r/CanadaPublicServants 4d ago

Benefits / Bénéfices Medical Retirement - Operational Pension - Indexing

If I medically retire, will my pension be indexed right away? I will have 21 years of service and am 42 years of age.

I know a normal operational service pension requires you to get to the 85 factor to begin indexing (tho the percentages will accumulate from date of retirement until 85 factor)

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u/Admirable-Resolve870 4d ago

The Rule of 85 is a pension eligibility formula where your age + years of pensionable service = 85. This was for group 1 employees, people hired before 2012/2013 era.

If you meet this rule, you may qualify for an unreduced pension before the “normal” retirement age.

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u/Vegetable-Bug251 4d ago

The federal public service does not have a Rule of 85, even for employees that started before 2013. I started in the FPS in 1996 and the Rule of 85 has never applied. I think you may be confused with the Public Service Pension Plan that is present or used to be present in British Columbia, Ontario, and Alberta for Provincial Public Servants.

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u/Admirable-Resolve870 4d ago

It does apply

The 85 factor is calculated by adding together your age and years of service at retirement. If the total equals at least 85 points, you're entitled to an unreduced PSPP pension as early as your 55th birthday.

If you have 30 years of service at 55, you will be able to retire without penalty as you meet the minimum 55 age criteria

If you are 58 years old with 27 years, you can retire without penalty as you meet the 55 minimum criteria. The 85 formula applies.

Had a colleague that started at age 20. They retired at 55 with 35 years as they needed the minimum age. They could have differed probably.

Examples above are for group 1

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u/HandcuffsOfGold mod 🤖🧑🇨🇦 / Probably a bot 4d ago edited 4d ago

A group 1 plan member with two years of service can retire without penalty and receive an immediate annuity at age 60. Sixty plus two equals sixty-two, which is well below eighty-five.

Conversely, somebody who started working young (say, age 18) would not be eligible for an unreduced pension until age 55 even though their age+service would equal eighty-five before their 52nd birthday (52+34=86).

While some other pension plans do have some form of "magic number" reflecting a combination of age and years of service, the federal public service pension does not.