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What Happens to Unused Annual Leave When a Federal Employee Leaves Service?
Edward A. Zurndorfer, CFP

Upon leaving federal service, a federal employee is entitled to a lump-sum

payment for any accumulated and unused annual leave.

"Leaving" federal service includes retiring from or quitting federal service

or leaving one's job temporarily to go on military leave. This column discusses

what the lump-sum payment is, how it is computed, how much employees should

expect to receive, and when it is paid.

Full- and part-time employees are eligible for the lump-sum payment. A

lump-sum payment for unused annual leave is in general equal to the "pay" an

employee would have received had he or she remained in federal service until the

expiration of the period of unused annual leave.

The following types of pay are included in the computation of the lump-sum

payment:

  1. "basic" pay;

  2. locality pay adjustments;

  3. within grade increases, if waiting period is met on day of separation;

  4. across-the-board annual adjustments;

  5. where applicable, availability pay for law enforcement;

  6. regularly scheduled overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act for

    employees on uncommon tours of duty;

  7. supervisory differentials; 

  8. non-foreign area cost-of-living allowances and post differentials;

  9. foreign area post allowances; 

  10. night differential for Federal Wage System employees only.

The lump-sum payment comes from the departing or retiring employee's payroll

office and not from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). The check will be

deposited directly into the same bank account as the employee's paycheck was

deposited. The departing or retiring employee should expect the check to be

deposited within two to four weeks after leaving federal service.

An agency calculates a lump-sum payment by multiplying the number of hours of

accumulated and unused annual leave by the departing employee's applicable

hourly salary rate. For example, if an employee's salary is $80,000 per year,

then the employee's hourly salary rate is $80,000/2,087 hours per leave year, or

$38.33 per hour. If, for example, the employee has 300 hours of unused annual

leave at the time or retirement/departure from federal service, the employee's

lump-sum payment will calculated as 300 hours multiplied by $38.33/hour, or

$11,499. The lump-sum payment is subject to taxes - federal and state income

taxes, Social Security (FICA), and Medicare Part A payroll taxes. CSRS or FERS

contributions, insurance premiums and TSP contributions are not deducted.

As noted earlier, the lump-sum payment must equal the pay an employee would

have received had the individual remained in federal service. The employee's

agency will "project" the lump-sum period of leave beginning on the first

workday after the day the employee leaves or retires from federal service. This

means that the projection includes all subsequent workdays and holidays until

the expiration of the period of unused annual leave. Note that holidays are paid

as regular workdays. Here is an example.

Carol retired on Dec. 31, 2008 with 400 hours or 50 days of unused annual

leave. Carol's lump-sum payment will be paid as if she had work the following

days: January 1- 2, January 5 - 9, January 12 - 16, January 19 - 23, January 26

- 30, February 2 - 6, February 9 - 13, February 16 - 20, February 23 - 27, March

2-6, March 9-11, a total of 50 days.

Note that since the government-wide pay increase and locality pay adjustment

took effect on January 4, 2009, Carol's lump-sum payment for the period January

5 through Mar 11, 2009 (a total of 48 days) will include the

government-wide  pay increase and locality pay adjustment. Also, note that

both January 19 and February 16 are federal holidays that are paid as regular

workdays and not as holidays.
 
The lump-sum payment is taxable in

the year it is received. For example, if an employee were to retire on Dec. 31,

then the lump-sum payment for unused annual leave will be directly deposited in

the retired employee's bank account by mid- to late January. That means the

lump-sum payment is taxable in the new calendar year. The former employee will

also have the lump-sum payment reported on a W2 form for the year in which it is

received.

The maximum number of hours of unused annual leave payable to non-Senior

Executive Service employees or to those employees who never worked overseas is

448 hours. This could be accomplished by:

  1. carrying over 240 leave hours from one leave year to the next;

  2. retiring at the end of pay period 26 and before the start of the new leave

    year (in most leave years there are 26 pay periods);

  3. not using any annual leave hours during the last year of employment, thereby

    accruing 26 pay periods times eight hours per pay period or 208 hours of annual

    leave, added to the 240 hours carried over from the previous leave year,

    resulting in a total of 448 hours. Note that if an employee retires before the

    end of pay period 26 (for example, December 31, 2008), then the lump-sum payment

    will include 440 hours of unused annual leave.

Agencies will withhold federal (and state, if applicable) income taxes from

the lump-sum payment at the same withholding rate as they did on the employee's

paycheck. An employee who wants to have less or more federal (and state) income

taxes withheld should fill out a federal income tax withholding certificate (W4

and the equivalent for state income tax withholding) within two to three weeks

prior to departing from federal service.

There is also the issue of the Social Security (FICA) maximum taxable

earnings base that affects both FERS and CSRS Offset employees. Earned income -

that includes bonuses, salary or wages, and the lump-sum payment - during 2009

in excess of $106,800 is not subject to the 6.2 percent FICA withholding. This

means that there could be a savings of 6.2 percent of salary - including the

lump-sum payment - for any FERS or CSRS Offset employee whose earned income

exceeds $106,800 in 2009.

If an employee earning more than $106,800 during 2009 were to leave or retire

from federal service at the end of October rather than at the end of December

and receive the lump-sum payment in calendar year 2009, then a portion - perhaps

all - of the lump-sum payment would not be subject to the 6.2 FICA tax. But a

disadvantage to retiring in late October rather than late December is that the

employee will lose five or six accrual periods of additional annual leave hours;

also the lump-sum payment will be paid at the current leave year's hourly rate

rather than the new leave year's higher hourly rate. This is because unused

annual leave is projected into future work days. An employee's departure or

retirement at the end of December or at the beginning of January will result in

the employee's having the unused annual leave paid at the new leave year's

hourly rate after the pay increases take effect of the first day of the new

leave year.

If an employee returns to federal service prior to the expiration of the

period of the lump-sum annual leave period, he or she must refund the portion of

the lump-sum payment that represents the period between the date of

re-employment and the expiration of the lump-sum period. The employee's agency

will then re-credit to the employee's leave account the amount of annual leave

equal to the days or hours of work remaining between the date of re-employment

and the expiration of the lump-sum leave period.

About the Author

Edward A. Zurndorfer is a Certified Financial Planner and Enrolled Agent

in Silver Spring, Maryland. He is also a registered representative with

Multi-Financial Securities Corporation (Branch A9X), member FINRA/SIPC, also

located in Silver Spring, Maryland 



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