The IRS Rule of 55 lets workers tap 401(k) savings at 55 without the 10% penalty — yet most Americans have never heard of it.
The Rule of 55, a decades-old IRS provision allowing penalty-free 401(k) and 403(b) withdrawals for workers who leave employers at age 55 or older, remains one of the most overlooked tax breaks in the U.S. retirement system. More than 80% of respondents in a recent Wall Street Journal quiz incorrectly identified 59½ as the earliest age for penalty-free access, according to the newspaper's analysis.
"Knowing I could access that money penalty-free has made a huge difference," said Jon Barker, 58, a former teacher in Seattle who retired early after learning about the rule at age 53.
Alight Solutions data shows approximately 10% of workers left their jobs between ages 55 and 59½ in 2024, and slightly less than one-third of them used the rule. Many inadvertently forfeit access by rolling their 401(k) savings into an IRA — the first move many make after a layoff, according to Christopher Bahnsen, an adviser in Arvada, Colorado. Nearly 70% of 401(k) plans administered by Vanguard allow former employees to set up periodic withdrawals, though some plans require a full account liquidation upon any distribution.
For early retirees, the financial impact is substantial. Mark Nilles, 63, a retired hydrologist who left the U.S. Geological Survey at 56, estimates the rule saved him about $24,000 in penalties. Without it, workers face a 10% IRS penalty on top of ordinary income taxes on any withdrawal before age 59½.
How the Rule Works
The provision applies only to the 401(k) or 403(b) of the employer a worker leaves in the year they turn 55 or later. Unlike Rule 72(t), which locks users into a fixed schedule of substantially equal periodic payments until 59½, Rule 55 offers more flexibility — withdrawals can be taken on an as-needed basis. The trade-off is that only the most recent employer's plan qualifies, and workers must ask their plan provider about withdrawal rules before leaving.
When Nora Nilles retired at 57 in 2019, her 401(k) plan allowed only a single one-time penalty-free distribution. The couple's solution: Nora withdrew enough for her first year and rolled the rest into an IRA, while Mark increased his monthly withdrawals from his own plan to cover the gap.
Roth Preservation and Timing
Workers with both traditional and Roth 401(k) accounts should preserve the Roth portion, since Roth earnings can grow tax-free and are not subject to required minimum distributions in later life, said Andrew Atkins, a financial consultant at Fidelity Investments. Tapping a Roth 401(k) before 59½ may trigger income tax on earnings withdrawn.
Frank Gundal, 57, who retired at 55 from his role as director of energy efficiency at a utility company, said he has not needed to draw from his 401(k) yet, relying instead on cash investments. But knowing the rule exists provides a safety net. "I have the security that if something goes wrong with my income, I can tap into the 401(k) without penalties," he said.
For workers approaching 55, the key is to consolidate old 401(k) balances into the current employer's plan before leaving the job — not after. Once funds are rolled into an IRA, the Rule of 55 no longer applies.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.