Q. Can I retire from the Veterans Affairs hospital under FERS at age 55 with 25 years of service and withdraw my Thrift Savings Plan in lump sum. Or do I have to wait until I am MRA? Can I leave at 55 and defer my retirement until I reach my MRA at 56? A. Reg Jones says: You can’t retire until you reach your minimum retirement age, which is 56. If you retired then, your annuity would be reduced by 5 percent for every year you were under age 60 (5/12 of a percentage point per year). You could…
Yearly Archives: 2012
Q. I have some money in a traditional Individual Retirement Account that is doing nothing for me, and I was wondering if I could transfer it to my Thrift Savings Plan account. I invested roughly $44,000 in June 2008 and, as of March 30, I have a grand total of $46,190 in the account. I am also paying an annual fee of $344 for this IRA. In the same time frame, I made over $30,000 in my TSP account. I realize I will lose about $2,500 in the transfer, but I feel I can make that back up in no…
Q. I am a Postal Service employee, age 57, and I currently contribute $6,000 a year to a Roth Individual Retirement Account. Am I also allowed to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan, or would that be considered an excess contribution? A. You are permitted to contribute the maximum to the TSP, but, depending upon your circumstances, this may limit your ability to contribute to a Roth IRA. See Internal Revenue Service Publication 590 for the rules.
Q. I work as a CSRS federal employee, 60 years old with 35 years of federal service. There is $200,000 in pretax money saved in my Thrift Savings Plan account. I’m interested in taking advantage of the “one-time” age-based in-service withdrawal option. Can I choose any amount to withdraw? For example, my plan is to take out $100,000 and roll (100 percent) directly into my private Individual Retirement Account and invest in stocks. Is it also correct to assume that I can move money from my IRA pretax account into my TSP account (any time and any amount) as long…
Q. Will the Thrift Savings Plan automatically withhold money toward my federal and state taxes each month if I choose monthly withdrawals at retirement? A. Federal withholding; yes. State withholding; no. See the table on Page 2 of the notice at https://www.tsp.gov/PDF/formspubs/tsp-536.pdf for details.
Q. Will you be allowed to withdraw the principal (not the interest earned) from your Roth TSP account after the five-year seasoning period and without any retirement age restrictions? Do the Internal Revenue Service’s rules on Roth 401(k) or a Roth IRA apply to Roth TSP? A. The early withdrawal penalty covers Roth distributions prior to age 59½.
Q. I have been working for the federal government for 10 years. I have contributed the max for most of that time to the Thrift Savings Plan/FERS. After a divorce, I have been battling debt in the form of school loans, credit cards, etc. In an attempt to pay off the debt, I pay approximately $700 per month. I have attempted and requested to decrease the annual percentage rate on some items, with little success. I have a fair amount in my TSP. I am debating whether to withdraw just the amount I need to pay off the debt (20…
Q. My husband has 15 years active-duty military and is working now as a NASA employee. It will cost about $20,000 to buy back his 15 years. Can we roll over money from our 401(k) into FERS and avoid penalties and taxes on that money? A. No.
Q. I am a 54-year-old letter carrier with 24 years postal and nine years military. According to Senate bill S.1789, will I be eligible for early retirement? What about the Social Security supplement? How does this affect my Thrift Savings Plan? Can I get that also? A. You will have access to your TSP account for retirement income as soon as you separate from service. You will be subject to the early withdrawal penalty until you reach age 59½ unless you qualify for one of the exceptions listed on page 4 of the notice at https://www.tsp.gov/PDF/formspubs/tsp-536.pdf. Note that one of the…
Q. I will be retiring (CSRS) at the end of this year. I understand there are several options available with my account. However, I haven’t been able to find any clear/accurate information. Can I take it out as a lump sum? (Is there a negative to this?) As a retiree, can I leave it in place? (One article seemed to state that if a person does this, they receive a small monthly check of some sort.) A. You’ll find the information you need here: https://www.tsp.gov/planparticipation/withdrawals/accountOptions.shtml.