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Why Care?

  • If you have a pension, you have something increasingly rare: a guaranteed income stream for life in retirement. Treat it with the seriousness it deserves.

  • A pension is a Defined Benefit (DB) plan — your employer promises a specific monthly payment in retirement based on years of service and salary history. Investment risk is on the employer, not you.

  • Pensions dramatically simplify retirement planning. A fixed monthly payment for life means you need less personal savings to cover basic living expenses.

  • Survivor benefits and cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) can significantly affect the total value of your pension. Understanding these options before you retire is critical.

  • Many public employees — teachers, firefighters, government workers — have pensions as their primary retirement vehicle. Maximizing value requires understanding vesting, contribution rules, and payout options.

Top Tips:

  1. Know your vesting schedule. You typically must work a minimum of 5–10 years before you're entitled to pension benefits. Leaving before vesting can mean losing everything.

  2. Understand your payout options. Most pensions offer a Single Life Annuity (highest payment, ends at death) or Joint & Survivor Annuity (lower payment, continues to spouse). Choose carefully.

  3. Factor it into your overall retirement plan. A pension paying $2,000/month is equivalent to having roughly $500,000 in savings (at a 4% withdrawal rate).

  4. Don't count on it blindly. Some pension funds — particularly at state and local levels — are underfunded. Stay informed about the financial health of your plan.

  5. Evaluate any lump-sum buyout offers carefully. Run the math — or hire a fee-only financial advisor — before choosing between a lump sum and monthly payments.

  6. Check the cost of survivor benefits. Adding a survivor benefit reduces your monthly payment. Compare it against the cost of term life insurance as an alternative.

Advice From The Experts

How to Value my Pension

Lump Sum or Payments

Pension vs 401k

Should you Invest 15% Into a Pension

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Grafton, Dahn, and Family LLC

EST. 2023

Disclaimer:

All information provided by Grafton, Dahn, and Family (DBA WY Value Partners) is for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment, financial, tax, or legal advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. We make no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability of any information on this site. You assume full responsibility for any actions taken based on this content. Please consult a licensed professional regarding your specific situation.

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