provisions. Balances under $1,000 may be cashed out automatically with taxes withheld.
Voluntary separation fully unlocks all vested retirement plan assets for rollover. The plan cannot prevent a vested participant from rolling over funds after separation. The only limitations are: (1) the vesting schedule — you can only move what you own; (2) the plan's processing timeline — allow 30–45 days; and (3) any outstanding plan loan that must be resolved first.
02Available Rollover Options
After a Job Change, you have up to 6 options for your 457(b) balance. A direct rollover to a traditional IRA is the IRS-preferred method — it eliminates all withholding and deadline risk.
Compatible Rollover Destinations for 457(b)
03Timing & Deadlines
The IRS imposes no deadline to initiate a direct rollover after a Job Change. The 60-day clock only starts if a check is issued to you personally. However, administrative deadlines apply — act within 60–90 days to maintain control.
Open the Receiving IRA Account
Before contacting the 457(b) plan, open your destination IRA account to obtain the FBO account number. The plan needs these details to process a direct rollover.
Same day at major custodiansResolve Outstanding Plan Loans
Outstanding plan loans become due within 60–90 days of separation. If not repaid, the loan balance becomes a taxable distribution — and if you are under 59½, a 10% penalty also applies.
Critical — 60–90 day windowRequest Direct Rollover from 457(b) Plan
Contact the plan administrator. Use the words "direct rollover" explicitly. Provide the receiving custodian's name, FBO address, and account number. Request a wire transfer rather than a mailed check to eliminate postal risk.
1 business day (your action)Plan Administrator Processing
The plan verifies eligibility, vesting status, and outstanding obligations. Issues a check or wire payable to the receiving custodian FBO your name — not to you personally.
3–10 business daysReceiving Custodian Posts Rollover
The new IRA custodian receives the funds, codes them as a rollover contribution (not a regular annual contribution), and posts the balance. Funds are available for investment in 1–3 business days.
1–3 business days after receiptThe 60-day clock begins on the date you receive a distribution check — not when you initiated the rollover. If a check is made payable to you, you must deposit 100% of the gross amount (including the 20% withheld) within 60 calendar days. Missing day 60 by even one day converts the entire amount to a taxable distribution with no automatic remedy. Direct rollovers avoid this entirely.
04Tax Implications
Tax Summary: 457(b) Direct Rollover After Job Change
10% Penalty Exceptions — 457(b)
The early withdrawal penalty applies only to taxable distributions — not to direct rollovers. If you do take a distribution (not a rollover), these exceptions eliminate the 10% penalty:
- N/A — no 10% penalty applies at any age for governmental 457(b) distributions
05457(b)-Specific Considerations
Beyond the general IRS rollover rules, your 457(b) has plan-specific features that directly affect how a Job Change rollover should be structured.
Required Minimum Distributions
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 — at any age. This makes it uniquely powerful for early retirees and bridge-income strategies between retirement and age 59½. However, the plan comes in two fundamentally different versions — governmental and non-governmental — that have almost nothing in common from a rollover portability standpoint.
Direct Rollover Mechanics for 457(b)
Governmental 457(b) plans follow the same direct rollover rules as 401(k) and 403(b) plans — 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.
Roth Conversion Option
A governmental 457(b) can be rolled to a Roth IRA, triggering a taxable conversion event. This strategy is particularly advantageous for 457(b) participants because there is NO 10% early withdrawal penalty on 457(b) distributions at any age — making early conversions before age 59½ less costly than equivalent 401(k) conversions.
063 Costly Mistakes to Avoid
These are the most financially damaging errors made by 457(b) holders navigating a Job Change — each is preventable with the right information.
Rolling over to the new employer's plan without comparing investment fees
Many workers automatically roll their old 401(k) into the new employer's plan for simplicity. But if the new plan charges 1–1.5% in annual fees versus 0.05% at a self-selected IRA, the fee difference compounds significantly over 10–15 years. Always compare the new plan's expense ratios to what you would pay at a major IRA custodian before defaulting to the new employer's plan.
Ignoring the outstanding loan deadline and triggering an unintended distribution
A $20,000 plan loan that goes unpaid after a job change becomes a $20,000 taxable distribution — plus a $2,000 penalty if under age 59½. Many departing employees with plan loans assume the loan follows them to the new job. It doesn't. The loan must be repaid to the old plan within the plan's cure period (typically 60–90 days) to avoid the taxable distribution.
Not obtaining a copy of the vested balance statement before leaving
Initiating a rollover later becomes complicated without a current account statement showing the vested balance. Once you leave, communication with the plan administrator becomes slower. Request a final vested account balance statement before your last day — it documents exactly what you own and simplifies the rollover paperwork.
07Frequently Asked Questions
- How long do I have to roll over my 401(k) after changing jobs?
- There is no IRS deadline to initiate the rollover — the 60-day rule only applies once you actually receive a distribution check. You can leave your funds in the former employer's plan indefinitely if the balance exceeds $7,000. However, for balances under $7,000, the plan may force a distribution or roll the funds to a default IRA. Address the rollover within 60–90 days of your job change to stay in control of the process.
- Should I roll my old 401(k) into my new employer's plan or an IRA?
- Compare the investment options and fee structures. New employer plans often have limited fund menus and higher expense ratios than what you can access with a self-directed IRA at Fidelity, Schwab, or Vanguard. An IRA gives you unlimited investment flexibility at zero annual custodian fees. Roll into the new employer's plan only if it has superior funds or you want access to plan loans.
- What happens to my unvested employer match when I change jobs?
- Unvested employer contributions are forfeited when you leave. You can only roll over your vested balance. If you are on a 3-year cliff vesting schedule and leave after 2 years, you forfeit all employer match contributions. If you are on a 6-year graded schedule and have 50% vesting, you forfeit the unvested 50%.
- Is there an IRS deadline to roll over my 457(b) after a Job Change?
- There is no IRS deadline to initiate a direct rollover — the 60-day rule only applies once a check has been physically issued to you. However, act within 60–90 days to prevent the plan from initiating a forced distribution (for balances under $7,000) and to maintain administrative control of the process.
- Does a direct rollover count against my annual IRA contribution limit?
- No. Rollover contributions are entirely separate from and do not count against the annual IRA contribution limit ($7,000 in 2026; $8,000 for those age 50+). A $400,000 rollover into a traditional IRA does not affect your eligibility to make a regular annual contribution.
- What happens if I miss the 60-day rollover deadline?
- The full distribution becomes taxable income in the year received — plus the 10% early withdrawal penalty if you are under age 59½ (absent another exception). There is no automatic remedy. The IRS may grant a waiver under Revenue Procedure 2020-46 if the delay was caused by a qualified hardship — but waivers are not guaranteed. Always request a direct rollover to eliminate the 60-day risk entirely.