Guide
Auto-rollovers and finding lost retirement accounts
What happens to small balances when a job ends — and how to reclaim accounts you have lost track of.
Careers move faster than paperwork. When you leave an employer, a small retirement balance can be swept out of the plan and into an automatic-rollover IRA — and over a career, accounts get forgotten entirely. Here is how the system works and how to find what is yours.
What an automatic rollover is
Federal rules let an employer plan move out the small balances of former employees — generally above $1,000 and up to the applicable cap — into a safe-harbor IRA established in the participant’s name, rather than leaving them in the plan or cashing them out. The money stays tax-deferred and conservatively invested until you claim or move it.
Why balances get left behind
Job changes, plan terminations, mergers, and simple inertia. The Department of Labor’s safe-harbor framework exists precisely because so many small accounts are orphaned when employment ends.
How to find a lost account
- Check old plan statements and contact the plan administrator of each former employer.
- Search the Department of Labor’s abandoned-plan resources and the federal retirement lost-and-found.
- Ask whether a former employer rolled your balance to a safe-harbor IRA provider — then claim it.
Consolidating what you find
Once located, a lost account can usually be moved by direct rollover or trustee-to-trustee transfer into an IRA you control — avoiding withholding and keeping the money tax-deferred. Consolidation also makes required distributions and beneficiary designations far easier to manage.
Common mistakes
- Cashing out a found balance and triggering tax and an early-distribution penalty.
- Losing track of a safe-harbor IRA’s conservative investments and its fees.
- Forgetting to update the beneficiary designation on a reclaimed account.
FAQ
Was my balance cashed out or rolled over?
It depends on its size and the plan’s terms; small balances are often rolled to a safe-harbor IRA rather than distributed. Requires review
Is the money still tax-deferred?
Yes — a safe-harbor rollover keeps the balance in a tax-deferred IRA until you act.
Can I consolidate it with my other accounts?
Often yes, by direct rollover or transfer into an account you control.
Sources include the Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Department of Labor. This guide is general information, not tax or legal advice; confirm specifics with a qualified professional.
Educational only. This page is general information, not individualized investment, legal, or tax advice. Rules depend on your account type, transaction, tax year, and circumstances — consult a qualified professional.