CSRS Retirement
The Civil Service Retirement Act, which became effective on August 1, 1920,
established a retirement system for certain Federal employees. It was
replaced by the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) for Federal employees
who first entered covered service on and after January 1, 1987.
The Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) is a defined benefit, contributory
retirement system. Employees share in the expense of the annuities to
which they become entitled. CSRS covered employees contribute 7, 7 1/2 or 8
percent of pay to CSRS and, while they generally pay no Social Security retirement,
survivor and disability (OASDI) tax, they must pay the Medicare tax (currently
1.45 percent of pay). The employing agency matches the employee's CSRS
contributions.
CSRS employees may increase their earned annuity by contributing up to 10 percent
of the basic pay for their creditable service to a voluntary contribution account.
Employees may also contribute a portion of pay to the Thrift Savings
Plan (TSP). There is no Government contribution, but the employee contributions
are tax-deferred. For more information about TSP, see the TSP
website.
This section of the website covers the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS).
Through the menu links on the left, you can find information about the
following CSRS retirement topics:
Eligibility – The main
eligibility requirements for the common types of retirements.
Creditable Service – Rules
showing the civilian and military service that can be used to compute your CSRS
retirement benefits.
Computation – How your
retirement annuity is computed.
Disability – Special rules
governing Disability retirement.
Early Retirement - Explanation
of the minimum retirement age and early retirement if you agency under goes
a “reduction in force” or you are involuntarily separated other
than for cause.
Voluntary – Requirements
for the most common type of retirement.
Deferred - If you are a former
Federal employee who was covered by the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS),
you may be eligible for a deferred annuity at age 62.
Service Credit – Payment
to increase your annuity for civilian service when no CSRS retirement deductions
were withheld or were refunded or for military service after 1956.
Former Employees – Options
if you leave your Federal job before becoming eligible for retirement.