How to Withdraw Money from 403b Without Penalty: 6 IRS-Approved Strategies

To avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty on a 403(b), you may withdraw without penalty if you meet IRS exceptions. These include separation from service at age 55 or older, permanent disability, financial hardship, Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (72(t)), or death of the account holder.
KEY
POINTS
  • The Rule of 55 allows some workers to take penalty free 403(b) withdrawals after leaving a job at age 55 or later.

  • Most 403(b) withdrawals become penalty free at age 59½.

  • Roth 403(b) withdrawals may qualify for completely tax free treatment.

  • Rolling over a 403(b) can help preserve tax advantages and avoid penalties.

  • Penalty free withdrawals can still be taxable as ordinary income.

A 403(b) is a tax-advantaged retirement plan designed for long-term savings, and withdrawals made before age 59½ are generally subject to ordinary income tax plus a 10% IRS early withdrawal penalty.

The IRS does, however, allow certain exceptions that may qualify distributions for penalty-free treatment under specific conditions.

These rules determine when and how funds can be accessed before retirement age.

What happens to your 403(b) when you die?

See who may inherit it, how beneficiaries are paid, and the tax rules to know.

Who Inherits It First?

6 Penalty-Free 403(b) Withdrawal Situations

Let’s break down exactly when you can withdraw money from a 403(b), which situations avoid penalties, how Roth accounts work differently, and the mistakes that quietly cost people thousands.

1. Once You Reach Age 59½

Once you reach age 59½, you can generally withdraw money from your 403(b) without the 10% early withdrawal penalty.

Of course, that doesn’t mean the withdrawals are tax-free.

Traditional 403(b) distributions are still taxed as ordinary income because the money went into the account pre-tax in the first place. The IRS basically deferred taxes for decades and eventually wants its share back.

So while turning 59½ removes the penalty, it does not remove income taxes.

2. Rule of 55

If you leave your job during or after the year you turn 55, you may be able to take penalty-free withdrawals directly from that employer’s 403(b) plan even if you haven’t reached 59½ yet.

And this can work for you if you plan to retire slightly early.

There are a few important catches

  • The rule only applies to the employer you just left
  • The money must stay inside that employer’s 403(b)
  • Rolling it into an IRA too early can accidentally eliminate the exception

So, if you retire at 56 and immediately roll your 403(b) into an IRA, you will no longer qualify for Rule of 55 penalty-free withdrawals.

3. Hardship Withdrawals

Someone asked me a few months back whether financial hardship automatically means penalty-free access to retirement funds. Unfortunately, the IRS doesn’t really see it that way.

A hardship withdrawal simply means the plan allows access to money for an “immediate and heavy financial need.”

Common examples include:

  • medical bills
  • funeral expenses
  • eviction prevention
  • tuition payments
  • certain home repairs

Hardship withdrawals are usually still taxable and still subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty unless another exception separately applies.

So yes, you may gain access to the money, but the IRS still often takes a meaningful portion of it.

That’s why I often recommend my clients to use hardship withdrawals as a last resort.

And unlike loans, your hardship distributions generally cannot be repaid into the retirement account later.

Can you withdraw from a 403(b) while still employed?

Find out when in-service withdrawals may be allowed and what rules could apply.

4. Disability Exception

If you become totally and permanently disabled, 403(b) withdrawals can generally avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty.

You still pay ordinary income taxes on traditional account withdrawals, but the additional penalty disappears.

Of course, the IRS definition of disability is fairly strict.

This usually requires medical documentation proving you cannot engage in substantial gainful work activity. Plans often request physician statements or Social Security disability determinations before approving disability-related distributions.

5. Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (72(t))

Under something called “Substantially Equal Periodic Payments” or SEPP, people can withdraw retirement funds early without penalties if they follow a very strict distribution schedule.

Essentially, you agree to take fixed withdrawals calculated under IRS-approved methods for:

  • five years
  • or until age 59½
  • whichever period is longer

If you alter the withdrawal schedule incorrectly, the IRS can retroactively apply penalties to all prior withdrawals plus interest.

I would say, while SEPP plans can work well for early retirees needing a predictable income, they’re generally not something people should casually set up without professional guidance.

6. Medical Expense Exceptions

One of the biggest applies when unreimbursed medical expenses exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income.

So, if medical costs become unusually large relative to your income, you may be able to withdraw retirement funds penalty-free for those expenses.

Yes, you will be avoiding the extra 10% penalty, but you will still owe ordinary income taxes.

There are also special exceptions involving:

  • health insurance premiums during unemployment
  • certain reservist military call-ups
  • IRS levies
  • qualified domestic relations orders (QDROs)
  • Federally declared disasters,
  • Emergency personal expense provisions were added under the recent SECURE Act updates

How Much Could Your 403(b) Grow?

Use the calculator to estimate savings, growth, and what your retirement could look like.

Open 403(b) Calculator

Roth 403(b) Withdrawal Rules

Roth 403(b) accounts operate under a completely different tax structure.

403(b) Withdrawal Taxes and Penalties
403(b) Withdrawal Taxes and Penalties
Situation Taxes? 10% Penalty?
Age 59½+ and 5-year rule met No No
Under 59½ but 5-year rule met Earnings taxable Usually yes
Over 59½ but under 5 years Earnings taxable Usually no
Hardship / nonqualified withdrawal Earnings may be taxable Possible
403(b) Withdrawal Taxes and Penalties
Age 59½+ and 5-year rule met
Taxes?

No

10% Penalty?

No

Under 59½ but 5-year rule met
Taxes?

Earnings taxable

10% Penalty?

Usually yes

Over 59½ but under 5 years
Taxes?

Earnings taxable

10% Penalty?

Usually no

Hardship / nonqualified withdrawal
Taxes?

Earnings may be taxable

10% Penalty?

Possible

Responsive comparison table showing 403(b) withdrawal tax and penalty treatment for different situations including age 59½ and five-year rule, under age 59½, over age 59½ but under five years, and hardship or nonqualified withdrawals.

Since contributions are made using after-tax money, qualified withdrawals can eventually become completely tax-free.

To receive fully qualified Roth withdrawals, two conditions generally must be met:

  • The account must satisfy the 5-year rule
  • Withdrawal must occur after age 59½, disability, or death

If those conditions are satisfied, both contributions and investment earnings come out tax-free.

However, non-qualified Roth withdrawals become more complicated because earnings may still face taxes and penalties.

So, I’m here to clear the doubt that all Roth withdrawals are automatically tax-free regardless of timing. They aren’t.

403(b) Loans vs Withdrawals: Which is Better?

By the way, if you don’t want to withdraw your money, 403(b) plans also allow participant loans.

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And honestly, loans can sometimes be safer than early withdrawals because borrowed funds are not immediately taxable if repayment rules are followed correctly.

403(b) Loan vs Withdrawal
403(b) Loan vs Withdrawal
Feature 403(b) Loan 403(b) Withdrawal
Repayment Required Not required
Taxes now Usually no Usually yes
10% penalty No (if repaid) Often yes (<59½)
Max amount 50% vested balance or $50k Based on plan/account
Interest Paid to yourself None
Effect on savings Temporary Permanent
While employed Commonly allowed Often restricted
If you leave job Loan may become due No repayment
Default risk Becomes taxable Already taxable
403(b) Loan vs Withdrawal
Repayment
403(b) Loan

Required

403(b) Withdrawal

Not required

Taxes now
403(b) Loan

Usually no

403(b) Withdrawal

Usually yes

10% penalty
403(b) Loan

No (if repaid)

403(b) Withdrawal

Often yes (<59½)

Max amount
403(b) Loan

50% vested balance or $50k

403(b) Withdrawal

Based on plan/account

Interest
403(b) Loan

Paid to yourself

403(b) Withdrawal

None

Effect on savings
403(b) Loan

Temporary

403(b) Withdrawal

Permanent

While employed
403(b) Loan

Commonly allowed

403(b) Withdrawal

Often restricted

If you leave job
403(b) Loan

Loan may become due

403(b) Withdrawal

No repayment

Default risk
403(b) Loan

Becomes taxable

403(b) Withdrawal

Already taxable

Responsive comparison table showing 403(b) loan versus withdrawal features including repayment, taxes, penalties, maximum amount, interest, effect on savings, employment status, leaving a job, and default risk.

I would say the major risk comes when someone leaves their job before repayment is complete.

At that point, the remaining balance may become a taxable distribution.

Which means:

  • ordinary income taxes
  • possible 10% penalties
  • unexpected IRS bills

Again, these rules always seem simpler on paper than they feel in real life. So you should be extra careful about any of these situations.

Rollovers and Transfers

The best ways to avoid immediate taxes and penalties are through direct rollovers.

A properly executed rollover moves retirement money from one account to another without creating a taxable event.

This usually happens when:

  • changing jobs
  • consolidating accounts
  • retiring
  • moving funds into an IRA

Direct trustee-to-trustee transfers are usually the cleanest option because the money never touches your personal bank account.

Indirect rollovers are riskier because once you personally receive the funds, a strict 60-day clock begins.

If you miss that deadline, the IRS may treat the entire amount as taxable income.

Taxes You Still May Owe

Penalty-free does not mean tax-free.

Traditional 403(b) withdrawals are generally taxed as ordinary income regardless of whether the 10% penalty applies.

So even if you qualify for:

  • The Rule of 55
  • disability exceptions
  • medical exceptions
  • SEPP distributions

…you may still usually owe these taxes.

403(b) Tax Types
403(b) Tax Types
Tax Type When It Applies Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal
Federal income tax Traditional 403(b) distributions Yes
State income tax If your state taxes income Yes
Tax on Roth earnings If Roth 403(b) withdrawal is nonqualified Yes
Increased taxable income effect Large withdrawal increases AGI Yes
Social Security benefit taxation Higher income affects SS taxation Yes
Medicare IRMAA surcharge Higher income in retirement Yes
Mandatory federal withholding On eligible non-rollover distributions Yes (but it is prepayment, not extra tax)
403(b) Tax Types
Federal income tax
When It Applies

Traditional 403(b) distributions

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes

State income tax
When It Applies

If your state taxes income

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes

Tax on Roth earnings
When It Applies

If Roth 403(b) withdrawal is nonqualified

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes

Increased taxable income effect
When It Applies

Large withdrawal increases AGI

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes

Social Security benefit taxation
When It Applies

Higher income affects SS taxation

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes

Medicare IRMAA surcharge
When It Applies

Higher income in retirement

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes

Mandatory federal withholding
When It Applies

On eligible non-rollover distributions

Applies Even If Penalty-Free Withdrawal

Yes (but it is prepayment, not extra tax)

Responsive comparison table showing 403(b) tax types, when they apply, and whether they apply even if the withdrawal is penalty-free.

403(b) withdrawal rules are honestly far more flexible than many people expect.

There are numerous penalty exceptions available for:

  • retirement
  • disability
  • medical hardships
  • early separation from service
  • structured periodic payments
  • inherited accounts
  • special emergency situations

But taxes and penalties are two completely separate issues. Avoiding one does not automatically eliminate the other.

Borrowing From Your 403(b) Plan FAQs

403(b) Plan FAQs

Generally, no. Most 403(b) plans restrict withdrawals while employed. Some allow in-service withdrawals after age 59½ or for hardship, depending on plan rules. The Rule of 55 may apply after separation from service at age 55 or older.

A 10% additional tax applies to taxable withdrawals made before age 59½ unless an IRS exception applies. This is in addition to ordinary income tax.

Yes. Traditional 403(b) withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income. Roth 403(b) withdrawals are tax-free if qualified; otherwise earnings may be taxable.

The penalty is avoided only through IRS exceptions such as age 59½, separation at 55+, disability, medical expenses, or SEPP (72(t)). Hardship withdrawals may qualify depending on plan rules.

An immediate and heavy financial need under IRS and plan rules, such as medical expenses, tuition, eviction prevention, funeral costs, or primary residence expenses.

Form 1099-R reports distributions. Form 5329 is used to claim early withdrawal penalty exceptions.

Yes. A direct rollover to an IRA is not taxable and avoids penalties. Indirect rollovers must be completed within 60 days to avoid taxation.

Plan rules control access. If in-service withdrawals are not allowed, funds generally remain inaccessible until separation or eligible rollover.

References:

  • https://www.westernsouthern.com/retirement/403b-withdrawal
  • https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/substantially-equal-periodic-payments
  • https://savantwealth.com/savant-views-news/article/rule-of-55-early-retirement/

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