Viva_La_Migra
Market Veteran
- Reaction score
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HELLO!
And thank you for calling the TSP Advisor call center.
My name is PEGGY.
How may I help you today?
View attachment 33819
That's not a racially stereotypical post at all! :stooges:
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HELLO!
And thank you for calling the TSP Advisor call center.
My name is PEGGY.
How may I help you today?
View attachment 33819
Most people likely leave because they know tag at the government can get a rule changed for political reasons and lock the tsp in some way. The fear is having your assets locked up because of some obscure rule change. Why deal with that? Just move out of tsp and don't look back.
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At 70 1/2 years of age the FED makes you start taking out your TSP Savings! What the hell are they talking about? "We don't want you to but you have to".
MANDATORY DISTRIBUTIONSView attachment 33857
I don't depend on the TSP for Retirement money, I get plenty and I would like to leave it in so when I check out the wife would benefit from the income. She would get 55% of my pension and a little SSA, but NO I can't do that MUST start withdrawing soon and I don't like it one bit!
I agree ... but I think it's a tax thing ... you could consider incrementally converting it to a Roth. You will have to pay the tax, but you can leave the Roth, with all tax paid, to those you leave behind. At least that's what I understand.
The law states it must be disbursed and taxes paid. You can turn the difference into a Roth (non-TSP), but if you're retired, you can't contribute to TSP anymore.So ... I wonder if TSP could allow participants to pay the tax on the "mandatory distribution" amount, converting it to Roth, while allowing the funds to remain in the TSP account? It seems that it should be considered a "distribution" if the tax is paid?? If we could do this in retirement, we could eventually convert the whole account to Roth and have no withdrawals. Does that make sense?? (I did not research this ... just a thought ... if anyone knows)
The law states it must be disbursed and taxes paid. You can turn the difference into a Roth (non-TSP), but if you're retired, you can't contribute to TSP anymore.