Anonymous wrote:New poster. I’ll hit 30 years at age 57. If I retire then, what am I giving up? What incentive do I have to wait until age 62?
FYI that I’m 50 now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it really make sense to stay past 62 in order to get the extra .1 percent? I've never understood this with our retirement system as a Fed. People with 20+yrs of service who are younger than 62 seem to be leaving my office in droves. I will hit 20 years in about 4 more years but I'll only be 50 by then. I'm maxed out at the GS level, so basically I need to work another 12 years for another .1%? Sigh. Seems kind of worthless if you ask me, but I have no other plans beyond that so guess I'll just stick it out. Can't complain that I get a pension, but the 1 vs 1.1% doesn't seem like much of an incentive.
But it is to many people. 10% bump for your lifetime (plus your spouse's lifetime) is no chump change. Also, if you retire before 62, you don't get COLA until you turn 62. That loss will last you lifetime too.
NP and maybe. Let's say your pension is $50K per year so the 16% is like $7.5K per year or about $650 per month. In the meantime, 2 years of time at age 60 is probably 10% of your remaining life and likely a much higher percentage of the good active years you have left. Just saying the time you are giving up is worth serious consideration. At least for me with my TSP it won't make a difference but I realize others may have different views.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it really make sense to stay past 62 in order to get the extra .1 percent? I've never understood this with our retirement system as a Fed. People with 20+yrs of service who are younger than 62 seem to be leaving my office in droves. I will hit 20 years in about 4 more years but I'll only be 50 by then. I'm maxed out at the GS level, so basically I need to work another 12 years for another .1%? Sigh. Seems kind of worthless if you ask me, but I have no other plans beyond that so guess I'll just stick it out. Can't complain that I get a pension, but the 1 vs 1.1% doesn't seem like much of an incentive.
But it is to many people. 10% bump for your lifetime (plus your spouse's lifetime) is no chump change. Also, if you retire before 62, you don't get COLA until you turn 62. That loss will last you lifetime too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it really make sense to stay past 62 in order to get the extra .1 percent? I've never understood this with our retirement system as a Fed. People with 20+yrs of service who are younger than 62 seem to be leaving my office in droves. I will hit 20 years in about 4 more years but I'll only be 50 by then. I'm maxed out at the GS level, so basically I need to work another 12 years for another .1%? Sigh. Seems kind of worthless if you ask me, but I have no other plans beyond that so guess I'll just stick it out. Can't complain that I get a pension, but the 1 vs 1.1% doesn't seem like much of an incentive.
But it is to many people. 10% bump for your lifetime (plus your spouse's lifetime) is no chump change. Also, if you retire before 62, you don't get COLA until you turn 62. That loss will last you lifetime too.
Anonymous wrote:Does it really make sense to stay past 62 in order to get the extra .1 percent? I've never understood this with our retirement system as a Fed. People with 20+yrs of service who are younger than 62 seem to be leaving my office in droves. I will hit 20 years in about 4 more years but I'll only be 50 by then. I'm maxed out at the GS level, so basically I need to work another 12 years for another .1%? Sigh. Seems kind of worthless if you ask me, but I have no other plans beyond that so guess I'll just stick it out. Can't complain that I get a pension, but the 1 vs 1.1% doesn't seem like much of an incentive.
Anonymous wrote:I believe my spouse is planning to leave at 50, but that's partially influenced by being able to find private sector work that pays 2-3x his current salary.
Anonymous wrote:12 years of raises add up
Anonymous wrote:Does it really make sense to stay past 62 in order to get the extra .1 percent? I've never understood this with our retirement system as a Fed. People with 20+yrs of service who are younger than 62 seem to be leaving my office in droves. I will hit 20 years in about 4 more years but I'll only be 50 by then. I'm maxed out at the GS level, so basically I need to work another 12 years for another .1%? Sigh. Seems kind of worthless if you ask me, but I have no other plans beyond that so guess I'll just stick it out. Can't complain that I get a pension, but the 1 vs 1.1% doesn't seem like much of an incentive.