Independent Publication — Not Affiliated with the IRS or Any Government AgencyCross-referenced against IRS Publication 575 (Pension
Tax-Free Eligible

Tax-Free Rollover of a Traditional IRA Rollover

A tax-free rollover is a movement of retirement assets between eligible accounts that produces zero taxable income, zero early withdrawal penalty, and zero withholding — provided the correct method and compatible account types are used. The IRS designed the direct rollover and trustee transfer specifically to enable tax-free portability of retirement assets.

0%Withholding Risk
NonePenalty Risk
N/A60-Day Rule
Tax-FreeRoth Conversion
N/AState Tax Impact
Tax-Free Rollover Available for Traditional IRAA rollover is tax-free when: (1) the source account is a pre-tax qualified plan or pre-tax IRA; (2) the destination account is also a pre-tax account (traditional IRA or another qualified plan); (3) the rollover is executed as a direct rollover or trustee-to-trustee transfer; and (4) the funds never pass through the account holder's personal possession in a way that triggers a distribution. The direct rollover method preserves tax-deferred status with zero immediate tax impact.

1Overview — Tax-Free Rollover Defined

A rollover is tax-free when: (1) the source account is a pre-tax qualified plan or pre-tax IRA; (2) the destination account is also a pre-tax account (traditional IRA or another qualified plan); (3) the rollover is executed as a direct rollover or trustee-to-trustee transfer; and (4) the funds never pass through the account holder's personal possession in a way that triggers a distribution. Roth-to-Roth rollovers are also tax-free under specific conditions.

IRS Governing Framework

Primary IRC Section
IRC Section 402(c) — eligible rollover distributions from qualified plans, including the mechanism that makes direct rollovers non-taxable
Secondary IRC Section
IRC Section 408(d)(3) — IRA rollover rules; IRC Section 402A — designated Roth account rollover rules
Key Publications
IRS Publication 575 (Pension and Annuity Income), Chapter 2 — Rollovers section
Tax Year Rule
A tax-free direct rollover generates a Form 1099-R with Code G. The taxpayer reports the gross amount on Form 1040 Line 5a and $0 on Line 5b. No tax is assessed in the year of the rollover — the tax-deferred status of the original account continues uninterrupted.
ℹ️
Tax-Free vs. Tax-DeferredA tax-free rollover to a traditional IRA is more precisely 'tax-deferred' — the tax obligation is preserved and will be owed when distributions are eventually taken in retirement. A genuinely tax-free rollover (permanent, not deferred) only occurs when Roth assets move to a Roth IRA — the tax was already paid on those contributions and the future growth is permanently exempt.

2Traditional IRA — Account-Specific Rules

Traditional IRAs can receive rollovers at any time. There is no triggering event required — you can initiate a rollover from another IRA or from a qualified plan at any point.

💸

Tax Treatment

pre-tax (if deductible) or after-tax (non-deductible)

Contributions may be fully deductible, partially deductible, or non-deductible depending on income, filing status, and workplace plan coverage. Non-deductible contributions create 'basis' tracked on Form 8606.

⚠️

Early Withdrawal

10% federal penalty

10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax on pre-tax amounts withdrawn before age 59½

🗓

RMD Age

Age 73

Traditional IRAs are subject to RMDs beginning April 1 of the year following the year you turn 73. Unlike workplace plans, RMDs from multiple traditional IRAs can be aggregated — you calculate the total RMD across all traditional IRAs and can take the full amount from any one account.

📅

Rollover Deadline

60 Days

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.

The traditional IRA is the primary destination for most rollover assets — it is the most common IRA type by total assets. However, it is also the most misunderstood from a tax basis perspective. Millions of Americans hold traditional IRAs with a 'mixed basis' — some contributions were deductible and some were not — without maintaining the required Form 8606 records. Rolling additional qualified plan assets into a mixed-basis traditional IRA can permanently complicate the tax calculation on every future distribution.

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 — but future Roth conversions of the rolled amount will be fully taxable.

3How Tax-Free Rollover Applies to Traditional IRAs

📌 Account-Specific Tax Logic

Tax-Free RolloverTraditional IRA

Tax-free IRA-to-IRA trustee transfers: unlimited, no reporting, genuinely invisible to the IRS. Traditional IRA to Roth IRA: taxable conversion — not a tax-free rollover. Traditional IRA to 401(k) (reverse rollover): tax-free to the extent the 401(k) accepts incoming rollovers of pre-tax amounts.

✅ Conditions for a Tax-Free Rollover

  • Source account is pre-tax (401k, 403b, 457b, TSP, traditional IRA, SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA after 2-year period, pension lump sum)
  • Destination account is also pre-tax — or is the same tax character (Roth-to-Roth)
  • Method is direct rollover or trustee-to-trustee transfer — funds move institution-to-institution
  • The rollover is completed in a single transaction — no partial distributions that miss the 60-day window
  • The source plan and destination plan are compatible (check compatibility matrix)
  • For Roth 401(k) to Roth IRA: the 5-year period in the Roth IRA controls distribution tax treatment, not the Roth 401(k)'s period

4Real-World Scenarios — Traditional IRA

The following dollar-based scenarios illustrate how tax-free rollover rules apply specifically to Traditional IRA rollovers. The first scenario is drawn directly from the account-specific rules above.

Traditional IRA Specific

Traditional IRA — Tax-Free Rollover (Account-Specific)

Tax-free IRA-to-IRA trustee transfers: unlimited, no reporting, genuinely invisible to the IRS. Traditional IRA to Roth IRA: taxable conversion — not a tax-free rollover. Traditional IRA to 401(k) (reverse rollover): tax-free to the extent the 401(k) accepts incoming rollovers of pre-tax amounts.

Scenario 1

401(k) to Traditional IRA — The Most Common Tax-Free Rollover

Sandra retires at 63 with $620,000 in her former employer's 401(k). She opens a traditional IRA at Fidelity, contacts her former plan's HR department, and requests a direct rollover by providing Fidelity's name, address, and her new IRA account number (FBO Sandra Smith). The plan issues a check payable to 'Fidelity FBO Sandra Smith IRA' for $620,000. The check is mailed to Sandra for forwarding. She delivers it unopened to Fidelity and submits the rollover contribution form. January result: Form 1099-R shows $620,000 distributed, Code G. Tax return: $620,000 on Line 5a, $0 on Line 5b. Tax owed on the rollover: $0.

Scenario 2

Roth 401(k) to Roth IRA — Tax-Free Preservation of Post-Tax Assets

Derek has $180,000 in a Roth 401(k) accumulated over 12 years. He opened his Roth IRA in 2015. He rolls the Roth 401(k) directly to his existing Roth IRA upon retirement. Tax consequence: $0 — both accounts are post-tax. The 5-year clock for his Roth IRA began January 1, 2015 — it was satisfied in 2020. All future qualified distributions from the Roth IRA (including the rolled-over $180,000 and all subsequent growth) are permanently tax-free. Form 1099-R is issued with Code H (direct rollover from designated Roth account).

5Expert Analysis

The tax-free rollover is the mechanism that makes retirement account portability possible in the United States — it allows participants to change jobs, change custodians, consolidate accounts, and reposition assets without a tax event at each transition. Understanding the precise conditions that make a rollover tax-free — correct method, compatible account types, institution-to-institution movement — is the most valuable single piece of procedural knowledge in retirement planning. Getting it right costs nothing extra. Getting it wrong can cost 30–40% of the account balance.

For participants in the 55–75 age range with balances accumulated over 30–40 year careers, the tax-free rollover framework is the mechanism that allows multi-decade wealth accumulation to survive the transition from accumulation to distribution. The ability to consolidate $800,000 across four orphaned 401(k) plans into a single IRA — with zero tax cost — and then begin a systematic Roth conversion strategy is a financial planning opportunity that would not exist without the tax-free rollover framework established under IRC Section 402(c).

6Common Mistakes to Avoid

01

Assuming a rollover between compatible pre-tax accounts is always tax-free without verifying the method

A 401(k) to traditional IRA rollover is only tax-free if executed as a direct rollover. The same transaction executed as an indirect rollover — where the participant receives a check — triggers mandatory 20% withholding and the 60-day deadline. The tax-free outcome is method-dependent, not account-type-dependent. The participant must actively request the direct rollover method; the plan's default is often the indirect method.

02

Rolling a non-governmental 457(b) to a traditional IRA and expecting a tax-free result

Non-governmental 457(b) plans — held by employees of nonprofits, hospitals, and universities — cannot be rolled to a traditional IRA or any qualified employer plan. A rollover attempt results in a fully taxable distribution. The only tax-free rollover option for a non-governmental 457(b) is to another non-governmental 457(b) plan. Participants must confirm their 457(b) plan type (governmental vs. non-governmental) before assuming tax-free portability.

03

Rolling a SIMPLE IRA to a traditional IRA during the 2-year participation period

A SIMPLE IRA can only be rolled tax-free to another SIMPLE IRA during the first 2 years of participation. A SIMPLE IRA rolled to a traditional IRA during this period is a taxable distribution subject to the 25% early withdrawal penalty (not the standard 10%). The rollover is not tax-free — even if the participant intended it to be — simply because the 2-year restriction was not satisfied. Verify the participation start date before initiating any SIMPLE IRA rollover.

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.

7Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a retirement account rollover tax-free?

Three conditions must be met: (1) the source and destination accounts must be of compatible tax character — pre-tax to pre-tax, or Roth to Roth; (2) the rollover must be executed as a direct rollover or trustee-to-trustee transfer, where funds move institution-to-institution without passing through your hands; and (3) the accounts must be eligible to transact with each other under IRS rules (e.g., a non-governmental 457(b) cannot roll to a traditional IRA). Meet all three conditions and the tax consequence is $0.

Is a rollover from a 401(k) to a traditional IRA really tax-free?

Yes — a direct rollover from any pre-tax qualified plan (401k, 403b, TSP, 457b) to a traditional IRA is completely tax-free. The funds remain in a tax-deferred account — no income is recognized, no withholding applies, and no penalty is assessed. You will receive a Form 1099-R with Code G that must be reported on your tax return with $0 taxable, but the tax owed is literally $0. The tax deferral is preserved and will eventually be owed when you take distributions in retirement.

Can I roll a Roth 401(k) to a Roth IRA without paying taxes?

Yes — rolling a Roth 401(k) to a Roth IRA is a completely tax-free transaction. Both accounts are post-tax (contributions were made with after-tax dollars), so the rollover simply moves already-taxed assets between compatible accounts. You will receive a Form 1099-R with Code H. The 5-year holding period for your Roth IRA is determined by when you first established the Roth IRA — not by the rollover date. If your Roth IRA has been open for more than 5 years, future qualified distributions are immediately tax-free.

What tax-free rollover rules specifically apply to a Traditional IRA?

Tax-free IRA-to-IRA trustee transfers: unlimited, no reporting, genuinely invisible to the IRS. Traditional IRA to Roth IRA: taxable conversion — not a tax-free rollover. Traditional IRA to 401(k) (reverse rollover): tax-free to the extent the 401(k) accepts incoming rollovers of pre-tax amounts.

Does the tax-free rollover apply to direct rollovers from a Traditional IRA?

A direct rollover from a Traditional IRA to a compatible pre-tax account is completely tax-free — no tax-free rollover applies. The direct rollover method bypasses withholding, avoids the 60-day deadline, and produces no taxable income.

8IRS References & Regulatory Authority

Primary Publication

IRS Publication 575 (Pension and Annuity Income) — Rollovers section

Secondary Publication

IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to IRAs) — Can You Move Retirement Plan Assets section

Primary IRC Section

IRC Section 402(c) — eligible rollover distributions from qualified plans, including the mechanism that makes direct rollovers non-taxable

Secondary IRC Section

IRC Section 408(d)(3) — IRA rollover rules; IRC Section 402A — designated Roth account rollover rules

Primary Form

Form 1099-R (Code G for pre-tax direct rollover; Code H for Roth-to-Roth direct rollover)

Secondary Forms

Form 1040 (Lines 5a and 5b)

Traditional IRA — Primary Ref

IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements)

Traditional IRA — Distribution Form

Form 1099-R

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 · Governing authority: IRC Section 402(c) (qualified plan eligible rollover distributions); IRC Section 408(d)(3) (IRA rollover rules); IRC Section 402A (designated Roth account rollover)