Ok. I am in college to be a teacher and I will be graduating May 2008. I will begin teaching Fall 2008.
Currently I don't have any retirement savings. I know I need to start, but as of right now it just isn't feasible. I currently work in an office that really doesn't have any benefits (none...really!). I am actually employed by a staffing company. I'm pretty sure the staffing company offers a 401k, but it does not match anything.
I've always been told that teachers have great retirement plans and what not, but never really been given any details. I tried to do some research but I'm not sure I'm understanding what I'm reading.
I found this site:
Teachers Retirement System of Georgia
From what I understand, I have two options. The DC or DB (TRS plan). The DC is very similar to a 401k. It's riskier. The DB (TRS plan) basically is guaranteed retirement. It has options within the plan regarding death & beneficiaries.
I'm still very confused how the DB plan works. I've been reading a lot of the articles on the TRSGA site, but I'm still having difficulty understanding it.
Are there any teachers out there that might be able to explain it to me simply? Do I do the formula they give and then increase it by 2%? If that is the case, then I estimate I'll have ~$1.8M in retirement. Is that right?
Here is my math:
$60,000 - estimated highest average annual salary
x 30 - years worked
x 1.2 - 2% multiplier
= $1,803,600
Also, I've been told that you only have to contribute to social security for 7 years in order to benefit from it. Does anyone know if this is true? I also know that a lot of school districts do not participate in Social Security. I've been contributing to SS for 6 years already. Next year will be my 7th. So, if the above is true, then I'd also be able to get SS when I retire (that is of course if it is still around). I'm definitely not counting on this though. I was just wondering if what I heard was true.
Ok. I just found this article:
LA Times Article
Seems to break things down pretty well. But, it says you have to work in the private sector for 20 years. And, it also says that there is a "windfall elimination provision," which will decrease the SS benefits an ex-government employee can receive. Anyone know anything about this?
Lastly, should I also contribute to a IRA or ROTH IRA when I begin teaching? (I really can't start any sooner.) Or, will my retirement as a teacher be sufficient? I really don't understand the teacher retirement that well, so I guess that is why I'm asking this question.
Basically, any guidance, advice, articles, websites, etc. you can give me to help me research/understand this stuff would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
Currently I don't have any retirement savings. I know I need to start, but as of right now it just isn't feasible. I currently work in an office that really doesn't have any benefits (none...really!). I am actually employed by a staffing company. I'm pretty sure the staffing company offers a 401k, but it does not match anything.
I've always been told that teachers have great retirement plans and what not, but never really been given any details. I tried to do some research but I'm not sure I'm understanding what I'm reading.
I found this site:
Teachers Retirement System of Georgia
From what I understand, I have two options. The DC or DB (TRS plan). The DC is very similar to a 401k. It's riskier. The DB (TRS plan) basically is guaranteed retirement. It has options within the plan regarding death & beneficiaries.
I'm still very confused how the DB plan works. I've been reading a lot of the articles on the TRSGA site, but I'm still having difficulty understanding it.
Are there any teachers out there that might be able to explain it to me simply? Do I do the formula they give and then increase it by 2%? If that is the case, then I estimate I'll have ~$1.8M in retirement. Is that right?
Here is my math:
$60,000 - estimated highest average annual salary
x 30 - years worked
x 1.2 - 2% multiplier
= $1,803,600
Also, I've been told that you only have to contribute to social security for 7 years in order to benefit from it. Does anyone know if this is true? I also know that a lot of school districts do not participate in Social Security. I've been contributing to SS for 6 years already. Next year will be my 7th. So, if the above is true, then I'd also be able to get SS when I retire (that is of course if it is still around). I'm definitely not counting on this though. I was just wondering if what I heard was true.
Ok. I just found this article:
LA Times Article
Seems to break things down pretty well. But, it says you have to work in the private sector for 20 years. And, it also says that there is a "windfall elimination provision," which will decrease the SS benefits an ex-government employee can receive. Anyone know anything about this?
Lastly, should I also contribute to a IRA or ROTH IRA when I begin teaching? (I really can't start any sooner.) Or, will my retirement as a teacher be sufficient? I really don't understand the teacher retirement that well, so I guess that is why I'm asking this question.
Basically, any guidance, advice, articles, websites, etc. you can give me to help me research/understand this stuff would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
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