Chapter 1: Your TSP Has a New Job
From Building Retirement Savings to Creating Retirement Income
You spend decades learning how to build your TSP. Most people spend only a few weeks learning how to spend it.
This guide is designed for federal employees and retirees who plan to leave some or all of their retirement savings in the Thrift Savings Plan after retirement. If you’re considering rolling your TSP into an IRA or another employer-sponsored retirement plan, many of the tax concepts discussed here still apply, but some withdrawal rules and planning considerations are different. We’ll cover those decisions in a separate guide.
Your TSP Has a New Job
For more than thirty years, your relationship with the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) has probably been measured by one number:
Your account balance.
When the balance increased, retirement felt a little closer.
When the market declined, you reminded yourself that you still had time.
Throughout your career, your TSP had one primary job:
Help you build retirement savings.
- Increase your contribution percentage.
- Capture the full agency matching contribution if you’re covered by FERS.
- Choose an investment allocation.
- Stay invested through market ups and downs.
- Watch your retirement savings grow over time.
Those are all important decisions.
But retirement quietly changes the purpose of your TSP.
Once your federal paycheck stops, your TSP has a completely different job.
It must now help provide the income you’ll use to support your retirement.
That shift changes the questions you ask.
- How much can I safely withdraw?
- Will I owe taxes on my withdrawals?
- Should I spend Traditional TSP money first or Roth TSP money first?
- Could one withdrawal affect Medicare premiums or the taxation of Social Security benefits?
Those aren’t investment questions.
They’re retirement income questions.
Did You Know?
Many federal employees spend decades learning how to contribute to the TSP, yet begin researching withdrawal rules only a few months before retirement.
The accumulation phase receives most of the attention.
The distribution phase often determines how efficiently those savings support your retirement lifestyle.
Why This Guide Exists
After years of publishing MyFederalRetirement.com, one pattern has become impossible to ignore. Most readers don’t ask me how to choose between the C Fund and the G Fund.
Instead, they ask questions like:
- Why is my TSP withdrawal taxable?
- Can my TSP affect Medicare premiums?
- How does my pension work with TSP withdrawals?
- Should I keep my money in the TSP after I retire?
Those questions usually arrive after retirement.
My goal is to help you ask them before retirement.
This guide won’t tell you what withdrawal strategy is best for your situation.
Instead, it will explain how the rules work so you can better understand your options and have more informed conversations about your retirement income.
Visual Timeline
Your TSP Has Two Very Different Jobs
WORKING YEARS
Earn Income
↓
Contribute to the TSP
↓
Choose Investments
↓
Grow Retirement Savings
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RETIREMENT
Need Monthly Income
↓
Begin Withdrawals
↓
Understand Tax Rules
↓
Coordinate Pension + TSP + Social Security
Key Insight: Your investment strategy doesn’t end when you retire. It evolves into an income strategy.
Understanding the Foundation
Before we can discuss taxes, withdrawal options, or retirement income planning, we need to understand one fundamental concept.
The TSP contains two types of money:
- Traditional TSP contributions, which generally receive favorable tax treatment when contributed and are generally taxed when distributed.
- Roth TSP contributions, which are made with after-tax dollars and may qualify for tax-free withdrawals if IRS requirements are met.
Everything else in this guide builds on understanding that difference.
Official Source: How Traditional and Roth TSP Contributions Are Taxed
The official explanation of the tax treatment of Traditional and Roth TSP contributions is provided by the Thrift Savings Plan in its guidance on Traditional and Roth contributions. The federal tax treatment of retirement plan distributions is explained in IRS Publication 575, Pension and Annuity Income. Additional IRS guidance on retirement account distributions and Required Minimum Distributions is available in IRS Publication 590-B. Why these sources matter: Throughout this guide, each major tax concept should be supported by an official government source so readers can verify the information directly.
Reader Checkpoint
Before moving on, see how many of these questions you can answer today.
- Approximately how much of your TSP is Traditional?
- Approximately how much is Roth?
- Have you estimated your annual retirement income?
- Do you know when you expect to begin Social Security?
- Have you estimated your first-year TSP withdrawals?
- Do you know when Required Minimum Distributions may apply?
If several of those questions made you pause, don’t worry.
By the end of this guide, you’ll have a much clearer framework for thinking through each one.
Editor’s Perspective
One lesson I’ve learned after years of publishing MyFederalRetirement.com is that federal employees are exceptionally good at saving.
The TSP proves that every day.
Where many people feel less confident is the transition into retirement.
For thirty years, the goal was straightforward:
Build your retirement savings.
Retirement asks a completely different question:
How do I turn everything I’ve built into dependable retirement income?
That question deserves just as much attention as choosing investments did during your career.
In many ways, retirement isn’t the end of your financial education.
It’s the beginning of a new chapter.
Chapter Summary
- Your TSP has one job while you’re working and another after you retire.
- Retirement changes the questions you need to answer.
- Traditional and Roth TSP balances follow different tax rules.
- Understanding those differences is the foundation for every withdrawal decision you’ll make.
- Throughout this guide, every major concept should be supported by official government sources.
In the next chapter, we’ll explore the five tax surprises that catch many federal retirees off guard—and how understanding them ahead of time can help you make more informed retirement decisions.













