r/CanadaPublicServants • u/Trick_Fig3092 • 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/Vegetable-Bug251 4d ago edited 4d ago
For the Federal Public Service there is no such thing as factor 85. The pension retirement rules in the FPS are either retire at age 55 with at least 30 years of pensionable service for an unreduced pension (employees who started before 2013) or retire with at age 60 with at least 30 years of pensionable service for an unreduced pension (employees who started after 2012).
To answer your specific question, if it is ultimately determined that you are eligible to medically retire right now, you would receive roughly 2% per year times 21 years of service times your average top 5 consecutive best salary. So if your average top 5 consecutive best years salary is for example $100,000 then multiply that by 42%, so your medical retirement pension would be $42,000 per year and it is indexed starting on January 1st of the year after you retire, with a pro-rated indexation for the first year depending on the month you medically retired the year before, and then full indexation on January 1st every year thereafter. There is no penalty reduction for your pension if you medically retired, much like there is if you retire non-medically, without the needed years of service to qualify for an unreduced pension.