Hey all, |
Should I convert my 401k into a IRA to maximize my fund choices? Archived From: Finance |
Hey all, |
rocketwidget said:I was thinking along the lines of differences in borrowing to make a down payment on a home, or differences in ability to withdraw funds if I want to retire early.The ability to borrow is the major advantage of 401(k)'s. But it's only up to half of the account value (except for very small accounts), and no more than $50,000. |
Although the ability to borrow from your 401k goes away when you leave the company. |
Another thing is to consider the funds in your 401(k). My Vanguard 401(k) has a fund selection of 75-100 funds from Vanguard, T. Rowe Price, and Dreyfus. In an IRA or brokerage, many of the funds are closed and/or require large minimum balances. Also, it is easier to allocate between funds and diversify without worrying about minimums per fund. |
Here is what I found with Vanguard... |
Here's some other differences that I can think of: |
For old 401k's, from old employers after having left the job, I generally recommend rolling over to a Traditional IRA. Why? Because in the future, after you leave other employers, you can roll their 401k's over to the same IRA. |
Once you roll over a 401K to an IRA is it possible to later roll it back into a 401k? |
tladle said:Once you roll over a 401K to an IRA is it possible to later roll it back into a 401k? |
LH2004 said:rocketwidget said:I was thinking along the lines of differences in borrowing to make a down payment on a home, or differences in ability to withdraw funds if I want to retire early.The ability to borrow is the major advantage of 401(k)'s. But it's only up to half of the account value (except for very small accounts), and no more than $50,000. |
psychtobe said:But an IRA, in particular a Roth IRA, gives you unique advantages from the standpoint of estate planning. There is no such thing as a stretch 401k, for example. For this reason alone, in my opinion it is almost always worth converting to an IRA.There are no meaningful estate-planning advantages to an IRA over a 401(k). "Stretch IRA" is a term some people use for an inherited IRA from which the beneficiary takes withdrawals over his initial lifespan; while, formerly, it was easier to get to one if you inherited an IRA than a 401(k), those rules have all been repealed, and, today, there's no meaningful advantage to inheriting an IRA over a 401(k) account. |
LH2004 said:psychtobe said:But an IRA, in particular a Roth IRA, gives you unique advantages from the standpoint of estate planning. There is no such thing as a stretch 401k, for example. For this reason alone, in my opinion it is almost always worth converting to an IRA.There are no meaningful estate-planning advantages to an IRA over a 401(k). "Stretch IRA" is a term some people use for an inherited IRA from which the beneficiary takes withdrawals over his initial lifespan; while, formerly, it was easier to get to one if you inherited an IRA than a 401(k), those rules have all been repealed, and, today, there's no meaningful advantage to inheriting an IRA over a 401(k) account. |
psychtobe said:it is my understanding that if your child inherits your 401(k), your company can require him/her to withdraw that money within 5 years. In an IRA, that cannot happen; you have the life expectancy of the child to withdraw the money. Is this not correct?It is correct (in practice; an IRA could also require you to withdraw faster, but they generally don't do that). But it doesn't make any difference. If you die with a 401(k) account, your kids (or other heirs) can roll over the account into "inherited" IRAs, which will then function exactly the same as if they had inherited an IRA from you: they can take withdrawals over their life expectancies. |
thanks for the clarification. When did this change? It seems that everything I have read, even published as recently as 2003-04, does not mention this. Does this apply for 403(b)s, 457(b)s, and 457(f)s as well? And does it matter if you die while you are still employed with the company (although in that case, there is no option to rollover to an IRA anyway)? |
psychtobe said:thanks for the clarification. When did this change? It seems that everything I have read, even published as recently as 2003-04, does not mention this.It changed under the Pension Protection Act, and has been effective for all of 3 weeks now. But it had been planned for some time before that.Does this apply for 403(b)s, 457(b)s, and 403(f)s as well?All qualified plans, 403(a)'s, 403(b)'s, and 457's. There's no such thing as 403(f).And does it matter if you die while you are still employed with the company (although in that case, there is no option to rollover to an IRA anyway)?Yes (and there is an option if you're over 59 1/2 and your plan allows it, or with respect to employer contributions, roll-ins, after-tax contributions, or any other non-401(k) money). Anyone who inherits a qualified, 403, or 457 plan account can now roll over to an IRA.While I think this is getting a bit OT, and estate planning deserves its own FWF master thread, another situation in which it would be better to leave an IRA or 401(k) to a child would be if your estate would otherwise be greater than 2 times the current maximum exclusion allowed under federal estate tax, as you could otherwise lose your individual exemption. Example: if current federal law allows an estate tax exclusion of $1 million, and you are married and have with your wife a total of a $2 million estate, you would be better off leaving as much as possible up to $1 million to your child in the event of your death. Then when your wife dies, her taxable estate is only $1 million and estate tax free, rather than $2 million with $1 million subject to estate tax. Please tell me if I am mistaken.That's true -- IF you have no other appropriate assets that you could leave to the kids (for example, because you're right at $2 million including the 401(k)). If you have $1 million in non-IRA assets, like cash, your house, etc., you're normally better off leaving those to the kids (up to the exemption amount at least) and the IRA to the spouse. |
markkundinger said:For old 401k's, from old employers after having left the job, I generally recommend rolling over to a Traditional IRA. Why? Because in the future, after you leave other employers, you can roll their 401k's over to the same IRA. |
leenga said:markkundinger said:For old 401k's, from old employers after having left the job, I generally recommend rolling over to a Traditional IRA. Why? Because in the future, after you leave other employers, you can roll their 401k's over to the same IRA. |
tladle said:Once you roll over a 401K to an IRA is it possible to later roll it back into a 401k? |
not sure if it's still the case, but it used to be several years ago that 401k was protected against your creditors, while IRA was not. I know that was going to change but not sure if it did. |
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