Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - PARTICIPATION IN FEDERAL EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM › § 2154
Gives rules for how a former spouse can get part of a CIA employee’s retirement, survivor, Thrift Savings, and lump-sum benefits when the employee is covered by the federal retirement rules. Employee: a CIA worker covered by chapter 84 of title 5. Qualified former spouse: a divorced spouse who was married at least 10 years during the employee’s creditable service and who meets the rule about 5 years spent outside the United States (with December 4, 1991 as the cutoff for whether both spouses or only the employee must have been abroad). Pro rata share: the share based on days married during the employee’s creditable service divided by total days of that service. Spousal agreement: a written, signed, notarized agreement the Director authenticates. Court order: a divorce, annulment, separation decree, or related settlement. A qualified former spouse gets a share of retirement benefits: 50% if married for the entire creditable service, or a pro rata portion of 50% if not. Annuity supplements count. Benefits start when the employee is entitled to them or on the first day of the second month after the Director gets the court papers and required documents. Benefits stop if the former spouse remarries before age 55, dies, or when the employee’s benefits end. For disability cases the former spouse’s annuity starts when the employee would qualify or when the disability annuity starts, and it is figured on what the employee would have received. If the employee shifted systems, the former spouse’s share is computed in two parts for service before and after the change. Survivor benefits follow a similar rule but use 100% (or a pro rata part of 100%) and include any supplemental survivor annuity; remarriage before 55 bars payment but it can be restored if that remarriage ends and any lump sum paid is returned. A qualified former spouse gets 50% of the Thrift Savings account gains earned during the marriage, paid as a lump sum when the divorce is final, subject to account availability and not payable if the account was already cashed out or annuitized. An employee cannot change elections to cut the former spouse’s entitlement. A share of any lump-sum credit is also payable to a qualified former spouse. If an employee elected the special rules, certain other former-spouse benefit rules apply and survivor amounts for that former spouse are set at 55% as described, all paid from the CIA fund.
Full Legal Text
War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
50 U.S.C. § 2154
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73