Ready for retirement? Discover strategies to protect savings and create guaranteed income from your TSP. Register now for expert-led webinars: dcsofa.org/events ...
Roth strategies are not going away. But the way certain federal employees use them is changing, and the timing of your ...
The fixed income (F) fund lost 0.26% in December, bringing its 2025 performance down to 7.21%. And the G Fund, which is made ...
If you are retiring soon, you should have submitted your retirement application, usually through the Online Retirement Application (ORA) system. Retirement involves important, sometimes irreversible ...
Roth TSP accounts are “post-tax,” meaning that you pay income taxes on the money in the year that you earn it. It grows over ...
A thrift savings plan (TSP) is a retirement savings program specifically designed for federal employees and members of the military. TSPs are considered qualified retirement plans, and this status ...
The Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986 established the TSP.1 The TSP is administered by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (FRTIB). For employees covered by the Federal ...
Active-duty and federal employee veterans have until Dec. 31 to contribute to their Thrift Savings Plan for 2025. The annual limit is $23,500, with an extra $7,500 catch-up for those 50 and older; or ...
A thrift savings plan (TSP) hardship withdrawal allows federal employees and members of the uniformed services to access their retirement funds in times of severe financial need. To qualify, ...
From 2000 through 2013, at least 40,000 federal employees retired each year, with nearly 62,000 retiring in 2013. As of July last year, 14% of federal employees were eligible to retire, with that ...
Join the military and become a millionaire. Not a pitch you’ll likely hear from military recruiters. But maybe it could be. No, you’ll never become wealthy off your military retirement ...