http://www.myfederalretirement.com

Do FEGLI Premiums Change After You Retire?

If you are eligible, and

choose to continue your insurance as an annuitant or compensationer, you must

complete a Continuation of Life Insurance Coverage form (href="http://www.opm.gov/insure/life/fegli/sf2818.asp">SF

2818). On this form, you elect if

you want to continue your Basic life insurance into retirement or compensation

and elect the amount of Basic insurance you want after age 65 (or retirement, if

later). The choices are 75% Reduction, 50% Reduction, or No Reduction.



For annuitants,

the Office of Personnel Management pays the government contribution, and the

retirement system makes withholdings from your annuity.

 

style="COLOR: #000000">Cost for Annuitants for each $1,000 of the Basic

Insurance Amount in Effect at the Time of your

Retirement

 

 

75% Reduction

50% Reduction

No Reduction

Until the Month after your 65th Birthday

$0.3250 monthly

$0.9250 monthly

$2.1550 monthly

Starting the Month after your 65th Birthday

Free

$0.60 monthly*

$1.83 monthly*

 

* This amount will be withheld from your annuity for life (unless you cancel or subsequently elect 75% Reduction).


If you have Optional insurance and are eligible to continue it, you must choose how you would like to continue it in retirement (if you choose to keep Option A, it automatically reduces when you reach age 65 [or retire, if later]. There is no reduction election for Option A). For Options B and C, you can choose whether to have all or some of the multiples reduce or not reduce.


You pay 100% of the cost of Optional insurance. The premiums for the three Optional insurance coverages are based on your age and the number of Option B and/or Option C multiples (up to five) you elect. They may increase as you get older.

© 2007-2010 My Federal Retirement. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction without permission prohibited. WARNING: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.