Overview

You have the chance to choose your retirement plan. Should you keep your current retirement coverage or should you choose to be covered by FERS? Depending on what the future holds for you, this decision can make a difference in how early you are able to retire from the Federal Government and how much retirement income you will have. All of the information you need to make your decision is here!

FERS Transfer Handbook Online

The FERS Transfer Handbook provides you with enough information to decide which retirement plan will serve you best. CSRS, CSRS Offset, and FERS are explained in detail. If you are a member of a special employee group including Law Enforcement and Firefighting Personnel, Air Traffic Controllers, or Military Reserve Technicians there are specific sections written just for you.

Quick Decision Guide

If you don't want to spend a lot of time reading the FERS Transfer Handbook and you think your choice is pretty clear. The quick decision guide provides some situations for your review.

Employee Resources

Don't listen to gossip! Get the facts on common FERS transfer rumors. Read OPM's retirement fact sheets. Browse benefits-related links. And if you decide to transfer to FERS, find out how to do it -- all the Employee Resources section.

Benefits Personnel

The Benefits Personnel section contains resources to assist employees with their transfer decisions as well as help in administering transfer elections.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

FERS Transfer Handbook

On This Page

Note:

The material in this publication is based on the law in effect at the time it went to publication.

Under the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Public Law 105-33 for fiscal year 1998, employee retirement contributions increased as follows. Deductions for the Civil Service Retirement System and the Federal Employees Retirement System increased by 0.25% in January 1999, by an additional 0.15% in January 2000, and by 0.1% more in January 2001, for a total increase of 0.5%. These higher contribution rates were in effect through 2002.

FERS Transfer Handbook: Introduction

Why Have I Been Given This Book?

You have an opportunity that few workers have - the chance to choose your retirement plan. You can keep the retirement coverage you now have, or you can choose to be covered by the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS). This is a very important decision. Depending on what the future holds for you, your decision can make a difference to you in how early you can retire from the Federal Government and how much retirement income you will have.

FERS was created by Congress in 1986, and it became effective on January 1, 1987. Since that time, new Federal civilian employees who have retirement coverage are covered by FERS.

However, when the Congress created FERS, one of the rules it established was that people who already had enough Federal civilian service to potentially be eligible for a benefit some day under the old Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) would have a choice whether or not to be covered by FERS. Your agency has identified you, based on your current appointment and employment history, as someone who meets this criterion. As a result, you have a choice whether to keep the retirement coverage you now have or to transfer to FERS.

Depending on your current appointment and employment history, you currently may have CSRS coverage, CSRS Offset coverage, or only Social Security coverage. CSRS Offset coverage normally applies to employees who are going to a job with retirement coverage after a break in both service and CSRS coverage of more than 1 year, and who also had at least 5 years of civilian service as of the break in service.

If you have a term or indefinite appointment, you are not eligible for CSRS coverage, but you can elect FERS coverage.

This handbook is written primarily for employees who have a choice between CSRS or CSRS Offset coverage and FERS coverage. The Standard Form 50 (or equivalent personnel form) that shows your current appointment will say whether you currently have CSRS coverage, CSRS Offset coverage, or only Social Security coverage. If you have any questions about what your current retirement status should be, contact your servicing personnel office. Be sure that they have accurate records of all your Federal service. Even a few days can make a difference.

If you are already covered under FERS, you do not need to read this handbook. The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) booklet called The Federal Employees Retirement System, (RI 90-1) describes your benefits. If you are a Member of Congress or a congressional staff person, you should see your servicing personnel office.

The information in this handbook is based on the law in effect as of the printing date.

Your Chance to Choose

You have a personal election opportunity for 6 months from the date of your reemployment or your conversion to an appointment that offers FERS coverage. If you choose FERS, you can't change your mind later; so you want to choose the plan that fits best with your future plans.

Both CSRS/CSRS Offset and FERS are good retirement plans. Each plan has advantages and disadvantages. Neither plan is best for all Federal employees. That's why you are being given a choice.

In general, CSRS may be better if you think that you will retire from the Federal Government after a long career -- 20 or 30 years and before age 62. But what if you're not sure what the future holds? Maybe you're not planning to spend the remainder of your career with the Federal Government, or you may want to retire before you have 20 or 30 years of Federal service. In either case, FERS may be the retirement plan you want.

Simplifying Your Decision

If you are like many people, your initial reaction may be that this will be a complicated decision. For some people who have complex situations, it may be. However, for most people, it becomes a fairly simple decision when they think about the choices in terms of their own situation. You need to consider factors such as your work history, when you want to retire, and whether or not you plan to stay in Federal service until then. To help you organize your thoughts about what it important to you, we have included a checklist at the end of this section. It contains a list of factors that are important to many people in making their decisions. Some of them will be important to you, too.

The same transfer considerations apply, whether you are working full-time or on a part-time basis. If you are married, we encourage you to discuss your choice with your spouse.

This handbook takes you through important considerations and shows you why they're different in CSRS/CSRS Offset and FERS. Many people reach a decision without reading very much of this handbook, but we encourage you to at least review the first 6 sections because there are some special circumstances that may change your mind. You should look at the table of contents to identify topics that may be of interest to you. When you finish reading, you should be prepared to make a choice based on the plan overviews, comparisons, and examples. In most cases, you shouldn't have to do any calculations to decide which retirement plan is better for you.

Making Your Decision

Remember, the decision whether to choose FERS is yours to make. This handbook contains the information you need to consider, but it won't tell you what to do. You must decide based on what you know about yourself, your past, and your expectations for the future. You shouldn't decide based on what someone else did. There may be one key factor in that person's situation that would make his or her choice inappropriate for you.

We have tried to keep this handbook as simple as possible, but if you have questions, your agency should have personnel who can help answer your questions. So, if there is a part of the handbook that's important to your situation and that you don't understand, you should ask for help. However, while your agency should help answer your questions about the handbook, they will not tell you what to do.

Finally, remember that you are choosing between two very different retirement systems. The handbook stresses the differences. If you try to understand the differences between the systems in terms of what's important to you, your choice will be easier. If you try to master exactly how each system works, your decision will take more time and effort on your part. Of course, this handbook in no way replaces the many pages of regulations that govern benefits under CSRS, FERS basic benefits, the Thrift Savings Plan, and Social Security but, it should contain all of the information you need to make your decision.

What Happens If I Do Nothing?

If you do nothing, your current coverage (CSRS, CSRS Offset, or Social Security) will stay the same. Most people will not have another chance to choose FERS coverage unless they leave Federal service for more than 3 days.

How This Handbook is Organized

This handbook begins with a review of the important features of CSRS and FERS, so you can understand how each plan works.

Next there's a section called "Making Your Decision" that explains how to determine which plan better meets your needs. It also discusses some important cautions to consider when making your decision.

The next section provides a brief description of the Social Security Program.

Another section contains examples using several hypothetical employees that portray typical employee situations. Looking at them may help you make your decision.

This handbook also has an appendix that contains a handy reference chart for comparing the basic elements of CSRS and FERS as well as the special rules for employees who transfer.

Also, you'll come across some words that appear as links. These words are important to know. They are explained in the text, and are also included in the "Glossary" section.

What Things Do You Need To Make Your Choice?

For many employees, this handbook will give you enough information to decide which retirement plan you like better. You will need only a pen to fill out the retirement plan election form. The forms are available electronically on this website.

If you have already earned some Social Security credits, but are not sure how many, you should request this information from the Social Security Administration, using Form SSA-7004, Request for Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement. Your personnel office may have the form or you can request it by calling 1-800-SSA-1213, or you can request a PEBES statement electronically on the SSA website.

Some employees want to do some calculations before deciding. For you, there is a computer program that allows employees like yourself to enter data about your work history and future career expectations to compare CSRS and FERS benefits. To use this program, you may want to have your Social Security earnings history and the amount of your Thrift Savings Plan balance available.

This program is a projection into the future that requires making assumptions that may or may not turn out to be accurate, so you should not use the numbers if produces as estimates of the future benefits. Instead, the results allow employees to evaluate the relative benefits of the two retirement systems as they apply to the data provided.

Finally you need some time to read at least the beginning of this handbook. Choosing your retirement coverage is an important decision, so set aside some time to read the parts of this handbook that are important to you, and to fill out your retirement plan election form.

Making Your Election

Whether you switch to FERS or decide to keep the retirement coverage you have, you should complete an election form, SF 3109, Election of Coverage, and return it to your servicing personnel office. An election to transfer to FERS is effective at the beginning of the next pay period after your agency receives the completed form. An election to transfer to FERS is irrevocable once it has become effective. If you transfer to FERS, you then have a personal 30-day period to enroll in the Thrift Savings Plan or to change your enrollment.

Your spouse does not need to consent to a decision to change retirement plans. However, if 1) you have a former spouse who is entitled, by court order, to a portion of your CSRS annuity or CSRS survivor benefits, 2) the court order is on file at OPM, 3) the former spouse has not remarried before reaching age 55, and 4) the former spouse is still living, you cannot transfer to FERS without that former spouse's consent. Your former spouse needs to complete SF 3110, Former Spouse's Consent to FERS Election in order for you to be able to transfer.

OPM can waive this requirement only in very limited circumstances. If you don't know whether OPM has a qualifying court order on file, or want to request a waiver of the consent requirement, ask your servicing personnel office for Standard Form 3111, Request for Waiver, Extension, or Search.

Finally you may want to file a new designation of beneficiary form, SF 3102, Designation of Beneficiary, Federal Employees Retirement System, since CSRS designations are cancelled upon a transfer to FERS.

All of these forms are available on OPM's website.

Points to Consider

The following is a list of points that experience has shown are important to many people in making a decision to keep their existing retirement coverage or switch to FERS. If you review the list and check off the points that are important to you, it should help organize your thoughts before you start reading about the features of the retirement plans. There are some blank lines so you can add additional points that aren't on the list. Remember, we are all different; what is important to someone else may not be important to you. You may print this list for your own use. The information you enter will not be submitted or saved through this website. This form is designed only for you to use as a reference tool.

FERS Transfer Handbook: Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS)

Overview

FERS is a retirement plan that provides benefits from three different sources: a Basic Benefit Plan, Social Security, and the Thrift Savings Plan. Two of the three parts of FERS (Social Security and the Thrift Savings Plan) are portable should you leave the Federal Government before retirement. FERS gives you more control over the retirement benefits you receive.

The Basic Benefit and Social Security parts of FERS require you to make contributions each pay period. The cost of the Basic Benefit and Social Security are withheld from your pay as payroll deductions. The Government makes contributions too. Then, after you retire, you receive benefit checks each month for the rest of your life. This is what is called an annuity. The Thrift Savings Plan part of FERS is an account that is automatically set up for you. Each pay period your employing agency deposits into your account an amount equal to 1% of the basic pay you earn for the pay period. You can also make your own contributions to your TSP account and your agency will contribute even more.

Although FERS is a single retirement plan, the three benefit sources have different rules. The Basic Benefit and Social Security portions will be discussed together first. The Thrift Savings Plan will be explained by itself later.

Information about Social Security appears throughout this section on FERS. A brief overview of the Social Security program prepared by the Social Security Administration is also included in this Handbook.

There are also some special rules for employees who transfer from CSRS/CSRS Offset to FERS.

When You Can Receive Retirement Benefits

Basic Benefit Plan

If You Stay Until Retirement Age

With FERS, you can retire with a Basic Benefit as soon as you reach the Minimum Retirement Age (MRA) and have just 10 years of service. The MRA is the first year in which you can receive benefits. It varies according to the year you were born. For anyone born before 1948, the MRA is age 55. It increases gradually to age 56 for those born before 1965 and goes up to 57 for those born in 1970 and after.

The following chart will help you determine what your MRA is.

Minimum Retirement Age
If you were born Your MRA is
Before 1948 55
In 1948 55 and 2 months
In 1949 55 and 4 months
In 1950 55 and 6 months
In 1951 55 and 8 months
In 1952 55 and 10 months
In 1953 - 1964 56
In 1965 56 and 2 months
In 1966 56 and 4 months
In 1967 56 and 6 months
In 1968 56 and 8 months
In 1969 56 and 10 months
In 1970 and after 57

Under FERS, you can retire when your age and years of Federal service match any of the retirement combinations shown below. These are all immediate annuity benefits that also allow you to keep your Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) and Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance (FEGLI) coverages as a retiree if you have been enrolled for enough time (usually the 5 years immediately preceding your retirement) before you retire.

Retiring Under FERS
If you leave with this much service You get Basic Benefits at this age
At least 5 years 62 years
At least 10 years Your Minimum Retirement Age, with reduced annuity
At least 20 years 60 years*
At least 30 years Your Minimum Retirement Age*
*With these combinations, your Basic Benefit includes the Special Retirement Supplement if you have at least 1 full calendar year of FERS coverage.

Postponing Your Benefits

If you retire at.

you can wait until age 62 for full benefits and get a postponed annuity. You can begin receiving reduced benefits any time before age 62. Your monthly benefits will be reduced 5/12 of 1% for each month (up to 5% per year) you are younger than age 62 when you start receiving benefits. For example, if you retire at age 56 with 10 years of service, you are 6 years away from age 62. Your retirement benefit checks will be reduced by 30%.

If You Leave Before Retirement Age

One real advantage to FERS is that you do not have to stay with the Federal Government until retirement to receive good value from your retirement plan. This value comes from the fact you get an Agency Automatic contribution to your Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) account equal to 1% of your salary. Plus, if you contribute to the TSP, you can get up to 4% more. In addition, you will probably earn more Social Security credits wherever you work next. If you leave the Government long before retirement, with little service, FERS will always be best.

Let's say that you leave before you have the right combination of age and service to retire. Once you reach the age shown in the chart above, you may elect to begin receiving benefits. If you don't have 30 years of service, you may also choose to put off receiving benefits until as late as age 62. This will allow you to receive a bigger benefit by avoiding part or all of the 5% per year reduction, and you can collect on your Social Security and your TSP benefits.

If you don't want to wait until retirement age, you can withdraw all of the money you have contributed toward the FERS Basic Benefit Plan. It will be paid to you with a market rate of interest; that is, the same rate of interest earned by the U.S. Treasury securities purchased by the Retirement Fund (the account that contains all employee and employer contributions to CSRS and FERS). However, you give up your right to your Basic Benefit after retirement. If you take your money out, you cannot put it back in if you return to work with the Federal Government later. It's usually better to leave your money in FERS so that you can receive monthly benefits when you retire. This is because you pay very little compared to the benefits you will eventually receive from the Basic Benefit.

Social Security

For almost all American workers, Social Security is the basic retirement plan to which other benefits are added. To qualify for Social Security retirement benefits, you must have paid Social Security taxes for at least 10 years (or 40 credits or "quarters") over the course of your lifetime. (This 40-credit rule applies if you were born after 1928. If you were born before 1929, you need fewer credits to qualify). The Social Security credits you earn as a Federal employee are added to those you have earned in other employment throughout your career.

You can receive unreduced Social Security benefits if you wait until age 65. Starting in the year 2000, this age will gradually increase to 67. Or, you can retire at age 62 and receive reduced benefits. Your monthly Social Security checks will be reduced about 20% from the full benefit amount you would receive if you waited until age 65. (This gradually increases to a 30% reduction for those born in 1960 or later.) Leaving the Federal Government before you retire has no effect on the Social Security benefits you receive later. All of your FERS Social Security credits (years of covered employment) still count. You may continue to add more Social Security credits as long as you work under Social Security. You can still receive reduced Social Security benefits at age 62 or full benefits at age 65 (or later as the Social Security retirement age goes up to 67).

How Much You Will Receive After Retirement

Basic Benefit Plan

The amount of your FERS Basic Benefit annuity -- the monthly checks you receive after retirement -- depends on two things: your pay and your length of service.

As in most other retirement plans, an annuity formula is used to determine your benefits. The Government averages your highest 3 consecutive years of basic pay in your Federal career. This "high-3" average pay, together with your length of service, are used in the annuity formula. Your length of service is the total number of years and months you were covered under FERS.

Here is how the annuity formula is calculated:

FERS Annuity Formula

One Percent of your high-3 average pay for every year of service.

(Exception: If you are age 62 or older and have at least 20 years of service when you retire, you will receive 1.1% of your high-3 pay for every year of service.)

According to this formula, if you retire at age 55 with 30 years of service, you will be eligible for an annual annuity that is 30% of your high-3 pay. If you retire at age 62 with 30 years of service, you would get 33% of your high-3 pay.

In addition, if you have at least 1 calendar year (January 1 to December 31) of FERS service, you will be eligible for the Special Retirement Supplement. The Special Retirement Supplement (also known as the FERS Annuity Supplement) is a special benefit for those who have at least 1 full calendar year of FERS coverage, and who retire

  1. after 30 years of service at their MRA,
  2. after 20 years of service at age 60, or
  3. under the discontinued service or early voluntary retirement provisions. (These employees do not begin to receive the Special Retirement Supplement until they reach the MRA.)

The Supplement represents the amount you would receive from the Social Security Administration for your FERS service as if you were 62 on the day you retire. This benefit substitutes for the Social Security part of your total FERS benefit until age 62, when most people become eligible for Social Security. Like Social Security benefits, the Supplement is subject to an earnings test, which means your benefits are reduced if your income from earnings or self-employment is higher than an allowable amount.

If you take advantage of the FERS early retirement option (retiring at your MRA after leaving the Government), your annuity will be calculated according to the FERS annuity formula shown at the beginning of this section. Then, if you have less than 30 years of service, it will be reduced 5% for each year you are away from age 62 when you retire or elect to receive benefits. If you are 60 with 20 years of service, there is no reduction.

Remember, the Basic Benefit is just one of the three sources of benefits you'll receive. You may also get Social Security and Thrift Savings Plan benefits.

Social Security

It's difficult to predict exactly how much you will receive from Social Security.

A number of factors can affect your Social Security benefits, such as your complete pay history, whether or not you plan to work after retirement, and whether your spouse has been covered by Social Security.

Social Security benefits are determined by a three-part formula that is applied to your lifetime earnings under Social Security. Those who postpone receiving Social Security benefits until the full retirement age get higher benefits from the system.

Whether you start receiving Social Security benefits at age 62 or at the full retirement age, you should be aware that continuing to work may result in what is called an earnings offset under the Social Security Earnings Test. If you work at any job after you start receiving Social Security payments, your benefits will be reduced if you earn over the allowable amount. If you are under your full retirement age, for every $2.00 you earn over the amount, you'll give up $1.00 in Social Security benefits. The same rules apply to the Special Retirement Supplement. (See Special Notes on the Social Security Earnings Test.)

More information about Social Security is presented in the Brief Description of the Social Security Program section.

Cost-of-Living Adjustments (COLA's)

Basic Benefit Plan

Cost-of-living adjustments, or COLA's under the FERS Basic Benefit Plan begin when you reach age 62.

FERS cost-of-living adjustments's match the rate of inflation when the increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is up to 2%. (The CPI is a monthly survey that measures changes in consumer prices.) If the increase in the CPI is between 2% and 3%, the cost-of-living adjustments will be 2%. If the CPI increases 3% or more, the cost-of-living adjustments will be the rate of increase in the CPI minus 1%. This means that FERS cost-of-living adjustments are sometimes less than the rate of inflation.

For example, if the increase in the CPI is 2%, FERS basic benefit payments will increase by 2%. If the increase in the CPI is 5%, FERS retirement checks will increase by 4%.

The Supplement paid through age 62 is not increased by cost-of-living adjustments.

Social Security

Social Security gives cost-of-living adjustments that match the rate of inflation.

Cost to Participate

Basic Benefit Plan

FERS Basic Benefits, including the Special Retirement Supplement, are financed by very small contributions from you and much larger contributions from the Government. Your contributions are automatically deducted from your paychecks. The Basic Benefit deduction for 1998 is .80% of the total basic pay (basic pay, not including such things as overtime, bonuses, etc.) you earn in a pay period. However, in contrast, your agency pays 11.5% of your pay each pay period for your Basic Benefit.

If you leave the Federal Government before retirement, you can take out all of your Basic Benefit Plan contributions, and you will receive market rate interest, but you lose any right to a future Basic Benefit based on that service. This means that the service covered by the refund will not count toward eligibility to retire if you become a Federal employee again. However, taking a refund does not affect creditability of the service for non-retirement purposes such as reduction in force credit or leave.

Social Security

Your contributions to Social Security are actually a tax. This means that there are no refunds -- even if you never gain enough years of Social Security credit to qualify for benefits.

Social Security taxes are a percentage of your pay, including overtime and bonuses. They are limited to earnings below the maximum taxable wage base, which in 1998 is $68,400. This amount increases each year based on the annual average increase in earnings of the American work force as a whole. (You do not pay Social Security taxes on any earnings above the maximum taxable wage base. However, these excess earnings are not used in calculating your Social Security benefits, either.) The Social Security tax rate, not counting Medicare, in 1998 is 6.2% of salary up to the maximum taxable wage base. Your agency also pays the same amount.

Total Cost to Participate

The total cost to you of the FERS Basic Benefit contribution and Social Security in 1998 is 7.0%. This 7% is made up of .80% of pay for the Basic Benefit and 6.2% for Social Security. However, FERS will cost you less than 7.0% if you earn more than the $68,400 maximum taxable wage base because the Social Security tax stops when your earnings reach this amount. You only pay .80% of pay for the Basic Benefit until January 1 of the next year, when you start paying Social Security taxes for a new year. For example, suppose that Jill's pay reaches $68,400 on November 15. From November 16 thru December 31, she pays only .80% of basic pay for her FERS basic benefit. On January 1, Social Security taxes start again for the new year.

Thrift Savings Plan for FERS

The Thrift Savings Plan is an important part of the total FERS retirement package. It gives you a way to save extra money for the future and to get a tax break today.

When you join FERS, your agency sets up a Thrift Savings Plan account in your name. Every pay period, your agency automatically puts in an amount equal to 1% of your basic pay. This money is called your Agency Automatic (1%) Contribution. It is not a deduction from your basic pay. It is an amount your agency contributes for you based on your basic pay per pay period.

In addition, you can contribute up to 10% of your basic pay per pay period to your Thrift Savings Plan account. If you contribute to your Thrift Savings Plan account, you will also receive Agency Matchings Contributions as follows:

Your own contributions and your Agency Matching Contributions as well as the earnings attributed to these contributions belong to you right away. There is no waiting (vesting) period. You are vested in the Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and attributable earnings after you have completed 3 years of Federal (generally, civilian) service (2 years for some non-career participants).

The following chart shows how your agency matches your contributions:

Percent of Basic Pay Contributed to Your Account (FERS Participants Only)
If you Put In: Then Your Agency Puts In: And the Total Contribution Is:
0% 1% 0% 1%
1% 1% 1% 3%
2% 1% 2% 5%
3% 1% 3% 7%
4% 1% 3.5% 8.5%
5% 1% 4% 10%
6-10% 1% 4% 5%
Plus the percentage you contribute

The money in your Thrift Savings Plan account can be invested in any of the three investment funds: the Government Securities Investment (G) Fund, the Common Stock Index Investment (C) Fund, and the Fixed Income Investment (F) Fund. The C and F Funds are riskier than the G Fund but have the potential for earning higher rates of return. For example, during the 10-year period 1988 through 1997, the C Fund's compound annual rate of return was 17.49%.

Twice each year there is a Thrift Savings Plan open season. During the open season, you can start, stop, increase or decrease, and change the investment of your Thrift Savings Plan contributions. The investment election you make during the open season affects only your future contributions. You may move any portion of your existing account balance among the three funds by requesting an interfund transfer in any month you choose, without an annual limit.

You can stop contributing to the Thrift Savings Plan at any time. However, if you stop contributing outside an open season, you must wait until the second open season after you stop before you can contribute again. If you stop contributing during an open season, you may resume contributions during the next open season.

You get a tax break for saving in the Thrift Savings Plan because your Thrift Savings Plan contribution comes out of your basic pay before Federal and many State and local income taxes are figured. There is, however, an Internal Revenue Service annual limit on tax-deferred contributions. For 1998, the limit is $10,000; this limit is indexed to cost-of-living adjustments referred to in the Tax code and may change from year to year. You won't owe taxes on your contributions and attributable earnings until you withdraw your TSP account. You can withdraw your account when you separate or retire from Federal service. If you transfer all or any portion of your Thrift Savings Plan account balance to an Individual Retirement Arrangement or other eligible retirement plan, you do not pay taxes on the funds transferred when they are transferred. You will, however, be subject to applicable taxes when you withdraw your funds from the Individual Retirement Arrangement or other eligible retirement plan.

You may withdraw money from your Thrift account while you are working for the Government if you are age 59 or older or document financial hardship. You will be liable for taxes on the amount withdrawn and, if you are under age 59 , for the 10% early withdrawal penalty. You also can borrow from it. There are two types of TSP loans: general purpose and residential. You must have at least $1,000 in your own contributions and associated earnings to be eligible for a loan.

The Thrift Savings Plan is managed by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, an independent Government agency. The Board manages the G Fund and contracts with a professional asset manager to manage the C and F Funds. This book describes the elements of the Thrift Savings Plan that are most important in making a transfer decision. To find out more about the Thrift Savings Plan, ask your employing agency for the most recent booklet prepared and issued by the Board. You should read the Board's detailed information on each of the Investment Funds and review each Fund's performance before making any investment decision. The Board also issues a Fact Sheet each month containing the monthly returns for the Thrift funds. This is available from your agency. TSP publications, forms, and rates of return are also available from the TSP website (www.tsp.gov).

Important Conclusions About FERS

FERS is flexible for a work force that is more likely to work for several different employers over the course of a career. It allows for the fact that many employees may not retire from the Federal Government. FERS builds on the Social Security credits that employees already have or may earn in the future from non-Federal work. Also, the Thrift Savings Plan keeps its value after an employee leaves Federal service.

There are some important advantages to FERS:

FERS has some disadvantages too:

FERS is a good retirement plan, especially for employees who are not sure whether they will stay with the Federal Government until they retire. FERS gives employees more control over the amount of their retirement benefits. It also allows you more flexibility in deciding when to retire.

If you do stay with the Federal Government until retirement, you will also receive good benefits based on your FERS coverage. FERS comes out ahead of CSRS if you retire late because the annuity value of your Social Security benefit and Thrift Savings Plan go up quickly if you continue to work past age 62. The Windfall Elimination Provision penalty reduces as you go from 20 to 30 years of service under FERS. The reduced cost-of-living adjustments have less effect if you retire later.

FERS Transfer Handbook: Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS)

Overview

The Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) has traditionally been a single benefit retirement plan. Employees have had one payroll deduction for the plan and, after retirement, have received one check from CSRS each month for the rest of their lives.

CSRS employees may also contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan in order to receive additional retirement income. If you stay with CSRS, you can contribute up to 5% of your basic pay each pay period and receive a tax break today. (CSRS, including CSRS Offset employees, receive no agency contributions to their Thrift accounts.)

If you have CSRS Offset coverage, you should read both this section, which gives the basic CSRS rules, as well as the following section. It tells you what is different under the Offset rules. If you are a law enforcement officer, firefighter, air traffic controller, or military reserve technician, you also need to read the Special Employee Groups section.

When You Can Receive Retirement Benefits

If You Stay Until Retirement Age

With CSRS, you can retire with full benefits as soon as your age and years of Federal service match one of the retirement combinations shown below:

Retiring Under CSRS

Except in limited circumstances, CSRS does not allow you to retire voluntarily before you have the required age and service combination and take a reduced benefit (a reduced annuity) like FERS and many other modern plans do.

If You Leave Before Retirement Age

The chart above shows when you can retire and begin receiving CSRS benefits as an immediate annuity. If you leave Federal service before you are eligible to retire, you must wait until age 62 to receive monthly benefits, no matter how many years of service you have.

For example, let's say you simply stop working for the Federal Government at age 53 with 30 years of service. You're not 55 yet, so you don't qualify for retirement. Your monthly checks from CSRS won't start until you turn 62. Your monthly benefit amount is based on your pay when you leave. With inflation, those dollars don't buy as much by the time you receive them at age 62. You can't continue your health or life insurance as a retiree, either.

If you don't want to wait until age 62 to get benefits, you can withdraw all of the money you've contributed when you leave. However, in most cases, your money will be returned to you without any interest, and, you will not get monthly checks from CSRS, even at age 62.

How Much You Will Receive After Retirement

The amount of your annuity -- the monthly checks you receive after retirement -- depends on two things: your pay and your length of service. In computing your annuity, the Government uses your 3 highest consecutive years of basic pay and your length of service (the number of years and months you worked for the Federal Government and your creditable military service). If you retire and receive a benefit right away, you will also get credit for any unused sick leave.

Here is how the CSRS annuity formula is calculated:

CSRS Annuity Formula
Years of Service What You Receive
First 5 years of service 1.5% of your high-3 average pay for each year, or 7.50% of your high-3.
Second 5 years of service Plus 1.75% of your high-3 average pay for each year, or 8.75% more for a total of 16.25%.
For all years of service over 10 Plus 2% of your high-3 average pay for each year.
10 more years (20 total years) 20% more, for a total of about 36% of your high-3.
15 more years (25 total years) 30% more, for a total benefit of about 46% of your high-3.
20 more years (30 total years) 40% more, for a total benefit of about 56% of your high-3.

Note: The maximum benefit you can receive from CSRS is 80% of your high-3 pay plus credit for your sick leave. This limit generally affects only those who have more than 41 years of service when they retire.

According to the formula above, if you retire at age 55 with 30 years of service, you will be eligible for an annual annuity that is about 56% of your high-3 pay.

You will receive your full monthly annuity even if you have other retirement income or start a second non-Federal career when you retire. There is no reduction in your annuity because of other employment.

This is a very generous annuity formula compared to those used by many other retirement plans. As you can see, it rewards long service, because you receive more money for the years of service that come late in your career. It's not quite as generous if you have less than 10 years of service.

Cost-of-Living Adjustments (COLA's)

Inflation is a fact of life, but the actual rate of increase varies from year to year. To help retirement benefits keep pace with inflation, CSRS gives all those who retire annual cost-of-living adjustments or COLA's.

Your retirement benefits are eligible to be increased by a cost-of-living-adjustment in the year after you retire, and every year after that. The increases you receive each year actually match the rate of inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

For example, if the increase in the Consumer Price Index is 2%, CSRS retirement checks will increase by 2%. If the increase in the Consumer Price Index is 5%, the cost-of-living adjustments will also be 5%.

Cost-of-living adjustments help make sure that your retirement dollars keep the same buying power year after year. CSRS is better than many other retirement plans because it provides complete protection against inflation.

Cost to Participate

CSRS retirement benefits are financed by contributions from you and much larger contributions from the Government. Your contributions are automatically deducted from your paychecks. Your deduction in 1998 is 7.0% of the total basic pay you earn in a pay period. Your agency pays 7.0% of your basic pay each pay period. The balance of the cost of CSRS benefits are paid from the U.S. Treasury.

Thrift Savings Plan for CSRS

CSRS employees may participate in the Thrift Savings Plan. The Plan gives you a way to save extra money for the future and gives you a tax break today. The Plan allows you to contribute up to 5% of your basic pay per pay period on a before tax basis to your Thrift Savings Plan account. CSRS employees do not receive Agency Matching or Automatic (1%) Contributions.

The Thrift Savings Plan investment options, withdrawal and tax information are the same for both CSRS and FERS employees. See the FERS Thrift Savings Plan section for this information.

Voluntary Contributions for CSRS

CSRS employees also may make voluntary contributions. Total contributions may not exceed 10% of the total pay an employee has received to date. At retirement, each $100 in voluntary contributions (including interest earned) will provide an additional annuity of $7 a year, plus 20 cents for each full year you are over age 55 at the time you retire. You may also choose to share the annuity by electing a survivor annuity. Voluntary contributions paid out as additional annuity are not increased by cost-of-living adjustments. Voluntary contributions can also be paid out as a lump sum refund at any time before retirement.

Voluntary contributions earn a variable interest rate determined by the Treasury Department each calendar year, based on the average yield of new investments purchased by the CSRS fund during the previous fiscal year. The interest rate payable for 1998 is 6.75%. Interest accrues to the date of the refund calculation, separation, or transfer to a position not subject to CSRS or FERS, whichever is earliest. Employees who transfer to FERS may retain a voluntary contributions account, but may not add to it after transferring.

Interest on voluntary contributions is not taxed until the tax year in which it is paid out. At that time, interest may be rolled over to an Individual Retirement Account to further defer taxes. However, in contrast with Thrift Savings Plan contributions, voluntary contributions are not pre-tax dollars that permit you to reduce your taxable income. For further information on voluntary contributions, ask your servicing personnel office for the pamphlet "Voluntary Contributions Under the Civil Service Retirement System," (RI 83-10). Voluntary contributions are administered by the U.S. Office of Personnel Management. This program is not part of the Thrift Savings Plan.

Important Conclusions About CSRS

CSRS was designed for a workforce that was likely to retire from the Federal Government after many years of service. For that reason, it provides excellent benefits to employees who put in many years of service, especially if they retire before age 60. Employees who join the Federal Government late in their careers and can't retire before age 60 are less well off. CSRS does not provide good benefits to employees who leave the Federal Government before they are eligible to retire.

There are some important advantages to CSRS:

There are also some disadvantages to CSRS that apply if you leave the Federal Government before you're eligible to retire:

In general, the Civil Service Retirement System is a good retirement plan for employees who know that they will stay with the Federal Government until they are eligible to retire and who retire young. It is not very well-suited to employees who may not spend their entire careers in Federal service, particularly if they leave before retirement.

CSRS Offset Benefits

If you have CSRS Offset coverage, the regular CSRS rules described in the preceding section about when you can receive retirement benefits, how the benefit is computed, and cost-of-living adjustments apply to you. Also, the rules for participating in the Thrift Savings Plan are the same for both CSRS and CSRS Offset employees.

What is different for CSRS Offset employees is the fact that you are paying Social Security taxes and earning a Social Security benefit at the same time that you are paying CSRS deductions and earning a CSRS annuity. However, instead of paying 6.2% of pay for Social Security plus 7.0% for CSRS, the Social Security tax is subtracted from, or offset, from the 7.0% for CSRS. The amount you pay for CSRS in 1998 is .80% of your basic pay. If your total pay in a year exceeds the maximum amount that is subject to Social Security taxes ($68,400 in 1998), the Social Security deduction stops and your CSRS deduction increases to 7.0% of your basic pay. Thus, you pay the same 7.0% cost for retirement as a CSRS employee, but the amount is divided between CSRS and Social Security.

When you retire, your annuity is computed under the same rules that apply to all CSRS employees. However, when you become eligible for Social Security benefits (normally at age 62), your CSRS benefit is reduced, or offset, by the value of your CSRS Offset service in your Social Security benefit. If you want to estimate the amount of the offset from your future annuity, see these instructions.

Note: If you do not become eligible for any Social Security benefit, there is no offset.

Important Conclusions About CSRS Offset

You receive the value of the CSRS benefit formula and cost-of-living adjustments, but pay a smaller amount for this benefit. You also enjoy the flexibility of having Social Security coverage that continues to build if you leave the Federal Government to work elsewhere.

If you leave the Federal Government before retirement, the same drawbacks that apply to CSRS employees who leave early also apply to you. However, you have paid far less for your benefit and your Social Security benefit is portable.

WARNING: If you are considering electing FERS you must keep in mind that any CSRS Offset service (service under both CSRS and Social Security) will then change to FERS service. Since FERS pays a lower percentage of your "high 3" average salary, this could make a significant difference in the amount of your Federal retirement benefits. See Special Transfer Rules section.

FERS Transfer Handbook: Minimum Retirement Age

The following chart will help you determine what your MRA is.

Minimum Retirement Age
If you were born. Your MRA is.
Before 1948 55
In 1948 55 and 2 months
In 1949 55 and 4 months
In 1950 55 and 6 months
In 1951 55 and 8 months
In 1952 55 and 10 months
In 1953 - 1964 56
In 1965 56 and 2 months
In 1966 56 and 4 months
In 1967 56 and 6 months
In 1968 56 and 8 months
In 1969 56 and 10 months
In 1970 and after 57

FERS Transfer Handbook: Special Transfer Rules: CSRS to FERS

Overview

For most people, transferring to FERS means you may take advantage of the features of both CSRS and FERS. (The exception is if you have less than 5 years of creditable civilian non-Offset CSRS service at the time you transfer. All of your CSRS Service will be switched over to FERS and any excess contributions can be returned to you.)

All your CSRS service is creditable toward eligibility for death and disability benefits, as well as retirement, so you and your family do not risk any gaps in protection if you transfer to FERS.

When You Can Receive Retirement Benefits

If you transfer, your past CSRS service and all future FERS Service will be added together to determine when you can retire. Instead of the CSRS retirement rules, you will follow the more flexible FERS rules that appear below:

Retiring With Full Benefits

Retiring with Reduced Benefits

Example: If you have 18 years of CSRS service when you transfer and you work 2 more years, your total service is 20 years. According to the preceding chart, you can retire with full benefits at age 60, or with reduced benefits at age 55-57 (depending on your Minimum Retirement Age).

One advantage that FERS offers is the opportunity to retire early -- at the Minimum Retirement Age with as little as 10 years of service, and transferees don't have to work under FERS for any minimum amount of time. If you retire early, you will receive reduced combined CSRS and FERS benefits. The reduction will be 5% for each year you are away from age 62 when you retire. However, there is no reduction if you are 60 when you retire and you have at least 20 years of service. You also can keep your Federal health and life insurance coverage as a retiree if you met participation requirements as an employee.

Example: If you transfer to FERS and then leave the Federal Government at age 55 with 20 years of service, you'll receive combined FERS and CSRS benefits that are 35% lower than the full benefit you would have received if you waited until age 62. You will, however, receive full cost-of-living adjustments on the CSRS part of your benefit. For many people, receiving benefits earlier and for a longer period of time will make the reduction worthwhile.

FERS rules will also apply if you leave the Federal Government before you have the right combination of age and service to retire. You'll keep your service credit and, once you reach the necessary age, will start receiving benefits. This is an important advantage to transferring to FERS. If you stay with CSRS and leave before retirement, you will not receive any benefits until age 62.

How Much You Will Receive After Retirement

The retirement benefits you actually receive normally will come from both CSRS and FERS. The higher CSRS annuity formula will be used for the years of non-Offset service you put in under CSRS. You can get credit for your unused sick leave (the amount you have when you transfer or retire, whichever is less) if you work until your MRA.

The lower FERS Basic Benefit (and the Special Retirement Supplement) formula will apply only to the years you spent under FERS and CSRS Offset, so you're probably not giving up all the CSRS benefits you've already earned. You are trading a higher CSRS benefit after you transfer for increased flexibility with FERS.

The high-3 pay that determines your benefits at retirement will be the highest 3 years in your entire Federal career, under CSRS or FERS. Your Social Security benefits will be based on all of the Social Security credits you've earned in your lifetime.

Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA's)

Once you start receiving retirement benefits, the CSRS part of your benefit will receive cost-of-living adjustments (COLA's) right away, even if you are receiving your CSRS benefit before you could have under CSRS rules. The FERS part of the benefit won't be eligible for a cost-of-living adjustment until you reach age 62. The FERS cost-of-living adjustment will usually be 1% less than the rate of inflation.

Disability Benefits

If you transfer to FERS and become disabled, your disability benefit will be determined totally under FERS rules. The Social Security disability portion of your benefit generally can't begin until you are fully insured and have paid Social Security taxes for 5 out of the last 10 years before you become disabled. For more information on disability benefits see the Disability Benefits Under CSRS and FERS.

How CSRS Offset Service Is Credited

If you are covered by CSRS Offset provisions, and you transfer to FERS, your Offset service becomes subject to the less generous FERS rules.

You must have at least 5 years of non-Offset service to be eligible for an annuity with a component computed under CSRS rules -- in other words you must have at least 5 years of civilian service other than your Offset service. (Count all service, even it you didn't pay CSRS deductions or you received a refund.)

If you have less than 5 years of civilian service other than CSRS Offset at the time you transfer to FERS, all of that CSRS service will become FERS service. You can request a refund of the extra money you paid for CSRS and receive it plus interest. Employees whose CSRS service will become FERS service may also receive a partial refund of any military deposits they may have paid under CSRS rules.

Example 1: Susan had 6 years of CSRS-covered employment when she resigned and got a refund of her deductions in 1985. When she was reemployed in June 1998, she was covered under the CSRS Offset provisions. She transferred to FERS in November 1998. When Susan retires, the 6 years of CSRS service will be computed under CSRS rules. However, since Offset service is treated under FERS rules once you transfer to FERS, her service from June through November becomes FERS service.

Example 2: In contrast, Bob's employment history shows that he had 4 years of CSRS-covered employment, a break, 2 years of CSRS Offset service, and another break in 1986. When he returned to Federal employment, he was covered under CSRS Offset provisions until he transferred to FERS. Since Bob had less than 5 years of non-Offset service, all of his service is now subject to FERS rules. Bob is also entitled to a refund of the extra money he paid for CSRS since he didn't previously receive a refund for his first 4 years of service.

Bob thinks he has made a good decision because he is far from retirement, and he isn't sure he will stay with the Government. In addition, he is already contributing 5% of pay to the Thrift Plan, and switching to FERS gets him the full 5% Government matching contribution.

Example 3: Ed had 15 years of CSRS service, a 3-year break, and now has 12 years of CSRS Offset service. He chooses to stay in CSRS Offset because he does not want to lose CSRS credit for his Offset service. If he were to transfer to FERS, his Offset service would become subject to FERS rules. This means that, instead of getting 24% of his high-3 for this period of service under CSRS rules, he would only get 12% under FERS rules.

WARNING: Since all Offset service becomes subject to FERS when an employee transfers to FERS, it is particularly important that CSRS Offset employees give careful consideration to their first transfer opportunity. Even though your employment history may result in your having another opportunity to elect FERS at a later date, the more Offset service you have, the more you can lose by having waited to transfer to FERS. In addition, you will have missed out on the opportunity to get a government match on your Thrift Account for that service.

Cost to Participate

For most employees, the cost to participate is essentially the same under CSRS, CSRS Offset, and FERS -- in 1998, 7.0% of your basic pay. However, if you are a high salaried employee, earning more than the $68,400 maximum 1998 taxable wage base, FERS will cost less than 7.0% because the 6.2% for Social Security drops out at $68,400 leaving only the .80% for the FERS basic benefit. This is different from CSRS Offset, which is 7.0% even when Social Security taxes drop out. If FERS salary exceeds the maximum taxable wage base, contributions in 1998 stay at .80%; thus take-home pay goes up. However, if CSRS Offset salary exceeds maximum taxable wage base, when Social Security deductions stop, retirement contributions go up to 7.0% --thus take-home pay is unchanged.

Survivor Benefits

If you transfer to FERS, all your CSRS service counts toward eligibility of your survivor benefits. The benefits for your survivor will be determined entirely under FERS rules. These rules include: (1) a 5 or 10% reduction in your benefits to provide survivor benefits for your spouse; (2) a spousal benefit defined as either 25 or 50% of your benefit; (3) cost of living increases generally equal to the Consumer Price Index increases minus 1%; and (4) a 10-year service requirement before any monthly annuity is payable to your spouse.

Important Conclusions

CSRS usually provides better benefits to those who retire from the Federal service before age 62. Switching to FERS lets you take advantage of the features of both retirement systems: flexibility and early retirement from FERS and a generous annuity formula and full cost-of-living adjustments from CSRS for your service before you transfer. Switching gives you the ability to get government contributions to your Thrift account and have the portability that Social Security coverage gives if you leave the Federal Government and go to another job.

The next section of the handbook, called "Making Your Decision", will point out some important retirement plan considerations that can make one of the plans a better choice for you.

FERS Transfer Handbook: Making Your Decision

The decision about your retirement plan normally comes when you have just begun a new job and wouldn't otherwise have thought about all of this. You may be uncomfortable trying to consider a lot of details about a retirement plan now, especially if retirement is far away for you.

Rather than sorting through every detail of how the two plans are structured, perhaps it would be easier to think about what your future career plans are. Consider whether or not you think you'll stay with the Federal Government for the rest of your career, and, if you are married, what your spouse's career plans are.

This section will help you consider some important factors about yourself and your work history that may make either CSRS or FERS clearly a better choice for you.

The factors are separated into groups according to your current age, how far from retirement you are now, and special situations. You may want to read all four groups, but:

After reading this section, you should know which plan you want to choose.

Choosing Based on When You Expect to Retire

You Are Close to Retirement Age

If you are within 10 years of retiring from the Federal Government, things are probably pretty clear for you.

You may have already earned most of your retirement benefit under CSRS. You will take that benefit, including the full CSRS cost-of-living-adjustment (COLA), with you if you transfer to FERS. You already know a lot about your life and your career: things like your marital status, your spouse's work history, your non-Federal work history. You may also have some idea about what you want to do after you retire from the Government: turn your hobby into a business, start a second career, or concentrate on your golf game.

The fact that you know much more about yourself and your career now than you did 10 or 15 years ago, makes the choice much clearer.

CSRS Is Probably Better For You If: