Are you a career employee who served in
active military duty after 1956? Will you qualify for Social Security
benefits?
If
your answer to both questions is "yes," you may want to make a deposit
into the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) or Federal Employees Retirement
System (FERS) so that your military service will be included in your permanent
retirement annuity calculation.
A
military deposit must be paid in full before you retire, and each period
of active duty must be paid in full in order to be credited. It's better
to pay a military deposit as soon as possible to avoid additional interest
charges.
Why
is a military deposit necessary? Effective January 1, 1957, Social Security
(FICA) started being deducted from military pay. If you qualify for Social
Security benefits, the military service will automatically be credited
toward those benefits.
In
order to receive benefits from another retirement (i.e., CSRS or FERS),
you must also pay into that retirement to "buy in" your military time.
You can't get benefits from two retirement systems for the same period
of service if you have only paid into one.
If
you are a CSRS employee or an employee who transferred to FERS with frozen
CSRS time and your first federal career appointment was before October
1, 1982, your active military service should already be included in your
Retirement Computation Date (RCD) for determining retirement eligibility.
That time will also be included in computing your monthly annuity upon
retirement.
However,
if you do not pay the military deposit, once you become eligible to draw
Social Security benefits (usually at age 62), your active military service
time will be deducted from your Civil Service Retirement check.
[Example
of CSRS benefit.- 3 years of service equals 6 percent of your high-three-years'
average salary. With a high-3 of $35,000, 6 percent would equal $2,100,
or $175 per month, which is the amount that would be deducted from your
CSRS annuity.]
It
does not matter whether you apply to draw your Social Security benefits
or not. The key is whether you are eligible, by having worked the necessary
number of quarters (credits) under Social Security, either before or after
your retirement.
If
you are a CSRS employee or a FERS employee and your first federal career
appointment was October 1, 1982, or later, your active military service
will not be included in your Retirement Computation Date (RCD) until you
have completed your military deposit for any period of service.
Once
we have received a statement from our Minneapolis Information Service Center
indicating you have paid a period of active military service in full, a
PS Form 50 will be processed crediting that period of service toward your
RCD.
[Example
of FERS benefit. 3 years of service equals 3 percent of your high-three-years'
average salary. With a high-3 of $35,000, 3 percent would equal $1,050,
or $87.50 per month.]
To
make a military deposit, you need the form "Estimated Earnings During Military
Service," which is available from Employee Benefits. You must send your
completed request form, along with a copy of your DD-214 for each period
of active military service, to the payroll center for the military branch
in which you served. (Addresses are provided along with the "Estimated
Earnings" form.)
The
military payroll center will complete the form by providing your base military
earnings for the
period(s) indicated and will return the
completed form to the Gateway District Employee Benefits office, where
the amount of deposit due based on those earnings will be calculated.
CSRS
employees must pay 7 percent of base military earnings, plus interest which
has compounded yearly since October 1, 1986. FERS employees must pay 3
percent of base military earnings, plus interest accruing annually beginning
either three years after the career appointment date or three years after
January 1, 1987, whichever date is later.
The
total amount of deposit due, including interest, will be sent back to you,
along with the two forms necessary to make the military deposit (SF 2803
and PS 2805). To make the deposit, you must then complete those two forms,
indicating which method of payment you prefer.
Your payments may be a lump sum, by check or money order, installments
of at least $50 each, by check or money order, or payroll deductions of
at least $5 per pay period. Completed forms SF 2803 and PS 2805 (along
with any checks or money orders made payable to "U.S. Postal Service")
should be sent to Employee Benefits for processing.
Download an MicroSoft Word 95 "Estimated
Earning" form.
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This site was created by Jack Ball.
Please address all comments and corrections
to him at apwuqcy@adams.net