Browsing: thrift savings plan

Q: I am 75 and still working under the Federal Employees Retirement System. I have two tax shelter plans. One of them is with my Thrift Savings Plan account, and I learned from the TSP website that I do not have to take a required minimum distribution from them until I retire. My other plan started when I worked for Georgia Tech, but is now managed by a brokerage firm. My question is: Must I take an RMD from the plan managed by the brokerage firm if I am still working? I don’t understand why I should have to take such…

Q: I wanted to have my house paid off by the time I retire in 2025. I am over 50, and the yearly payment needed to pay off my house would equal my Thrift Savings Plan catch-up contribution; I can’t do both. Would you recommend paying off the house or paying more into the TSP account? A: It depends upon your assumptions about the future and your circumstances. With what little I know about you (virtually nothing), I can only recommend that you carefully consider keeping the mortgage and making the TSP contributions.

Q: I am a 60-year-old Federal Employees Retirement System employee. Good health holding out, I plan on retiring in 2025. I am saving the maximum allowed in the L 2020 Fund, with the thought that I may have to retire if health does not hold out until 2020. Your article in Federal Times on Dec. 13 said to choose the L Fund that corresponds to your life expectancy, rather than when you want to retire. Should I move my L Fund money to L 2030, or are there other allocations that you would recommend?   A: I can’t responsibly give…

Q: In a Dec. 13 blog post, you answered the following question: “I am a federal firefighter under CSRS Special Retirement due to retire in November 2011 at age 50. At what age will I be able to collect on my TSP retirement?” You said that the writer would be subject to the early withdrawal penalty until age 59 1/2 unless the withdrawal was rolled over, used to buy a life annuity or met one of the other “specific exceptions to the rule.” I’m an 1811-series federal employee, age 52, and will be retiring in 2011. I’ve read that I…

Q: I am a retired executive currently working as a re-employed annuitant during parts of the year. I always look forward to reading your Federal Times column. I have a question regarding some advice you provided in the Dec. 13th edition.    You indicate that it’s best to use the Thrift Savings Plan’s L Funds as planning guides. You recommend choosing the L Fund that corresponds to your life expectancy and apply its beginning asset allocation to your account, then periodically adjusting the mix. I had always heard that you should choose the L Fund that most corresponds to the date…

Q: Will my Thrift Savings Plan withdrawals be taxed at retirement by the state of New Jersey? A: Making a contribution with after-tax dollars typically creates “tax basis” in your account. As long as you keep good records on the amount of after-tax money you contributed to the account, you should not have to pay tax on those dollars again when withdrawn. I’m not an expert in New Jersey tax law, though, and you should consult a certified public accountant who is for specific advice.

Q: Thank you for agreeing to respond to my New Jersey Thrift Savings Plan taxation question. New Jersey does not permit federal employees to contribute pre­tax dollars into TSP accounts. Its position is that TSP was not established under a Internal Revenue Code 401(k) plan. As this impacts many thousands of federal workers in the state, my question is: Presumably at retirement, New Jersey TSP participants will be taxed at the federal level for all TSP distributions, and at the state level for distributions minus contributions which NJ previously taxed (let’s hope so; that alone may be a recordkeeping nightmare).…

Q: I am married with no children. What happens to any remaining balance in my Thrift Savings Plan account if my spouse precedes me in death or dies prior to withdrawing all that is in my account? A: According to information provided by the TSP, the following order of precedence will prevail in the event that there is no viable named beneficiary: • To your widow or widower. • If none, to your child or children equally, and to descendants of deceased children by representation. • If none, to your parents equally or to the surviving parent. • If none,…

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