Most federal and postal workers are covered by the Federal Employees Retirement System. But FERS is a lot different from the old civil service pension program.
Three of every four federal workers are under the “new” Federal Employees Retirement System and that’s the subject of today’s guest column by benefits expert John Elliott. MC.
If you’re covered under the old Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS), you can stop reading; this is for our FERS friends who have never been covered under CSRS. It is about three things you can do to plan for retirement under the Federal Employees’ Retirement System (FERS) so that you won’t be caught financially short at retirement.
What we want is no surprises in retirement, at least about the money.
Your FERS retirement is made up of three parts:
The calculator can perform the following functions in helping you plan for retirement, and I quote from the calculator page:
Estimate the growth of your TSP account by calculating the growth of your future contributions and/or the growth of the money already in your account. Estimate what your account balance would provide in monthly annuity payments under a variety of TSP annuity options. Estimate how many monthly payments you can receive from your account when you choose a specific dollar amount, or estimate how much you can receive each month if you choose monthly payments based on life expectancy. Link to the Ballpark Estimate calculator to estimate how much you will need to save each year to meet your retirement goals.
Use these tools, and your retirement planning will be a little easier. J.E.
John Elliott presents retirement seminars for the National Institute of Transition Planning. Tune in to For Your Benefit each Saturday morning, from 10-11. Listen live at 1050 AM, or www.federalnewsradio.com
Nearly Useless Factoid
From Disgusting Flavors We Never Got a Chance to Love on MentalFloss, “one of the biggest flavor offenders seems to be Jell-O, who tried and failed with Coffee, Chocolate and Cola flavors. Their most behated flavor, however, has to be Celery, which was apparently created for use in salads.”
To reach me: mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
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