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Here’s how to avoid penalties with retirement plan rollovers


The one-year rule is an “archaic belief,” according to career expert Sarah Doody.

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1. Bypassing the once-per-year IRA rollover rule

“The biggest one is breaking the one-per-year IRA to IRA rollover rule,” Appleby told CNBC. “And that happens because people are impatient.”

Generally, you can’t make more than one IRA rollover from the same IRA within a 12-month period, she explained. Otherwise, you must include the rollover in gross income and it may be subject to a 10% early withdrawal penalty before age 59½.

Plus, the IRS treats the additional rollover as an excess contribution, which triggers a 6% levy per year for every year the money stays in the new IRA.

2. Missing the 60-day rollover deadline

3. Losing eligibility for the 10% penalty exception

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