Submitted by cantnap t3_11e559o in personalfinance

I plan to leave my job at the end of March, but want to ensure I do so wisely. This is my first time having a 401k so I’m unsure of what happens to that fund when I leave. I have about 25k in there. I will likely be traveling for a bit after leaving my job. I read that sometimes you get mailed a 401k check after leaving a company. I’m afraid of that happening while I’m not in the country (although I will have a mail service that scans my mail). Anyone have experience quitting with a 401k? What happens to it?

Thanks for any advices you can offer!

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NativeTxn7 t1_jace72l wrote

You're over the limit where they could do an auto-cash out (usually, balances below $5K can be automatically cashed out depending on how the plan is set up). So, there shouldn't be a check just floating around while you're out of the country.

Ultimately, you should be able to leave it there as long as you want to (which is not a bad thing if it's a good plan with low fees and a good investment lineup), you could roll it to an IRA or your next company's 401k (assuming that 401k allows for rollovers coming in, which a majority do), or take a distribution (not advisable since you'd likely incur taxes and/or an early withdrawal penalty).

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Ok_Cap_408 t1_jaceblf wrote

You mention having 25k in your 401k. Do you have other financial stuff in place or are you planning on surviving on only 25k? I'm also curious if you have any debt.

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GoodbyeTobyseeya1 t1_jacg70m wrote

Open an IRA if you don't have one, call your 401k administrator once you've quit and tell them you want to roll it into the IRA. Once it's in there, make sure you invest it, otherwise it's just sitting as cash and getting no interest. Look at the prime directive as to how you may want to invest but typically index funds are safest.

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dhork t1_jacgj18 wrote

You should call the 401k provider and explain the situation. They will tell you whether you have enough in the account to be able to leave it there. If so, you can just chill until you come back and decide what to do with it. I have left money in prior company's 401ks for over a year before. It may not be a long-term solution, in my case after a year I got hit with fees and that prodded me to move it.

Moving it is actually quite simple: you open up a new Rollover IRA account (perhaps even with your current bank), and that bank gives you directions on how to tell your 401k provider how to send them the money directly. If it's sent directly, you won't have any tax implications for the transfer other than filing an additional form with this year's taxes.

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Bad_DNA t1_jacmqbc wrote

Most retirement plans don't let you move them to a personal IRA (roll over) until after a couple of pay cycles. This gives any laggard paperwork time to filter through the system and your real total for the account has settled down. Additionally, some investment types don't translate well, so you might want to 'go to cash' in the 401k a week before you do roll it over (perhaps something like a IRA with Vanguard or Fidelity or Schwab... just thinking of decent choices) and you have contacted both the destination company and the current trustee to find out procedures, expected fees and such.

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throwaway18000081 t1_jacpsrp wrote

> Once it’s in there, make sure you invest it, otherwise it’s just sitting as cash and getting no interest.

The settlement account that your money just sits in earns interest. Right now, those accounts are earning ~2-4.5% interest.

Vanguard: https://investor.vanguard.com/investment-products/mutual-funds/profile/vmfxx

Fidelity: https://www.fidelity.com/mutual-funds/fidelity-funds/money-market-funds-fcash

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lucky_ducker t1_jacr5ke wrote

Don't use the phrase "roll it." That could trigger an indirect rollover where the sponsor cuts a check, withholds 20% for taxes, and starts a 60-day countdown for the ex-employee to deposit the check plus the missing 20% into an IRA, which is exactly what OP is trying to avoid.

OP doesn't need to talk to 401(k) sponsor at all. OP needs to open the appropriate type of IRA, and give the 401(k) account details to the IRA sponsor to initiate a direct transfer.

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jongleurse t1_jad08uc wrote

Because nobody knows whether the market will actually go down or up. Staying out of the market right now because it's risky is saying that you believe you know what direction the market will go. On the contrary, the research indicates that time in the market beats timing the market.

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graff48 t1_jad1nbu wrote

I had the bright idea to move my entire 401k balance into company stock, just prior to leaving WorldCom in 1999 because the internet isn't going away, right?

I would advise against a similar course of action for you.

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Splatx t1_jadcz04 wrote

I recently rolled over my 401k to a personal roll over account on Vanguard. This company called Capitalize made the process super easy and they have great staff. Hicapitalize dot com

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Total_Time t1_jaegtqf wrote

Probably no rush to remove it from the company 401k account. Maybe wait until end of year when all bonuses and final company contributions hit the 401k. Then rollover 401k to a IRA at Vanguard or Fidelity or another low cost IRA admin firm.
I rolled my 401k out shortly after leaving a firm then there was a final contribution of about $49 in the 401k that I then had to do a second rollover. A bit of a PITA.

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