Withdrawal Penalty
What it is
A withdrawal penalty is a fee or tax charged when you take money out of an account before allowed or expected. Common examples include early withdrawals from time deposits (like certificates of deposit, CDs), retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s), and deferred annuities.
How it works
- Penalties vary by account type and contract terms. They can be:
- Forfeiture of interest (common with CDs).
- A fixed percentage penalty and/or additional taxes (common with retirement accounts).
- Account opening documents or plan summaries explain what counts as an early withdrawal and the specific penalties.
- Alternatives to outright withdrawals—such as qualified retirement-plan loans—may avoid immediate taxation if they meet plan rules.
Key examples by account type
IRAs and 401(k)s
- Withdrawals before age 59½ are generally subject to a 10% early-withdrawal penalty plus ordinary income tax on taxable amounts (for traditional IRAs and 401(k)s).
- The IRS provides exceptions in certain circumstances (for example, some medical expenses, certain education costs, or in limited situations related to unemployment), but rules and restrictions apply and differ by plan type.
- Qualified plans (like 401(k)s) may follow different rules than IRAs; an IRA exception does not always apply to a 401(k).
Certificates of Deposit (CDs)
- Early withdrawal usually means forfeiting some or all of the interest earned. Example: a 24-month CD might carry a penalty equal to six months’ interest.
- Some banks offer CDs with more flexible terms or no early-withdrawal penalty.
Deferred annuities (surrender charges)
- Many deferred annuities impose a surrender charge if you withdraw funds during the early years of the contract.
- Surrender charges typically decline over time (for example, 10% in year 1, 5% in year 5, 1% by year 10), but exact schedules vary by insurer and contract.
Hardship withdrawals
- Qualified retirement plans may allow hardship distributions for specified needs (medical emergencies, funeral expenses, certain education costs, or primary residence expenses).
- Hardship withdrawals can still trigger the 10% early-withdrawal penalty and are usually subject to income tax unless a specific exception applies.
Special considerations and alternatives
- Penalties and tax consequences can be costly; evaluate alternatives before withdrawing:
- Take a qualified plan loan (if permitted) — loans are not taxable while repaid according to plan rules.
- Use emergency savings, short-term loans with manageable terms, or other untaxed sources.
- Always review plan documents and IRS rules for exceptions that might apply to your situation.
Example scenarios
- CD: Cashing out a 24-month CD after 6 months might cost you six months’ interest as the early-withdrawal penalty.
- Annuity: Withdrawing money from a deferred annuity in year two could incur a high surrender charge (for example, 10%), which typically declines each subsequent year.
Bottom line
A withdrawal penalty is a cost for accessing funds before the account’s terms allow. Penalties vary by instrument—interest forfeiture for CDs, surrender charges for annuities, and a typical 10% tax penalty (plus income tax) for early retirement-account withdrawals. Because penalties and tax consequences can be significant, consider alternatives and check plan-specific rules and IRS exceptions before withdrawing.