Could you benefit from consolidating your retirement assets?
Key Points
- Rolling over assets into an IRA has pros and cons.
- Consolidating retirement accounts may help simplify your finances.
- Integrating your retirement accounts with a financial plan can help you track your goals for retirement.
- Seeing all your savings in one place can help you monitor investments.
- Consolidation may help you diversify your investments.
Many Americans own two or more 401(k) or IRA accounts. If you are one of these people, consolidating your accounts may help you save time and may provide a more comprehensive view of your financial situation.
Consolidation may save you time and money
When you have multiple accounts, it can be more difficult to understand how much money you have and where it is. Over time, you may even lose track of some older accounts. Consolidating your accounts may save time by reducing the number of accounts you have and need to track. It also may allow your financial advisor to provide you with broader services and easily integrate your retirement accounts with a financial plan.
Consolidation can help you diversify your assets
Having money in multiple accounts with different funds does not necessarily make your portfolio more diversified. In fact, it may make it harder to see your holdings, and may actually conceal very similar investments in various accounts.
Consolidation may make it easier to allocate assets according to your investment strategy. Seeing your entire portfolio in one place could reveal when you are too concentrated in one area of the market, and make it easier to adjust and fix these imbalances. It may also help reduce unnecessary risk and better align your savings with your goals.
Learn about your options for your retirement plan assets
If you have savings in an employer-sponsored retirement plan like a pension, 401(k) or 403(b) plan, you have an important decision to make when you change jobs, retire or otherwise become eligible to withdraw money from the plan, including:
- Leaving it in your former employer's plan
- Transferring it to your new employer's plan, if available and allowed by that plan
- Rolling it into an individual retirement account (IRA)
Comparison of retirement plan options
This chart compares some basic features of employer-sponsored plans and the Ameriprise® IRA. For a more complete comparison, ask your advisor to review the Leave It or Roll It?® brochures with you. Your Ameriprise financial advisor can help provide the information you need to decide the most appropriate choice for some or all of your retirement savings.
Defined contribution plan | Defined benefit plan | Ameriprise® IRA | |
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Control of custodian/service providers |
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Investment options |
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Investment services |
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Distribution flexibility |
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Beneficiary planning and options |
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10% early withdrawal penalty |
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Roth conversions/direct rollovers |
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Creditor protection |
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Employer securities and net unrealized appreciation (NUA) |
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Federal withholding rules |
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Loans |
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Required minimum distributions for plan participants and IRA owners (Different rules apply to inherited amounts) |
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Investment expenses |
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Account, administrative and other fees |
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Determining which accounts to consolidate and handling retirement plan distributions can be complex and requires careful thought and additional advice from your tax and legal advisors. An Ameriprise financial advisor can help evaluate your own unique situation and provide education and guidance so you can determine if consolidation is the right thing to do.