Q. I understand that you can transfer funds into and out of your Thrift Savings Plan from either eligible pretax plans and/or after-tax plans. However, withdrawals (loans, withdrawals and interfund transfers) are made proportionately from both the traditional and Roth. Thus, you cannot specify withdrawals from only the traditional or the Roth. This is seen as a major drawback for some who would like to participate in the Roth option only or make withdrawals from only the traditional or the Roth option. Would it be possible, at or near retirement, to transfer a major amount of your TSP balance —…
Browsing: account balance
Q. If I have $100,000 in my C Fund and 100,000 in the I Fund and transfer the balance to the G Fund, will the balance be $200,000 if nothing changes in the market overnight? A. Yes.
Q. On June 26, I took out a $22,000 loan against my 401(k) plan for major home improvements. That equaled up to $376 per month taken out of my paycheck to repay this loan. Then, Aug. 1, my hours were temporarily reduced until the end of 2012 to 30 hours per week, which amounts to an additional $620 deducted from my pay monthly. This puts a serious hardship on my ability to pay my monthly obligations. Is there a way to legally stop payments to my 401(k) repayment, seeing as I had no idea my hours would be reduced, whereby affecting my ability…
Q. I just changed my contribution allocations from 100 percent G Fund to 100 percent L Fund 2030. Would it make sense to transfer my fund balance that I earned with G Fund to the L Fund? A. It’s impossible to give you reliable investment advice without the proper analysis and understanding of your unique circumstances, goals and constraints. How you manage your investments should depend directly upon what you expect that money to do and when. In general, though, unless the G Fund is holding money that is to be spent within the next few years, or that is part…
Q. My wife is asking for 93 percent of my total vested account balance. Does total vested account balance mean what was contributed by me over the past 12 years, or the total value of the account which includes Va contribution and growth? A. It includes everything in your account except for Agency Automatic Contributions, which have not yet met the vesting requirement: “A participant is vested in (entitled to keep) the Agency Automatic (1%) Contribution in his or her account after completing 3 years of Federal service (2 years for most FERS employees in Congressional and certain noncareer positions).”
Q. I retired from active duty in December 2011. I accepted an appointment to a government service position in October 2011 and established a FERS Thrift Savings Plan account. I did not move any of my TSP account balance accumulated during my time on active duty into my FERS TSP account, so I currently have two accounts. Am I eligible to take out a loan against the TSP account balance still residing in my [previously] active-duty account? If not, can I transfer all or part of my [previously] active-duty account into my FERS TSP account with the goal of taking…
Q. I am planning on retiring in December, but I will still have outstanding balances owed on my Thrift Savings Plan loans. Will they take that remainder out of my TSP money when I withdraw it? A. If you retire with an outstanding loan balance, the unpaid balance, plus interest, will be declared a taxable distribution. This money has already been deducted from your TSP balance, so it won’t be available for withdrawal if it has not been repaid.
Q: Could you elaborate on a couple of statements you made in your “Mistakes to Avoid” column that appeared in the July 13 issue of Federal Times? At mistake No. 2, “not having enough insurance,” you said “Once you are retired, long-term care insurance is a prudent thing to consider.” Many feds signed up for the federal long-term care insurance program when it first became available years ago. Are you saying that most of us workers don’t need to get long-term care coverage until we’re actually retired? You stated “Many people follow this rule of thumb: ‘It’s generally safe to…