TSP - A Great Retirement Vehicle
By Patrick on Mar 21, 2007 in Investing
The Thrift Savings Plan is the US Government sponsored retirement plan that functions the same as a traditional 401k. It is primarily open to US Military members and civil-service employees. Why does it rock?
- It is simple to do (electronic sign-up takes less than 5 minutes).
- 5 simple index funds and 5 LifeCycle Funds (targeted retirement date funds) make it easy for anyone to invest even if you don’t know much about investing. The index funds are broken into 2 groups - stocks and bonds. The bonds include Govt. (Treasury Bonds) and Fixed Security Bonds (Lehman Bros. US Aggregate Index). The stocks include indexes for Large Cap (S&P 500), Small Cap (Dow Jones Wilshire 4500), and International Stocks (Morgan Stanley International EAFE Stock Index). Together these 5 funds cover the fundamental segments of the marketplace. The LifeCycle Funds automatically allocate a portion of your portfolio to target risk and returns based on your proposed retirement date.
- Very low overhead. The highest you can currently expect to pay in fees is .05%, including the LifeCycle Funds.
- Tax free withdrawals are possible. (Yes, it’s true!) If you were deployed to a Tax Free Zone, the money you earned was not subject to federal taxes. The TSP functions the same as a 401k - you invest pre-tax dollars and reduce your current taxable income. You pay taxes only when you make withdrawals in retirement. If you contributed to your TSP while in a Tax Free Zone, you were not subject to any federal taxes on those monies. Therefore, when you withdraw those monies they are tax exempt! You don’t get to pick and choose when to make tax free withdrawals, they will be allocated in proportion to your total amount. (To see if you have any tax exempt money in your TSP, look at the bottom of you balance sheet: you will see “Tax Exempt Balance - $xxxx.xx.”
- You can easily add a percentage (or all) of your special duty, Hostile Fire Pay, Hazardous Duty Pay, or certain bonuses. If you have some extra income, why not direct a portion to your retirement funds?
- Matching contributions to civil-service employees (up to 10%) . Sorry, still no current match for military. The Army has debated doing it in limited cases as a retention tool. Will the military get matching contributions? Not likely, as the funds would come from personnel funds, which are limited. If you are in the military and would like to see that change, you should write to your Congressman.
Overall, I believe this is a very simple and cost efficient method for investing. This is a great system for many civil-service and military members to supplement their retirement income.
For reasons I believe the TSP has some drawbacks read this article: TSP - 5 Drawbacks
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2 Comment(s)
By Brandon J on Mar 21, 2007 | Reply
I cover the TSP extensively in my Money for Military finance blog. I think the TSP is great; however, I think you should max out your 401(k) first then contribute to the TSP. The TSP is only available while you are in the military or civil-service. You have to roll it into an IRA anyways. There are ways to play the TSP to make it more risky and to enhance returns too. I will wait and see what you write about the drawback though.
Brandon
http://moneyformilitary.blogspot.com
By Patrick on Mar 22, 2007 | Reply
Hi Brandon,
Do you mean max out your IRA first? Because there is no TSP match for military members, it does make sense to max out your IRA before contributing to your TSP (especially if contributing to a Roth IRA).
And while you can only contribute to the TSP while you are currently in the employ of the govt., you are not required to roll it over into another 401k plan or into a traditional IRA when you leave. I am no longer in the military, but I have some money that I am leaving in the TSP because I have a tax exempt balance and I am not sure if that would roll over and maintain it’s tax exempt qualities.