Can You Roll Over a 401(k) Into a Self-Directed IRA?
Yes — and it’s one of the most common ways investors free up retirement capital to invest in real estate and notes. Here’s how the rollover works, the tax rules, and the steps to do it right.
Yes, you can roll over a 401(k) into a self-directed IRA — and doing so is the most common way investors unlock their retirement savings to invest in alternative assets like real estate and mortgage notes. In most cases you can roll over a 401(k) after you leave the employer that sponsored it; some plans also allow in-service rollovers while you’re still employed. When done as a direct rollover (trustee-to-trustee), the move triggers no taxes and no withholding. This guide explains who’s eligible, the crucial difference between direct and indirect rollovers, the tax implications, the step-by-step process, and how to put the funds to work once they land.
Key Takeaways
- You can roll eligible 401(k) funds into a self-directed IRA, usually after leaving the employer.
- A direct, trustee-to-trustee rollover avoids taxes and the mandatory 20% withholding.
- Traditional 401(k) to Traditional SDIRA isn’t taxable; converting to Roth is.
- Rollovers don’t count toward the annual IRA contribution limit.
- Once funded, the SDIRA can invest in real estate, mortgage notes, and note funds.
Can You Roll Over a 401(k) Into a Self-Directed IRA?
Yes. A self-directed IRA can receive a rollover from a 401(k) the same way any IRA can — the “self-directed” part just means the receiving account is held at a custodian that permits alternative investments. New to the vehicle itself? Start with what a self-directed IRA is. The main question is eligibility to move the funds:
- Former employer 401(k): almost always eligible to roll over once you’ve left the job.
- Current employer 401(k): often restricted while you’re still employed, though some plans permit an in-service distribution or rollover, frequently after age 59½. Check your plan’s specific rules.
Match the tax type when you roll: a traditional 401(k) rolls into a Traditional SDIRA, and a Roth 401(k) rolls into a Roth SDIRA, to keep the transfer tax-free.
Direct vs. Indirect Rollover: What’s the Difference?
This is the single most important distinction to get right, because it determines whether the move stays tax-free.
| Feature | Direct Rollover | Indirect Rollover |
|---|---|---|
| How funds move | Trustee-to-trustee, straight to the new custodian | Paid to you first, then you redeposit |
| Withholding | None | Typically 20% withheld from a 401(k) |
| Deadline | No 60-day clock | Must redeposit the full amount within 60 days |
| Tax risk | None when done correctly | Shortfall becomes a taxable distribution (and possible penalty) |
The takeaway: choose a direct rollover whenever possible. With an indirect rollover, the 20% withholding still has to be made up out of pocket to roll the full balance, or the missing portion is treated as a taxable withdrawal.
What Are the Tax Implications?
Done correctly, a rollover is not a taxable event:
- Traditional 401(k) → Traditional SDIRA: no tax; the money stays pre-tax and continues growing tax-deferred.
- Roth 401(k) → Roth SDIRA: no tax; qualified withdrawals remain tax-free later.
- Traditional 401(k) → Roth SDIRA: this is a Roth conversion — the converted amount is taxable as ordinary income in the year of the conversion, though future qualified growth is tax-free.
And a helpful detail: because a rollover isn’t a contribution, it does not count against the annual IRA contribution limit ($7,500 for 2026, or $8,600 if 50+). That’s how investors move six-figure balances into an SDIRA in a single transaction.
How to Roll Over a 401(k) Into a Self-Directed IRA
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Open a self-directed IRA
Open an SDIRA of the matching tax type with a custodian that allows the assets you want to hold. Our guide to choosing a self-directed IRA custodian covers what to compare.
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Confirm your 401(k) is eligible
Verify with the plan administrator that your balance can be rolled over now — typically yes for a former employer, sometimes restricted for a current one.
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Request a direct rollover
Ask the administrator for a direct, trustee-to-trustee rollover payable to your new custodian for your benefit. Avoid having the check made out to you personally.
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Fund and invest
Once the funds settle in the SDIRA, direct the custodian to invest — for example, into a mortgage note fund — following that investment’s subscription process.
Why Roll Over Into a Self-Directed IRA?
The reason most investors make this move is access. A typical 401(k) offers a fixed menu of mutual funds. Rolling into a self-directed IRA opens the door to real estate, private lending, and mortgage notes — assets that can diversify a retirement portfolio away from the stock market and generate real-estate-backed income. If you’re weighing your retirement-account options, compare a Solo 401(k) vs. a self-directed IRA for note investing, and see how mortgage note income works inside an SDIRA.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you roll over a 401(k) into a self-directed IRA?
Will I pay taxes to roll a 401(k) into a self-directed IRA?
What is the difference between a direct and indirect rollover?
Can I roll over my current employer’s 401(k)?
Can I invest in a mortgage note fund after rolling over?
Ready to Put Rolled-Over Funds to Work?
Once your self-directed IRA is funded, the Integrity Income Fund offers accredited investors real-estate-backed monthly income — tax-deferred or tax-free.
Explore the Fund →Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not investment, tax, or legal advice. Rollover eligibility and tax treatment depend on your plan and individual circumstances, and rules can change; confirm details with your plan administrator, custodian, and a qualified tax advisor. Where specific details appear (preferred return, minimum investment, commitment period), they refer to Labrador Lending’s Integrity Income Fund. All investments carry risk, including loss of principal. The Integrity Income Fund is available only to accredited investors.