How to Rollover a Traditional IRA to a Real Estate IRA
The traditional IRA is the primary destination for most rollover assets β it is the most common IRA type by total assets.
01Executive Overview
A Traditional IRA rollover to a Real Estate IRA is a non-taxable transfer that preserves your tax-deferred status while giving you expanded investment options and custodian flexibility. This guide follows the procedural framework of IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements) and IRC Section 4975.
Source Account: Traditional IRA
- Governing Code
- IRC Section 408(a)
- Plan Category
- individual retirement account
- Tax Character
- pre-tax (if deductible) or after-tax (non-deductible)
- Sponsor Type
- self-directed (no employer sponsor)
- 2026 Contribution Limit
- $7,000 (+$1,000 catch-up age 50+)
- Rollover Trigger
- 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.
Destination Account: Real Estate IRA
- Account Class
- self directed individual retirement account
- Tax Character
- pre-tax (traditional SDIRA) or post-tax (Roth SDIRA)
- Setup Time
- 10β21 business days from rollover to first real estate purchase closing
- Minimum to Open
- No IRS minimum, but practical minimum is $50,000β$100,000+ to purchase real estate with sufficient liquidity reserve for ongoing expenses
- RMD Implication
- Subject to RMDs at age 73
- Rollover Acceptance
- Real Estate IRAs accept rollovers from all qualified plans, subject to the same SDIRA mechanics. The practical constraint is having sufficient balance after rollover to both purchase the property and maintain a cash reserve for ongoing expenses.
02Eligibility Rules
Before initiating a Traditional IRAβtoβReal Estate IRA rollover, confirm that both the source plan and the destination account meet IRS eligibility requirements.
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.
Real Estate IRAs accept rollovers from all qualified plans, subject to the same SDIRA mechanics. The practical constraint is having sufficient balance after rollover to both purchase the property and maintain a cash reserve for ongoing expenses.
The Real Estate IRA must be held by an IRS-approved self-directed IRA custodian under IRC Section 408(a). Open the receiving account before contacting your Traditional IRA plan administrator.
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.
β IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements)
03Step-by-Step Rollover Process
The IRS-preferred rollover method is a direct rollover (trustee-to-trustee transfer) β the check is made payable to the new custodian, not to you. This eliminates the mandatory 20% federal withholding and the 60-day deadline risk entirely.
- 1
Open the Real Estate IRA Account First
Open the receiving Real Estate IRA account before contacting your Traditional IRA plan administrator. The distributing plan needs the receiving custodian's name, mailing address, and FBO account number to process a direct rollover. Without this information, the plan cannot complete the direct rollover and may default to an indirect rollover.
Setup time: 10β21 business days from rollover to first real estate purchase closingYou'll need:- Government-issued ID
- SSN
- SDIRA application
- Rollover or transfer from existing retirement account
- Selected property and purchase contract (for initial investment)
- Sufficient cash reserve within the IRA for property expenses
Select an IRS-approved SDIRA custodian (e.g., Equity Trust, Directed IRA, IRA Financial). Verify the custodian is chartered under IRC Section 408(a) before opening. - 2
Request a Direct Rollover from Your Traditional IRA
Contact your Traditional IRA plan administrator and use the words "direct rollover" explicitly. Provide:
- The receiving custodian's full legal name
- The FBO format:
[Custodian Name] FBO [Your Full Name] Real Estate IRA - The receiving account number
- The custodian's mailing address
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.
- 3
Verify the Check Payee
When the distribution check arrives β whether mailed to you for forwarding or directly to the custodian β verify the payee before accepting or forwarding it. The check must be payable to the new custodian, not to you personally.
β CorrectFidelity FBO Jane Smith IRA #123456789β Incorrect (Triggers 20% Withholding)Jane SmithIf the check is made payable to you personally, contact the plan administrator immediately. Do not deposit it into a personal bank account β doing so converts it into an indirect rollover subject to 20% withholding and the 60-day deadline.
- 4
Deposit as a Rollover Contribution
When delivering the check or wire to the receiving custodian, specify it as a "rollover contribution" β not a regular annual IRA contribution. This critical coding ensures the amount is not counted against your 2026 IRA contribution limit (standard annual limits).
Open the Real Estate SDIRA account, fund via direct rollover, identify the target property, have the SDIRA custodian review the purchase contract, submit an Investment Direction Letter authorizing the purchase, and the custodian takes title in the IRA's name (e.g., 'Equity Trust Company FBO John Smith IRA'). All earnest money and closing costs must come from within the IRA.
Posting time after receipt: Varies by property transaction. Residential closings: 14β30 days after purchase contract. Cash closes: faster. All-cash Real Estate IRA purchases avoid the non-recourse financing complexity. - 5
Submit an Investment Direction Letter
Once the cash is credited to your SDIRA, the custodian holds funds in your account but does not invest them automatically. You must submit an Investment Direction Letter (IDL) authorizing the specific alternative asset purchase.
The SDIRA custodian takes legal title to the property on behalf of the IRA. All documents β deeds, purchase contracts, leases, management agreements β must identify the IRA as the owner (not the account holder personally). The custodian must approve all transactions in writing through a formal investment direction process.
Real Estate Title Vesting: All purchase documents, deeds, and closing paperwork must identify the IRA, not you personally, as the buyer. Example:Equity Trust Company Custodian FBO Jane Smith IRA. Using your personal name on the deed is a prohibited transaction that disqualifies the entire IRA. - 6
Confirm Tax Documentation
In January of the following year, verify you receive:
- Form 1099-R from the Traditional IRA plan β shows the gross distribution with Distribution Code G (direct rollover). Report on Form 1040 Line 5a with $0 on Line 5b β write 'ROLLOVER' on the dotted line.
- Form 5498 from the receiving Real Estate IRA custodian β issued by May 31, confirms the rollover contribution was received and properly coded.
04Processing Timeline
Most Traditional IRAβtoβReal Estate IRA rollovers complete in 10β21 business days from request submission to funds credited at the receiving institution. The timeline varies significantly by plan administrator and asset type.
Open Receiving Account
Open Real Estate IRA at the chosen custodian. Receive account number.
10β21 business days from rollover to first real estate purchase closingSubmit Rollover Request
Contact Traditional IRA plan administrator with receiving custodian's FBO information. Request direct rollover in writing.
1 business dayPlan Administrator Processing
Plan administrator verifies eligibility, vesting, and outstanding loans. Prepares distribution check or wire.
3β10 business daysCheck or Wire Transfer
Plan issues check (3β5 postal days) or wire (same business day). Wire transfers are strongly recommended for large balances to eliminate postal delay and lost-check risk.
1β5 business daysCustodian Posts Rollover
Receiving Real Estate IRA custodian credits the rollover contribution. Funds available for investment or investment direction.
1β3 business daysInvestment Direction Executed
Submit Investment Direction Letter. Custodian processes and executes the alternative asset purchase.
2β5 business days for authorization; then closing timelineThe 60-day window begins on the date you receive the distribution check β not the date it was issued or postmarked. For direct rollovers, no 60-day deadline applies. If you receive a check payable to you, you have exactly 60 calendar days to deposit 100% of the gross amount (including the 20% withheld) into the new account. Missing the deadline by even one day creates a taxable event with no automatic remedy.
05Tax & Penalty Guide
Direct Rollover Tax Summary
Why This Rollover Is Tax-Free
Rolling a pre-tax qualified plan to a traditional Real Estate IRA is non-taxable. The SDIRA structure and tax treatment are the same as any other traditional SDIRA.
Traditional Real Estate IRA: all rental income, appreciation, and sale proceeds flow back into the IRA tax-deferred. Roth Real Estate IRA: all income and gains are permanently tax-free. The ability to accumulate rental income and appreciation tax-deferred (or tax-free in a Roth SDIRA) is the primary tax advantage of the Real Estate IRA structure.
Early Withdrawal Penalty: 10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax on pre-tax amounts withdrawn before age 59Β½
The 10% early withdrawal penalty (IRC Section 72(t)) applies only to taxable distributions taken before age 59Β½ β not to direct rollovers. The following exceptions eliminate the penalty even on early taxable distributions:
- first-time home purchase (up to $10,000 lifetime)
- qualified higher education expenses
- disability
- death
- substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP/72(t))
- health insurance premiums while unemployed
- unreimbursed medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI
- IRS levy
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.
06IRS Reporting Requirements
Every retirement account rollover β including non-taxable direct rollovers β requires reporting on your federal tax return. Failing to report a rollover, even a tax-free one, triggers the IRS's Automated Underreporter (AUR) program to propose tax on the full distribution amount.
Distribution Report
Issued by your Traditional IRA plan. Shows the gross distribution (Box 1) and Distribution Code in Box 7.
- Line 5a = Box 1 amount ($200,000 example)
- Line 5b = $0 β write "ROLLOVER" on the dotted line
Rollover Confirmation
Issued by your Real Estate IRA custodian. Confirms the rollover was received and properly coded in Box 2 (rollover contributions) or Box 3 (Roth conversion amount).
IRS Publications Referenced in This Guide
- IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements) β governing rules for the Traditional IRA
- IRC Section 4975 (Prohibited Transactions) β governing rules for the Real Estate IRA as receiving account
- IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from Individual Retirement Arrangements)
- IRS Notice 2009-68 β Safe Harbor Explanation for Eligible Rollover Distributions
07Custodian & Compliance Rules
The Real Estate IRA requires an IRS-approved self-directed IRA custodian and strict compliance with IRC Section 4975 prohibited transaction rules. The custodian takes legal title to the assets β the account holder never holds them personally.
Custodian Selection Guide
Real estate SDIRA transactions require a custodian with staff experienced in property closings, deed work, and lease administration. Not all SDIRA custodians have equal real estate expertise. Ask each custodian for their average processing time for a residential purchase transaction and their fee for title work β these vary significantly.
- Directed IRA β extensive real estate transaction experience; online portal optimized for property management
- Equity Trust Company β largest SDIRA custodian; handles complex real estate transactions
- IRA Financial Trust β strong for checkbook IRA structures paired with real estate LLCs
- New Direction Trust Company β specialized in real estate and alternative assets
Prohibited Transaction Rules β IRC Section 4975
The personal labor prohibition is the most commonly violated Real Estate IRA rule. Performing any maintenance, repair, or management service on an IRA-owned property yourself β regardless of whether you charge the IRA for the work β is a prohibited contribution. All property services must be performed by third-party vendors paid from within the IRA. This includes simple tasks like mowing the lawn or replacing a light fixture.
Permitted Assets in Your Real Estate IRA
β Permitted
- Single-family residential rental properties
- Multi-family residential (duplexes, apartment buildings)
- Commercial real estate (office, retail, industrial)
- Raw land and development parcels
- Tax lien certificates and tax deeds
- Real estate notes and mortgage lending
- REITs (private, non-traded)
- Real estate partnerships and LLCs
- Foreign real estate (complex β consult legal counsel)
β Prohibited
- Property for personal use (vacation homes, primary residence)
- Property used by disqualified persons (family members, business partners)
- Transactions where the IRA owner personally performs repair or maintenance work (this constitutes a prohibited contribution)
- Real estate purchased from or sold to disqualified persons
- Property with an existing mortgage unless the IRA uses non-recourse financing
083 Costly Mistakes to Avoid
These are the most common β and most expensive β errors investors make when rolling over a Traditional IRA to a Real Estate IRA. Each is preventable with the right procedural knowledge.
Not maintaining Form 8606 for non-deductible contributions
Every non-deductible IRA contribution must be reported on Form 8606 in the year it is made. Without this record, the IRS has no way to distinguish your after-tax basis from pre-tax amounts β and will tax the full distribution as ordinary income. Recovering lost 8606 records requires reconstructing years of contribution history, which is extremely difficult after the fact.
Personally performing services on IRA-owned property
The IRS requires that all services for an IRA-owned property be performed by third parties β not the account holder. Mowing the lawn, painting a room, fixing a leaky faucet β any physical work you perform personally on an IRA-owned property constitutes a prohibited contribution of services. The IRA rules make no exception for small repairs or routine maintenance. All labor must be hired out and paid from within the IRA.
Rolling a qualified plan into a traditional IRA that already contains non-deductible contributions
If your traditional IRA contains non-deductible contributions (basis), rolling a large qualified plan distribution into the same IRA dilutes that basis proportionally. This is called the 'IRA aggregation rule.' It can significantly reduce the tax efficiency of future Roth conversions, because all traditional IRA balances are aggregated when calculating the taxable portion of a conversion.
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.
09Frequently Asked Questions
- Is there an income limit to roll over a 401(k) to a traditional IRA?
- No. The rollover of qualified plan assets to a traditional IRA has no income limit. Anyone can roll a 401(k), 403(b), TSP, or other qualified plan to a traditional IRA regardless of income level. Income limits apply only to new IRA contributions, not to rollovers.
- How many times can I roll over my traditional IRA per year?
- You may perform only one IRA-to-IRA rollover (60-day rollover) per 12-month period, and this limit applies across all of your IRAs combined. However, trustee-to-trustee transfers β where funds move directly between custodians β are unlimited and are not subject to this restriction.
- What is the pro-rata rule and how does it affect my traditional IRA rollover?
- The pro-rata rule applies when your traditional IRA contains both deductible (pre-tax) and non-deductible (after-tax) contributions. When you take any distribution or do a Roth conversion, the IRS requires you to calculate the taxable portion proportionally across all your traditional IRA balances β you cannot selectively withdraw only the after-tax basis. This rule significantly affects Roth conversion tax planning.
- Can I use my IRA to buy a rental property?
- Yes β a self-directed IRA (Real Estate IRA) can purchase rental properties. The IRA takes legal title to the property, and all rental income flows back into the IRA tax-deferred (or tax-free in a Roth SDIRA). The key restrictions are: you cannot personally use the property, family members cannot use or live in it, and all expenses must be paid from within the IRA.
- Can I buy a house with my IRA for my child to live in?
- No. Renting an IRA-owned property to your child (or any other 'disqualified person' β including your spouse, parents, grandchildren, or entities you control) is a prohibited transaction under IRC Section 4975. The consequence is that the entire IRA is deemed distributed as of January 1 of the violation year, making the full balance immediately taxable.
- What happens to a Real Estate IRA when I reach RMD age at 73?
- You must take Required Minimum Distributions from the IRA, including from the value of the real estate. Since you cannot distribute a fraction of a property, you have three options: (1) maintain sufficient cash in the IRA to cover the annual RMD; (2) take an in-kind distribution of a partial property interest (complex and taxable); or (3) sell the property before RMD age and hold the proceeds in cash for distribution. Proactive RMD planning for Real Estate IRAs should begin at least 5 years before age 73.
- Is there a deadline to roll over a Traditional IRA after leaving my employer?
- There is no IRS deadline to initiate a rollover after a triggering event. The 60-day rule only applies once a distribution has been issued to you. However, plan administrators may force distributions for balances under $7,000 within 12β18 months of separation. Address the rollover within 60β90 days to maintain administrative control.
- Does a direct rollover count against my annual IRA contribution limit?
- No. Rollover contributions are 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 Real Estate IRA does not affect your ability to make a regular annual contribution to the same account.