Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY SYSTEM › Part Part C— - Computation of Annuities › § 2031
Pays a retiree an annual annuity equal to the retiree’s "high-3" average pay (the highest 3 consecutive years with full contributions) times years of service (up to 35) times 2 percent. Unused sick leave can be added to years of service for an immediate retirement or to survivors, but sick leave cannot be used to raise the high-3 pay or to qualify for retirement and no deposit is required for it. Part-time service after April 6, 1986 is handled by computing the annuity in two parts (service before April 7, 1986 using full‑time pay for that job, and service after April 6, 1986 prorated to a full‑time equivalent). Any fraction of a month of service is dropped. If married at retirement, the retiree must provide a spouse (or qualifying former spouse) a survivor annuity unless the spouse signs a written waiver or a different written election is made. The retiree’s annuity is reduced to pay for the survivor benefit by 2½ percent of the first $3,600 plus 10 percent of any amount over $3,600. The survivor generally receives 55 percent of the full annuity (or 55 percent of a smaller base if that was chosen). Child annuities depend on whether a spouse survives and are the smallest of three amounts (percentages of high‑3 divided by number of children, or fixed dollar amounts of $900/$2,700 or $1,080/$3,240 as adjusted under section 2131). Child payments start the day after the retiree’s death (or when a student child again becomes eligible) and stop when the child dies or no longer qualifies. Unmarried retirees may instead name someone with an insurable interest to receive 55 percent of a reduced annuity; that reduction is 10 percent plus 5 percent for each full 5 years the designee is younger, up to 40 percent. Elections made after March 31, 1992 to change survivor coverage may require a deposit within 18 months equal to the added cost plus interest (computed under section 8334(e)). If a retired person later remarries, there are time limits (generally two years) to elect survivor coverage and rules about deposits and offsets (6 percent interest and up to 25 percent offset) to cover retroactive cost. The Director may get pay and benefit records from Defense, Veterans Affairs, Social Security, and Labor to check eligibility and must notify retired participants yearly about certain election rights and, when practical, tell spouses and former spouses about their rights.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
50 U.S.C. § 2031
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73