FERS Pension Formula: How Your Retirement is Calculated
The Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) is the retirement plan for federal employees hired after December 31, 1983. Understanding how your FERS pension is calculated is essential for retirement planning. The formula is straightforward, but the components (High-3 salary, years of service, supplement benefit) require explanation.
The Core FERS Formula
Annual FERS Pension = High-3 Salary × Years of Service × 0.01
This simple formula calculates your monthly pension. Each component is critical:
- High-3 Salary: Your average salary for the three consecutive years of highest earnings
- Years of Service: Creditable years and months of federal service
- 0.01 (1% multiplier): Each year of service earns 1% of your High-3
Example FERS Calculation
Senior federal employee, age 62, retiring with 30 years of service:
- High-3 salary: $120,000 (average of highest 3 years)
- Years of service: 30
- Calculation: $120,000 × 30 × 0.01 = $36,000/year ($3,000/month)
This $3,000/month pension continues for life. At age 65, the supplement benefit (calculated as Social Security equivalent) expires; the pension remains unchanged.
Calculating Your High-3 Salary
High-3 is the average of your three consecutive highest-earning years of federal service. This is not necessarily your last three years—it's your highest three years whenever they occurred.
Why High-3 Matters
- High-3 is multiplied by years of service to determine pension
- Every $10,000 increase in High-3 = $100/month increase in pension for each year of service
- For a 30-year employee, a $10,000 higher High-3 = $3,000/year pension increase
Calculating Your High-3
Your agency's HR office provides High-3 documentation. For example:
- 2023 salary: $100,000
- 2024 salary: $108,000
- 2025 salary: $115,000
- High-3 average: ($100,000 + $108,000 + $115,000) ÷ 3 = $107,667
Strategic note: If you're planning to retire soon, negotiating a final promotion or raise impacts your High-3 calculation significantly. A final raise before retirement increases your lifelong pension.
The FERS Supplement Benefit (Before Age 65)
FERS includes a supplement benefit paid between retirement and age 65. This benefit approximates the Social Security benefit you would receive at age 62, allowing you to retire before Social Security begins.
How the Supplement Works
- Paid as part of your pension from retirement until age 65
- Approximately equivalent to Social Security benefit at age 62
- Stops automatically at age 65 when you can claim Social Security
- Pension continues unchanged after supplement ends
Supplement Calculation Example
Federal employee retiring at age 56 with 30 years of service:
- FERS pension: $36,000/year ($3,000/month)
- Estimated supplement: $12,000/year ($1,000/month) from age 56-65
- Total income 56-65: $48,000/year ($4,000/month)
- At age 65: Supplement ends, pension continues at $36,000/year ($3,000/month)
- At age 65+: You claim Social Security separately (on top of FERS pension)
The supplement benefit is valuable because it bridges the gap between early retirement and Social Security claiming. Without it, retiring before 62 would leave significant income gaps.
Years of Service: Creditable Service
Not all time worked counts as "creditable service" for FERS purposes. Understanding what counts is essential for accurate pension calculation.
Fully Creditable Service
- Full-time federal employment in any agency
- Part-time federal employment (pro-rated based on hours worked)
- Military service can be included if you deposit military service credit with OPM
- FERS service for civilian employees and federal judges
Not Creditable
- Private sector employment
- Unpaid leave
- Periods of service in CSRS (different retirement system)
Military Service Credit
Federal employees with prior military service can buy back that time. A deposit (approximately $3,500-8,000 per year of military service, depending on pay grade and year) makes that military time creditable toward FERS.
Military service credit is valuable: each year of military service earns 1% of your High-3, just like federal service. If you have 4 years of military service, buying it back is often worthwhile if you have significant High-3 and plan long retirement.
TSP Strategy in FERS Retirement
FERS employees also contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP), a 401(k)-style retirement savings account. Coordinating FERS pension and TSP withdrawal is important for tax planning.
TSP Withdrawal Options at Retirement
- Lump sum: Withdraw entire balance at once. Large withdrawal may push you into higher tax bracket.
- Monthly payments: Receive fixed monthly amount from TSP separate from FERS pension.
- Annuity: Convert TSP to lifetime annuity. Fewer options post-retirement.
- Leave it invested: Keep TSP invested and withdraw only Required Minimum Distributions after age 73.
TSP + FERS Coordination Example
Federal employee retiring at 60 with:
- FERS pension: $36,000/year
- FERS supplement: $12,000/year (ages 60-65)
- TSP balance: $400,000
Option 1: Take lump sum - Withdraw $400,000 from TSP at retirement. Income year one: $48,000 (FERS+supplement) + $400,000 (TSP lump) = $448,000 taxable. Tax bill likely $100,000+. Pushes into highest tax bracket.
Option 2: Periodic TSP withdrawals - Take $12,000/year from TSP plus FERS+supplement. Total income: $60,000/year. More tax-efficient.
Option 3: Leave TSP invested, take RMDs after 73 - Live on FERS+supplement ($48,000) and other income until 65. At 65, supplement ends, live on $36,000 FERS + other income. At 73, TSP RMDs begin.
Tax Planning: FERS pension and supplement are ordinary income tax rates. TSP withdrawals are also taxable. Coordinate with Social Security timing to minimize tax burden. Consider deferring TSP withdrawals and taking RMDs after 73 to keep early-retirement income lower.
FERS Survivor Benefits
FERS includes survivor benefits for spouses and children if you die before or after retirement.
Before Retirement Death
- Surviving spouse receives 50% of accrued FERS pension (calculated as if employee died)
- Dependent children under 18 (or 22 if in school) receive 15% of accrued pension each, up to family maximum of 75%
- Lump-sum death benefit: Return of employee retirement contributions (no government match)
After Retirement Death
If you die after retirement, your survivor benefits depend on pension options chosen:
- Full annuity (no survivor option): Pension ends; no survivor benefits
- Reduced pension with survivor option: Surviving spouse receives 50-100% of your pension (depending on option chosen)
- No spouse when retiring: No automatic survivor benefits unless you elect survivor option
Pension Options at Retirement
FERS retirees must choose a pension option, which determines survivor benefits:
- Option 1 (No survivor benefit): Higher monthly pension; no survivor benefits. Pension ends at death.
- Option 2 (100% to spouse): Reduced monthly pension (~10-15% reduction); surviving spouse receives 100% of your pension for life.
- Option 3 (50% to spouse): Smaller pension reduction (~5-8%); surviving spouse receives 50% of pension.
Example: Full-annuity pension $36,000/year. Option 2 (100% survivor): Your pension ~$31,000/year; if you die, spouse receives $31,000/year for life. Important decision for married employees.
FERS Retiree Healthcare: Continuation of FEHB
FERS retirees with 5+ years of FEHB coverage can continue FEHB in retirement. This is valuable because FEHB remains your primary insurance until Medicare at 65, then secondary to Medicare. (See FEHB 2026 guide for details.)
Final FERS Retirement Checklist
- Calculate High-3 salary (contact your HR office for verification)
- Count creditable years of service (include military service if applicable)
- Consider military service buy-back if you have significant prior military time
- Plan FERS pension + supplement bridge to Social Security at 65
- Coordinate TSP withdrawal strategy (lump vs. periodic vs. leave invested)
- Choose pension option: full annuity vs. survivor options (major decision)
- Plan FEHB continuation into retirement (5+ years required)
- Coordinate FERS + Social Security claiming strategy with tax professional
FAQ: FERS Pension Calculation
Can I increase my High-3 by taking a promotion right before retirement?
Yes. Your High-3 is the three highest consecutive years. A final promotion that raises salary affects your High-3 calculation if it occurs in one of your final three years of service. Each $10,000 salary increase increases pension by $100-300/month depending on years of service.
Is the FERS supplement benefit part of my pension?
Yes, the supplement is paid as part of your FERS benefit from retirement until age 65, then it ends automatically. It's not a separate benefit; it's part of your total FERS benefit structure.
Can I return to federal service after retiring on FERS?
Yes, but your FERS pension is suspended while you work for the federal government again. Pension resumes when you leave service. You may also earn additional FERS service during the return-to-work period (special rules apply).