Q. I am an unmarried federal employee. I max out my contribution to the Thrift Savings Plan. I plan to work until at least 62, which will give me 21 years of service, or possibly until 65 with 24 years. As a federal employee in FERS and with TSP, what is the best way to provide income for two siblings when I die? I am not opposed to taking a reduction in monthly benefits if that is the best way to do so. My home will be paid off in 2014. I have no other debt and live on about…
Browsing: survivor benefits
Q. I’m a Postal Service employee who is very close to his retirement date. I was told that withdrawing 4 percent of my Thrift Savings Plan savings per year would last for a lifetime? Is this true? What if I die two years after I begin to draw and my benefits are left for my daughter who is only 38 now? Will she receive the money for a lifetime also? Or will she be paid only the balance? A. You can’t be sure that a 4 percent annual withdrawal rate will be safe. It depends upon a number of factors, including…
Q. Effective Feb. 29, 2012, I am a CSRS retiree from federal service; I participated in both the Thrift Savings Program ($201,000), and the Voluntary Contributions Program. I must make an election soon of the funds now in the VCP: $87,637 (nontaxable); $34,682 (taxable). I am married, and I will be 66 years old in October. I (we) do not foresee needing the money from these two sources in the near term. I will likely convert everything to a traditional IRA then Roth IRA in April of the year after I turn 70½, to be left to my son after I…
Q. My sister retired in 2010 and most likely will not move her Thrift Savings Plan into an IRA and begin withdrawals until she’s required to in 2015. In the meantime, she has awarded percentages of her TSP to children and friends. If she dies before 2015, I know that the beneficiaries will have to notify TSP. It’s my understanding that the TSP beneficiaries will each have to start new IRAs to receive their portions. I don’t think there’s any way for the beneficiaries to receive a lump-sum payment, unless they pay penalties. Am I correct? And this is true regardless…
Q. I am a FERS employee earning $118,000 per year. My sister is a dental assistant earning about $30,000 per year. (She’s also married and lives in a state with a much lower cost of living, while I’m single.) This question involves inheritance of our parents’ retirement accounts, and I offered our salaries because our tax obligations are vastly different. Our father has a TSP account worth approximately $110,000. Our mother has a 401(k) worth approximately $90,000. Both are retired, and both are very ill with terminal cancer. We’re wondering if our parents should each convert their retirement accounts to cash…
Q. I am 62, retiring from the Postal Service after 45 years of government service and wish to take a set amount of money from my Thrift Savings Plan account on a monthly basis. If I should I pass away prior to my wife becoming age 59½ years of age, would she have to pay the 10 percent penalty? A. No, the penalty does not apply to distributions made on account of the death of the account holder.
Q: I am interested in contacting a financial planner/consultant to help me answer some CSRS questions (gross annuity and former spouse survivor benefits calculations) pertaining to a court order. Do you know where I can obtain this service? A: Try visiting www.variplan.com.
Q: I am a Civil Service Retirement System retiree. What happens to my Thrift Savings Plan account after my death? My notes from a retirement seminar 10 years ago say that if my spouse is listed as my beneficiary, she may move my TSP funds into her individual retirement account with no tax or penalty. If my children are listed as beneficiaries they do not have the same option, and in most cases the TSP funds are fully taxable. Is this still correct? A: Your spouse may transfer the balance to an IRA and avoid current taxation or may, under…