| I would recommend an early or mid-career federal employee retirement class. Your agency should offer them a few times a year, they are really great and provide a wealth of information. |
| I would create a budget for what spending currently looks like. I would also project and see what a budget looks like after you are done paying for college and if your partner moves in. It sounds like you need to know more about health care - what is covered and if there is any additional costs. See if your agency offers retirement workshops. I think you will need a bit more than what you have saved. |
Presumably unlike op your husband started his fed career before the age of 38 and had more than 100k in his tsp at the age of 43 (or he had significant family assets/prior savings/a spouse contributing decent earnings)…so not really relevant to her situation. |
So, what's the service requirement to get medical insurance in retirement? |
google federal health benefits in retirement eligibility and check out OPM site |
| Consider getting a Saatva mattress. I had the worst back pain after starting a 70 hour a week desk job. That mattress saved my back. |
You’d have two additional years of service, too, so your bump for continuing to work from age 60 to 62 would actually be about 20%, not 10. Like you I’ll have 22 years at age 60, and the 20% bump is what motivates me to stay until 62. |
I'm a fed, and working on the downshift until I collect SS right now. I'm 44 btw. |
Very helpful!
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Can you imagine if OP had a demanding private sector job? 55 hours at her desk, threat of being laid off any minute for being too old? |
If OP has 22 years at age 60 - this wouldn't apply would it? From OPM: If you retire at the MRA with at least 10, but less than 30 years of service, your benefit will be reduced by 5 percent a year for each year you are under 62, unless you have 20 years of service and your benefit starts when you reach age 60 or later. Let me know if I'm reading this wrong.... |
You’re reading it correctly. OP’s pension will not be reduced is s/he retires at age 60 with 20 years, but on top of that you get a bonus 10% for waiting until 62. |
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Retired fed here. Why would you give up an opportunity to make more money than you have before working as a contractor.
Get up and move for another 7 years. Put the max into your IRA. That’s how it’s done. |
| OP, you're a fed. If you're having increasing pain sitting a desk all day (as am I, even though I'm only 37), get up. Take a walk. Walk before, during (lunch break), and after work. Get up every hour and move around. You're not chained to your desk. No one is going to fire you for it. You can get a doctor's note if you need it, or if anyone gives you a hard time. Most won't, because they know the reasonable accommodation process exists and the outcome will be the same in the end, just with more paperwork. |
| I'll also add, we have very good insurance and you probably have a ton of banked sick leave. Use it to go to physical therapy and even to do your PT home exercise program. The sick leave is far more valuable when paid out to use as you need it than it is when added to your pension. |