Intro to Reserve Component Retirement — Calculation and Valuation

You may look at the current US Reserve Forces Retirement System as a fragmented house of cards rife with inequities. Or you may feel it’s run exactly as it should be. But of a certainty, if you are a retirement planner, actuary or a lawyer representing a client who is under the system, or the spouse of a member under the system, you better dig deep to understand the strange and somewhat bizarre workings of the system.


Now we’ve almost reached the end of the process of understanding. However there’s still one large factor that must be figured in. A reserve forces member who has his or her 20 (or more) years “in the bank” for retirement must also reach his or her 60th birthday before pay will begin. Since many persons have their 20 good years completed when they are in their late thirties or early forties, they might have to “sit” for 20 years or more before retired pay comes along. This creates a significant challenge in correctly determining their net present Value (NPV) and future annuity values. These guardsmen and reservists are commonly referred to as “Gray Area” reservists and some of the ins and outs of the “Gray Area” are complex enough to call for a separate, future treatment here at RetiredPay.com

Related posts:

  1. Intro to Reserve Component Retirement — Calculation and Valuation
  2. A Few More Thoughts On Reserve Component Retirement
  3. Reserve Forces Retirement Links
  4. Military Retirement — Special Six-Part Series — Part 1 — 20 Year Retirement
  5. Military Retirement — Special Six-Part Series — Part 1 — 20 Year Retirement

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Comments

[...] Now, though, if you cast your mind back to yesterday the reserve component retirement is based not only on months and years of participation … but also upon those pesky points … one per day of active duty and/or one per training session … remember now? [...]

I have been searching for a long time to learn how Navy Reserve retirement points works in the following scenario.

Enlisted member does 7.5 years on active duty followed by 12 years of Navy Reserve good years. This leaves 19.5 years of service, but should the .5 year from active duty count as a good year for Reserves — it is afterall 180 points worth of active duty and only 50 is required in an anniversary year. Please help if possible?

@Jeff: Delighted to see you drop by and to see a challenging question on my old love/hate partner, the reserve reirement system. If I understand your queston correctly, you can’t count things the way you want to. The rules are here:
http://www.arpc.afrc.af.mil/library/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=8296
It’s an Air force site but after 1995 all reserve forces are required to compute the R/R (Reserve Retirement anniversary), the same.

Hope this will help.

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