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🏒 Public Sector Rulesβš–οΈ IRS Code Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986 (FERSA), administered by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (FRTIB)

Can You Rollover a TSP as a Federal Employee?

A federal employee is a civilian worker employed by a department or agency of the U.S. federal government under the Civil Service system β€” including FERS (Federal Employees Retirement System) and CSRS (Civil Service Retirement System) employees. Federal employees have access to the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP), the world's largest defined-contribution retirement plan. Ensure you understand exactly how your TSP conforms to your sector's distinct rules before performing a rollover.

TSPPlan Type
Federal EmployeeEmployment
AvailableIn-Service Rollover

1Expert Sector Analysis

A customized perspective for Federal Employees. The federal employee's TSP rollover decision is uniquely complex because the TSP offers features unavailable anywhere else in the retail financial system β€” specifically the G Fund's Treasury-rate return with zero principal risk. Every financial decision involves trade-offs; the TSP rollover trade-off is explicit: lose access to the G Fund (permanently) in exchange for broader investment options and IRA flexibility. For employees approaching retirement who want conservative allocation within their retirement account, retaining TSP assets specifically for G Fund exposure is a legitimate and frequently underutilized strategy.

The TSP is handled very differently across sectors. The TSP's proportional distribution rule β€” where every distribution includes a proportional share of both traditional and Roth balances β€” is the most important tactical consideration for TSP rollover planning. Employees who want to roll only their traditional TSP to a traditional IRA and leave their Roth TSP in place cannot do so under TSP rules: any distribution pulls proportionally from both. The solution for employees who want to separate the two is to roll the entire TSP to two different IRAs (traditional and Roth) simultaneously, with the Roth-to-Roth portion being tax-free.

Federal employees retiring in the 55–75 age range have accumulated TSP balances that often represent their largest financial asset β€” ranging from $300,000 to over $1,000,000 for employees with long careers and disciplined savings. The FERS pension provides a predictable income floor, which means the TSP rollover decision is often less about immediate income need and more about tax optimization: should the traditional TSP balance be rolled to a traditional IRA for Roth conversion planning during the low-income years between retirement and RMD onset?

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Critical DistinctionFederal employees are unique in having access to the TSP β€” a government-administered plan with the lowest expense ratios available to any retirement investor (as low as 0.04%) and the exclusive G Fund (government securities with no principal risk). The TSP rollover decision is the most consequential financial decision most federal employees face at retirement.

2TSP Eligibility & Governing Rules

Rules you must follow to successfully roll over as a Federal Employee.

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Rollover Trigger

When to Act

Separation from federal service (retirement, resignation, or removal) or reaching age 59Β½ while still employed (for in-service withdrawals). TSP in-service withdrawals are available after age 59Β½.
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Direct Rollover

IRS Allowed

TSP direct rollovers are processed through the TSP's own distribution form (Form TSP-70 for full withdrawal or TSP-77 for partial). The TSP is administered by the FRTIB β€” not a commercial custodian β€” and has its own processing queue. Allow 7–10 business days for the TSP to process the request after receiving complete paperwork.
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Account Specific Eligibility
Federal employees can access their TSP after separation from service at any age. Retired military members have separate TSP access rules. Civilian FERS employees who separate after age 55 avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty β€” a one-year advantage over the standard age 59Β½ threshold that applies to IRAs and most other qualified plans.

3Tax & Penalty Implications

How the IRS views your rollover based on your employment status.

  • Tax Treatment: Direct rollover of traditional TSP to traditional IRA: non-taxable. Direct rollover of Roth TSP to Roth IRA: non-taxable. Rolling traditional TSP to Roth IRA: fully taxable Roth conversion β€” the entire transferred amount is added to ordinary income for the year.
  • Early Withdrawal Penalty context: Standard 10% early withdrawal penalty applies before age 59Β½ for most federal employees. Exception: federal law enforcement officers, firefighters, and air traffic controllers who separate after age 50 (not 55) qualify for the penalty-free exception β€” 5 years earlier than standard workers.
  • General TSP penalty rules: 10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax for distributions before age 59Β½

4Costly Mistakes to Avoid

Mistakes specific to evaluating a rollover from a TSP as a Federal Employee.

Mistake 01

Rolling the entire TSP to an IRA without considering G Fund retention

The G Fund earns the blended rate of Treasury securities with no risk to principal β€” a feature that does not exist in any commercial financial product. A 65-year-old federal retiree who wants a 30% fixed-income allocation and rolls all TSP assets to an IRA loses access to this zero-risk yield permanently. Money market funds and Treasury ETFs in an IRA provide similar exposure but carry either fee drag or price risk not present in the G Fund. For retirees who value capital preservation, retaining a portion of TSP assets specifically for G Fund allocation is the correct strategic choice.

Mistake 02

Triggering the proportional distribution rule without a plan for the Roth TSP component

A federal employee with $400,000 in traditional TSP and $100,000 in Roth TSP who requests a $500,000 direct rollover will receive two Form 1099-Rs: one Code G for 80% of each distribution (traditional to traditional IRA) and one Code H for 20% of each distribution (Roth to Roth IRA). The rollover must be directed to two separate receiving accounts β€” one traditional IRA and one Roth IRA β€” with the correct proportional amounts. Sending the entire distribution to a traditional IRA converts the Roth TSP portion to a taxable event. Coordinate with both the TSP and the receiving custodians before initiating.

Mistake 03

Rolling out of the TSP too quickly and losing access to the G Fund

The TSP G Fund (Government Securities Investment Fund) is one of the only risk-free, interest-bearing funds available to retail retirement investors. It earns the rate of long-term Treasury securities with no risk of principal loss. Once you roll out of the TSP to an IRA, you permanently lose access to the G Fund β€” there is no equivalent commercial product. Some financial advisors recommend keeping a portion in the TSP even in retirement specifically to preserve G Fund access.

5Frequently Asked Questions

Should a federal employee roll over their TSP when they retire?

It depends on investment goals. Retain TSP assets if you want the G Fund's zero-risk Treasury yield β€” there is no IRA equivalent. Roll to an IRA if you want broader investment options, Self-Directed IRA alternatives, or a Roth conversion strategy. Most financial advisors recommend a hybrid approach: roll a portion to an IRA for Roth conversion and income planning flexibility, while retaining G Fund assets inside the TSP.

Can a federal employee roll over their TSP while still working?

Yes β€” the TSP allows in-service withdrawals after age 59Β½. If you are 59Β½ or older and still employed, you can roll a portion of your TSP to a traditional IRA without penalty and continue contributing to the TSP to capture the FERS agency match on new contributions. This dual-track strategy β€” rolling accumulated assets while continuing contributions β€” is one of the most valuable financial moves available to older federal employees.

Should a federal employee roll over their TSP to an IRA after retirement?

It depends on investment goals. The TSP's primary advantages are its ultra-low expense ratios (as low as 0.04%) and the unique G Fund. The primary advantage of rolling to an IRA is investment flexibility β€” access to individual stocks, bonds, Gold IRAs, Self-Directed IRAs, and thousands of mutual funds not available in the TSP. Most financial advisors recommend rolling if you want alternative assets or a specific investment strategy; staying in the TSP if low cost and simplicity are priorities.

This guide is provided for educational purposes only. Always verify your sector's rules and your account's plan document with a qualified professional before initiating a rollover. We do not provide investment or tax advice. IRS Reference utilized: IRS Notice 2009-68 (TSP Rollover Guidance).