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Guide to Transferring Money Into the TSP
Edward A. Zurndorfer, Certified Financial Planner

Since 2003, the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) has accepted distributions from

eligible retirement plans which are defined in Internal Revenue Code (IRC)

Section 402(c)(8)(B).

Eligible retirement plans include a traditional IRA, a Savings Incentive

Match Plan for Employers (SIMPLE) IRA, and eligible employer-sponsored

retirement plans such as a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) IRA, 401(k) or a

403(b) plan. This column discusses the specific requirements that must be met by

a TSP participant in order to transfer a traditional IRA or eligible

employer-sponsored retirement plan to a TSP account.

Form TSP-60 -- downloadable from href="http://www.tsp.gov">http://www.tsp.gov -- is used to request a

transfer of eligible funds into the TSP. An employee may not create a TSP

account by transferring funds into a TSP account. An employee must have an

established TSP account in order to transfer funds. Both current and

retired/separated employees are eligible to transfer funds; however, employees

who have separated from service and who already have made a full withdrawal of

their accounts or those participants age 70.5 and older who are receiving

"minimum required distributions" (MRD) cannot transfer money into their TSP

account.

In addition to making sure that funds transferred to the TSP originate from

the aforementioned IRAs or allowable retirement plans, a TSP participant is also

required to certify (in section III of Form TSP-60) that the distribution that

they want to transfer or rollover into the TSP meets the applicable requirements

for transfer or rollover. Also, the participant must certify that all funds to

be transferred have never been taxed. If the TSP participant does not sign the

certification, then the TSP will not accept the rollover or transfer

request.

The TSP will accept all or a portion of a distribution from a traditional,

SIMPLE IRA except a distribution that: (1) is a minimum required distribution

(MRD); or (2) consists of after-tax balances -- money that has already been

subjected to federal income tax. A traditional IRA -- as described in IRC

Section 408(a), or an individual retirement annuity - as described in IRC

Section 408(b), does not include a Roth IRA, an inherited IRA, or a Coverdell

Education Savings Account, formerly called an Educational IRA.

A TSP participant can transfer an amount from a SIMPLE IRA to the TSP

provided he or she has participated in the SIMPLE IRA for at least two years.

The TSP must receive written documentation showing the period of participation

by the TSP owner in the SIMPLE IRA.

An eligible employer retirement-sponsored plan includes a 401(k) or 403(b)

plan, a profit-sharing plan, a defined benefit plan, a stock bonus plan, and a

money purchase plan. The distribution from an eligible employer-sponsored plan

into a TSP must be an "eligible rollover distribution." This is a partial or

total distribution of a participant's retirement account. But the

employer-sponsored plan distribution cannot  be:

  1. one of a series of substantially equal periodic payments made over the life

    expectancy of the employee, or the joint lives of the employee and a designated

    beneficiary, if applicable;

  2. a series of substantially equal periodic payments made over a period 10

    years or more;

  3. a minimum required distribution;

  4. a hardship distribution;

  5. a plan loan that is deemed to be a taxable distribution  because of

    default; or

  6. a return of excess elective deferrals.

It is important to distinguish between a "transfer" and a "rollover". A

direct transfer, sometimes referred to as a "direct rollover", occurs when the

IRA owner or retirement plan participant instructs the administrator or the

custodian of a traditional IRA, SIMPLE IRA or an eligible employer plan to send

the eligible distribution directly to the TSP rather than initially sending the

eligible distribution to the participant. A rollover occurs when the IRA or

eligible employer plan makes a distribution to the participant (in the case of

an eligible retirement plan distribution, the plan administrator must first

withhold 20 percent in federal income tax from the distribution if the

distribution check is made out to the retirement plan participant) and the

participant deposits the entire gross amount of the distribution into the TSP.

The rollover of funds to the TSP must be completed within 60 days upon

participant's receipt of the rollover funds. Otherwise, the rollover will be

considered as a fully taxable distribution to the participant, and subject to an

additional 10 percent early withdrawal penalty if the participant is younger

than age 59.5.

A participant is permitted to transfer or rollover all or a portion of an

eligible retirement account to his or her TSP account provided the distribution

meets the applicable requirements discussed above and that it does not include

any "after-taxed" funds. If an eligible employer plan withholds taxes before

making the distribution, then the TSP participant can rollover the entire

employer plan distribution by reimbursing the difference with personal funds. If

at a later date it is determined that the funds were an ineligible rollover or

transfer, the funds will be removed from the TSP account and returned to the

sender.

Any portion of the distribution from a traditional IRA, SIMPLE IRA or

eligible employer plan that the participant chooses not to transfer or rollover

into the TSP will be taxed as ordinary income. A ten percent early withdrawal

tax penalty will be applied to the amount not transferred or rolled over into a

TSP only if the participant is younger than 59.5 at the time of

distribution.

There is no limit as to the number of transfers or rollovers or to an overall

dollar amount that an TSP participant can transfer into the TSP. Money that is

transferred or rolled over to the TSP in not applied to the annual elective

deferral limit ($16,500 during 2010) and the "catch-up" contribution limit

($5,500 during 2010) that is imposed on regular employee contributions.

Why would a TSP participant want to consider rolling over funds from

a traditional IRA or from an eligible employer retirement plan into his or her

TSP account?

Possible reasons include:

  1. low administrative fees associated with the TSP whereas many IRAs have both

    above average custodian and maintenance fees;

  2. poor past and current investment performance of the IRA or eligible employer

    retirement plan;

  3. eligible employer retirement plan is associated with a company that may be

    considering filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with a possibility that

    company-sponsored retirement may be under-funded and losing money; and

  4. the potential for maintaining all of one's retirement accounts under "one

    roof".   

Once the funds are transferred or rolled over to the TSP, the funds will be

allocated according to the participant's most current contribution allocation

schedule. The funds will be posted to the participant's account and subject to

the same plan rules as all other employee balances in the account.

Section I of form TSP-60 requires that current and retired/separated

employees provide their name, TSP account number, date of birth, daytime

telephone number and current address. For current employees whose address is

different than is shown in the TSP record, they should request that their

agencies submit an address change. Current employees cannot use TSP-60 to update

their TSP records. But retired or separated employees are permitted use form TSP

60 to update their address on their TSP records.

The TSP participant needs to complete section II to indicate whether the

funds are being directly transferred from the financial institution holding the

participant's IRA or from the participant's eligible employer plan. A box must

be checked to state whether this is a "transfer" or a "rollover". If the monies

were rolled over to the participant, then the participant will have already been

paid and would then send a check in the amount of the distribution to the TSP.

The participant has to indicate when the participant received the distribution,

the total amount being transferred to the TSP, and where the distribution is

from - an eligible employer plan, traditional IRA, or a SIMPLE IRA.

Section III of form TSP-60 is used for the participant to print his or her

name, sign and date the form. This certifies that the distribution being

transferred or rolled over meets all the requirements for transferring into the

TSP.

Section IV of form TSP-60 must be completed by the representative of the

participant's traditional IRA, SIMPLE IRA or eligible employer plan. For a

direct rollover or transfer, checks should be made out by the IRA or eligible

retirement plan administrator to the "Thrift Savings Plan" and contain the

participant's name and TSP account number or Social Security number on the

check. If the information cannot be provided on the check, then a document must

be enclosed providing this information. Form TSP-60 and check should be mailed

by the IRA custodian or eligible employer plan administrator to:

TSP Rollover and Transfer Processing Unit
P.O. Box 385200
Birmingham,

AL 35238-5200

or faxed to:

1-866-458-1452 (within the U.S. and Canada) or
205-439-4501 (outside the

U.S. and Canada)

TSP participants who have question about transfers and rollovers into the TSP

can call the ThriftLine at 1-877-968-3779, or the TDD at 1-877-847-4385. Outside

the U.S. and Canada, the number is 404-233-4400 (not toll-free).

About the Author

Edward A. Zurndorfer is a Certified Financial Planner, Registered Health

Underwriter, Registered Employee Benefits Consultant and Enrolled Agent in

Silver Spring, MD and the owner of EZ Accounting and Financial Services, an

accounting, tax preparation and financial planning firm also located in Silver

Spring, MD.  He is an instructor at federal employee retirement

seminars throughout the country for the National Institute of Transition

Planning, Inc. and writes numerous columns and books on federal employee

benefits.

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