What to do with your 401(k) when you retire
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[January 15, 2025] Christine
Benz of Morningstar
For many employees, what to do with a 401(k) plan at retirement has been
a foregone conclusion: Roll it over.
The opportunity to hang on to assets after employees retire — and in
turn keep costs down for the whole plan—isn’t lost on
defined-contribution plan advisors. In a 2021 Pimco survey of retirement
plan consultants and advisors, 36% of firms said they were actively
encouraging participants to stay put in their plans following
retirement.
If you’re pondering whether to leave the assets behind or roll them over
for retirement, here are the key questions to ask, listed in order of
importance.
What’s the quality of the 401(k)?
This is the key question when deciding whether to leave assets in a plan
or roll them over. You should assess the quality of the plan on three
key metrics: quality and breadth of the investment lineup, investment
fees for the fund options in the plan, and any administrative fees that
the plan levies on its participants.
You can use Morningstar ratings and data to assess investment options,
though you may have to do some additional sleuthing if your plan
includes collective investment trusts rather than mutual funds that are
open to the public.
Do you need early access to your funds?
If you’re a young retiree and need access to your money before the age
of 59.5, staying put in the 401(k) plan may be the most practical
course, even if the 401(k) isn’t all that great. That’s because
investors in 401(k) plans who have left their employers can tap their
assets a touch earlier without penalty—at age 55—versus age 59.5 for IRA
investors. Just be sure you’ve fully assessed your portfolio’s long-run
sustainability before contemplating withdrawals at such an early age.
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In this Nov. 15, 2017, file photo, new $1 bills are cut and stacked
at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington. (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
Does the plan allow flexibility
over withdrawals?
Some plans may not allow retirees to pick and choose which
investments they tap for withdrawals but instead require them to
take distributions pro rata from all the holdings in the account.
That lack of flexibility can be a major disadvantage for retirees
who would like to use their withdrawals to help keep their asset
allocations in line with their targets on an ongoing basis.
In a similar vein, if the plan offers traditional and Roth options,
the participant may not be able to choose which account to pull
from; distributions may have to come out pro rata from both account
types.
Do you need creditor protections?
Legal protections are another reason to consider staying put in an
old 401(k). Although laws regarding creditor protections for
retirement assets vary by state, company retirement plan assets
generally have better protections from creditors and lawsuits than
do IRA assets. Obviously, these protections will be a bigger
consideration for those who have had credit or bankruptcy problems,
or work in a profession where there’s a possibility they could be
sued.
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