Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fed atty here. I'll probably retire around age 52-55. I just don't see myself wanting to keep on putting in the grind in my late 50s after I'm already financially secure. I will just defer the FERS annuity until age 62.
FWIW, I'm currently 46 with about 14 years at DOJ. So maybe I'll change my mind. But, I'm thinking I'll just do another 6-8 years and then call it a career.
Do you understand that you would be giving up the right to FEHB if you retire before you reach your MRA, which I expect is 57.
Anonymous wrote:Fed atty here. I'll probably retire around age 52-55. I just don't see myself wanting to keep on putting in the grind in my late 50s after I'm already financially secure. I will just defer the FERS annuity until age 62.
FWIW, I'm currently 46 with about 14 years at DOJ. So maybe I'll change my mind. But, I'm thinking I'll just do another 6-8 years and then call it a career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For 1% versus 1.1% difference, see:
https://plan-your-federal-retirement.com/fers-retirement-62-and-20-bonus/
Thank you. I think they selected a bad example to show the benefits. If you are 61 (as in the example), you better stay one more year to get 1.1%. You'd be a fool not too. If someone is 56 and qualify to retire, would you wait 6 more years? or would you go? This is more interesting example than comparing 61 vs 62+
Anonymous wrote:For 1% versus 1.1% difference, see:
https://plan-your-federal-retirement.com/fers-retirement-62-and-20-bonus/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in your same position and hoping to stay on until I'm at least 62. While I could collect FERS at 57 that would replace just 30 percent of my final salary. You can't take anything out of your TSP without a penalty until age 59.5 and you can't collect social security until 62 so even with my mortgage paid off and my kids out of the house at 57 I can't live on 30 percent of my final income. Plus if you go beyond your initial retirement date you get a higher percentage, the multiplier by year is 1.1% rather than 1% per year. Adding my TSP and SS should get me pretty close to my final salary for life if I stay until age 62, which should be quite do-able.
This makes a lot of sense (and thanks to the later poster who pointed out that you can withdraw TSP funds without penalty at 55 instead of the normal 59.5 that applies to 401(k)s. I had not known that).
Out of curiosity, if you're in a role such as GS-15 attorney at a federal agency (as is my DH), does anyone really retire at age 57? I can see it if you have the ability to join a law firm and generate business, but otherwise 57 seems young to retire (unless your spouse is a big earner and you can just travel).
Finally, forgive my ignorance, but what's the advantage of waiting the 30 years until you're allowed to retire? Is there some benefit you get (apart from just the additional 1percent?) Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in your same position and hoping to stay on until I'm at least 62. While I could collect FERS at 57 that would replace just 30 percent of my final salary. You can't take anything out of your TSP without a penalty until age 59.5 and you can't collect social security until 62 so even with my mortgage paid off and my kids out of the house at 57 I can't live on 30 percent of my final income. Plus if you go beyond your initial retirement date you get a higher percentage, the multiplier by year is 1.1% rather than 1% per year. Adding my TSP and SS should get me pretty close to my final salary for life if I stay until age 62, which should be quite do-able.
This makes a lot of sense (and thanks to the later poster who pointed out that you can withdraw TSP funds without penalty at 55 instead of the normal 59.5 that applies to 401(k)s. I had not known that).
Out of curiosity, if you're in a role such as GS-15 attorney at a federal agency (as is my DH), does anyone really retire at age 57? I can see it if you have the ability to join a law firm and generate business, but otherwise 57 seems young to retire (unless your spouse is a big earner and you can just travel).
Finally, forgive my ignorance, but what's the advantage of waiting the 30 years until you're allowed to retire? Is there some benefit you get (apart from just the additional 1percent?) Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in your same position and hoping to stay on until I'm at least 62. While I could collect FERS at 57 that would replace just 30 percent of my final salary. You can't take anything out of your TSP without a penalty until age 59.5 and you can't collect social security until 62 so even with my mortgage paid off and my kids out of the house at 57 I can't live on 30 percent of my final income. Plus if you go beyond your initial retirement date you get a higher percentage, the multiplier by year is 1.1% rather than 1% per year. Adding my TSP and SS should get me pretty close to my final salary for life if I stay until age 62, which should be quite do-able.