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Why Roll Over Your TSP to a Personal IRA at Retirement?
L. Ronald Blair, Certified Financial Planner

Federal Retirement Seminars

Since 1980, Personal Benefit Services Group (PBS) has conducted more than 750 federal government retirement seminars in nearly all 50 states.

PBS seminars are taught by qualified instructors with:

  • combined federal government seminar experience of more than 52 years
  • experience in almost every government agency

PBS Seminars not only cover the most important information on federal retirement benefits -- such as CSRS/FERS, Social Security and the Thrift Savings Plan -- but more importantly they provide:

  • clear instruction of what to do, and what not to do
  • risk protection plans to protect retirement assets

To learn more about holding a retirement seminar at your office,
click here.


A recent seminar attendee asked us how to handle distributions from Thrift

Savings Plan (TSP) after his retirement.  He had carefully contributed

maximum amounts to TSP over working years and had amassed a large sum in his

account. 

Our reply:  "Consider rolling the account to an IRA."

Here's why:

Substantially more investment choices.  Where as the

TSP has 5 investments plus a group of lifestyle funds, an IRA, especially a

self-directed IRA can accommodate nearly any investment including real estate,

commodities, annuities, individual stocks, and even certificates of deposits.

Less hassle at 70-½ minimum distribution age.  Current

regulations require starting to withdraw from retirement plans at age 70

½.  If all funds are in IRAs, the withdrawal only has to come from one of

the IRAs.  If some funds are in 401(k) type accounts (TSP), a withdrawal

has to come from the TSP and the IRAs.

More flexibility to set up periodic income distributions…start, stop,

increase, decrease.  TSP allows distributions of monthly income,

but that distribution is not very flexible.  An IRA can distribute monthly

income, and that distribution can be stopped, restarted, increased or decreased

any time.

Unlimited partial withdrawals.  TSP allows one partial

withdrawal over the life of the account.  An IRA has no such restriction.

Quicker response time on withdrawals.  A withdrawal

from the IRA generally can be done in a few days or less -- not so with TSP.

About the Author

L. Ronald Blair is a Certified Financial Planner, Chartered Property Casualty

Underwriter, Accredited Asset Management Specialist, Certified Senior Advisor,

Registered Financial Consultant and owner of href="http://www.myfederalretirement.com/public/595.cfm">Personal Benefit

Seminars located in Lakewood, Colorado.  He is also a registered

representative with Royal Alliance Associates Inc., member FINRA/SIPC.



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