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So you're getting ready to retire and you've got a 403(b) sitting there – now what? This is actually a more common situation than people realize, especially if you worked in education, nonprofits, or faith-based organizations. The thing is, understanding how a 403(b) works when you retire can make a huge difference in your long-term financial picture.
Let me break down what's actually happening with these accounts. A 403(b) is basically the nonprofit world's version of a 401(k). You've been putting pre-tax money into it from each paycheck, your employer might have thrown in some matching contributions, and now you're sitting on this pool of retirement savings. The catch? You can't just leave it alone forever without thinking through your options.
When retirement hits, you're looking at three main paths forward. First, you could just leave your money where it is. Sounds lazy, but honestly, it can work out pretty well for 403(b) plans specifically. Here's why – these accounts tend to be loaded with annuities, which are structured for long-term or even lifetime income. That's actually different from a typical 401(k) that might be full of bonds and stocks needing constant management. The downside? You're still tethered to your former employer, and if their plan rules change or the administrator switches, you're along for the ride. Plus, some plans don't even let former employees keep money invested.
The second option is rolling your money into an IRA. This gives you way more control and freedom. You can move your 403(b) funds into a traditional IRA with zero tax hit – you're just moving pre-tax money from one bucket to another. Then you're done dealing with your old employer. But here's where it gets interesting – you could also convert to a Roth IRA instead. Yeah, you'll owe income taxes on the full conversion amount that year, which stings. But here's the payoff: once you're 59½, all your withdrawals from that Roth are tax-free, and you don't have to worry about required minimum distributions later. It's like paying a big tax bill upfront to never pay taxes on this money again.
Your third choice is the nuclear option – cash it all out into a regular taxable brokerage account. You'll pay income taxes on everything in that year, which is brutal. Then when you start pulling money out later, you're stuck with capital gains taxes and you lose all that tax-deferred growth magic. Most financial advisors will tell you this is the weakest play unless you have a really specific reason.
Here's something people often miss about 403(b)s specifically: the annuity situation changes how required minimum distributions work. Once you hit 73, you've got to start taking RMDs. But if your 403(b) is heavy on annuities that are already paying out, those might not even count toward your RMD calculation the same way. It's complicated enough that you probably want to run the numbers with someone who actually knows this stuff.
The real move? Don't just guess on this. How a 403(b) works when you retire depends on your whole financial situation – your tax bracket now versus later, how much you've got saved elsewhere, whether you want flexibility or stability. If you're serious about getting this right, talk to a financial advisor who can actually walk through your specific plan's rules and help you pick the best path. The difference between the right choice and the wrong one could literally be tens of thousands of dollars over your retirement.