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Supporting Knowledge Guide

401(k) Rollover to IRA Guide

Understand your options after leaving a US employer, including keeping your existing plan, rolling it into an IRA, transferring to another employer plan or taking a withdrawal while living abroad.

Educational Guide Approx. 8 Minute Read For Americans Abroad
Understanding the Decision

Should You Roll Over Your 401(k)?

Leaving a US employer often means deciding what to do with the retirement savings held in your former workplace plan.

Many people assume that rolling a 401(k) into an Individual Retirement Account is the obvious next step. In reality, keeping the existing plan, transferring it to a new employer arrangement or completing a rollover may each be appropriate in different circumstances.

For Americans living overseas, provider access, US tax rules, local-country treatment, investment choice, currency and future residency can add another layer to the decision.

Your Main Options

What Can You Do With a Former Employer 401(k)?

The right choice depends on the plan, your circumstances and your long-term retirement strategy.

01

Keep the Existing 401(k)

Some former employer plans offer competitive pricing, useful investment options and practical protections. Remaining in the plan may be entirely appropriate where access and service continue.

02

Roll the Account Into an IRA

A rollover may provide broader investment access, easier consolidation and more control, but the benefits should be compared carefully with the features of the current plan.

03

Move It to a New Employer Plan

Where permitted, a new employer plan may accept the former 401(k). This can simplify administration while retaining an employer-plan structure.

04

Take a Cash Withdrawal

A direct withdrawal may create immediate tax and possible penalty consequences. It should generally be reviewed carefully before irreversible action is taken.

Potential Reasons for a Rollover

Why Do Some Investors Choose an IRA?

A rollover can be useful, but its advantages depend on the existing plan and the IRA arrangement being considered.

Consolidating Multiple Accounts Bringing several former employer plans together may simplify administration and retirement-income planning.
Broader Investment Access Some IRAs provide access to a wider investment range than a former employer plan, depending on the custodian and platform.
Professional Portfolio Management An IRA may allow an eligible adviser to manage the account within a broader investment and retirement strategy.
Simpler Beneficiary Administration An IRA can sometimes offer greater flexibility when reviewing beneficiary arrangements and future estate planning.
Coordinated Retirement Income Consolidation may make it easier to plan withdrawals and manage retirement income across multiple accounts.
A Balanced Review

Why Might You Keep the Existing 401(k)?

A rollover is not automatically better than remaining in a former employer plan.

Institutional Pricing

Some large employer plans provide access to institutional investment pricing that may be difficult to replicate elsewhere.

Creditor Protection

Employer plans and IRAs can have different legal protections, making the account structure an important part of the comparison.

Specific Withdrawal Provisions

Certain employer-plan rules may provide access features that would not apply in the same way after a rollover.

Suitable Existing Investments

Where costs, investments and provider access remain appropriate, changing the account may create little practical benefit.

Living Outside the United States

Cross-Border Considerations Before a Rollover

The US account rules remain relevant, but the country where you live may also affect the outcome.

Provider Access

Some custodians and investment platforms restrict new accounts, trading or advice for clients with an overseas residential address.

US Tax Treatment

A correctly completed rollover is generally intended to preserve tax-deferred status, but the process and account eligibility should be confirmed before funds move.

Local-Country Tax

Your country of residence may not treat the rollover, account growth or future distributions in the same way as the United States.

Required Minimum Distributions

Future mandatory distributions should be considered alongside retirement timing, tax residence and wider income planning.

Currency Exposure

Retirement assets may remain invested in US dollars while future living costs are paid in another currency.

Beneficiary Planning

Beneficiary nominations should be reviewed after a move, particularly where family members and assets are located in more than one country.

Common Misconceptions

What Is Often Misunderstood About 401(k) Rollovers?

A Rollover Is Always the Best Option

Not necessarily. The existing plan may offer competitive costs, investments or protections that are worth retaining.

You Must Move the Account After Leaving

Many former employees can retain their existing 401(k), although provider rules and account size may affect the available options.

Living Abroad Means You Cannot Keep a 401(k)

Not always. Some plans continue to support overseas participants, while others impose practical restrictions.

An IRA Will Always Cost Less

Fees depend on the specific employer plan, custodian, investments and advisory arrangement being compared.

Before Making a Change

What Should Be Reviewed First?

A comparison should consider the complete retirement plan rather than focusing on one feature in isolation.

Compare total plan, investment and advisory fees
Review the existing investment range
Confirm provider access for overseas residents
Understand US and local-country tax treatment
Review beneficiary arrangements
Consider future retirement-income needs
Review creditor and legal protections
Avoid taking irreversible action without advice
Key Takeaways

A Rollover Is One Option, Not the Automatic Answer

Keeping a former employer 401(k) may remain appropriate.
An IRA may offer greater flexibility, but this depends on the arrangement.
Fees, investments, provider access and protections should be compared.
Living abroad introduces local tax, currency and residency considerations.
Professional advice can help assess the wider retirement strategy before action is taken.
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The Complete Guide to Moving Abroad From the USA

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Review Before You Act

Need Help Comparing Your 401(k) Options?

An adviser can help you review the existing plan, possible rollover arrangements and the wider cross-border retirement strategy before you make a decision.

Speak to an Adviser