Changing Jobs
At your job, you were lucky enough to have an employer-sponsored retirement plan. Now that you’re leaving, it’s time to make an important decision about it. How can you take the money with you, continue to enjoy tax-deferred growth potential, avoid penalties and stay in control of your investment?
Start by asking your employer if you can leave the money where it is. It may depend on how long you’ve worked with the company and the type of retirement plan you have. Leaving your money with a former employer may not be the best choice, but it helps to know which of these options are available to you:
- Cash it out − Take the cash now
- Let it be − Leave it in your current plan
- Roll it into an IRA − Move your retirement savings to an individual account you control
- Take it with you − Transfer your existing account balance into your new employer’s plan
There are a number of advantages and disadvantages to each of these options.
All your options − advantages and disadvantages
Please know that neither Nationwide® nor its representatives provide tax or legal advice. You should consult with an attorney or other professional advisor for such advice.
| Options | Advantages | Disadvantages |
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Cash it out |
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Let it be |
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Roll it into an IRA |
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Take it to your next employer |
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Generate income |
Choose from:
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To avoid tax withholding and possible penalties, be sure any loans on the retirement plan are paid off and your current plan custodian is instructed to send funds directly to your new rollover IRA custodian. Also know that neither Nationwide® nor its representatives provide tax or legal advice. You should consult with an attorney or other professional advisor for such advice.
Unless you are making withdrawals for qualified expenses, withdrawing any or all of the funds will trigger a 20% mandatory tax withholding and a 10% early withdrawal penalty, if you are under age 59½, in addition to paying ordinary income tax.
Potential purchasers seeking to use an annuity to fund a qualified or other tax-advantaged retirement plan should understand that the use of an annuity for such purpose is not necessary in order to defer taxation of investment earnings. Guarantees are subject to the claims-paying ability of the issuing company.
Not a deposit • Not FDIC or NCUSIF insured • Not guaranteed by the institution • Not insured by any federal government agency • May lose value







