Title 5 › Part III— EMPLOYEES › Subpart G— Insurance and Annuities › Chapter 84— FEDERAL EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM › Subchapter II— BASIC ANNUITY › § 8414
You can get an immediate federal annuity if you are a senior executive who is removed for not meeting performance or recertification rules after you have either 25 years of service, or you are 50 years old with 20 years of service. That rule applies to members of the Senior Executive Service, the Defense Intelligence Senior Executive Service and Senior Cryptologic Executive Service, and the FBI and DEA Senior Executive Service. Other federal employees may get an immediate annuity if they are involuntarily separated (but not removed for misconduct) or if they choose to leave during a big agency restructuring and the Office of Personnel Management and the agency say they qualify. To qualify for the voluntary offer during restructuring, employees generally must have worked at the agency at least 31 days before the agency asks for the determination, have a non–time-limited appointment, not have been given a notice of involuntary removal for misconduct or poor performance, and be within the group offered voluntary early retirement. An employee loses the annuity if they turn down a reasonable job offer in their agency that is within their commuting area and is not more than two grades or pay levels lower. Paragraph (1) does not apply to people already covered by other specific annuity rules in section 8412. Military technicians have special rules. Technicians hired on or before February 10, 1996, can get an annuity if they are separated after age 50 with 25 years because they left the Selected Reserve or lost the required military grade. Technicians hired after February 10, 1996, can get an annuity if separated from the Selected Reserve or lose their military grade after 25 years of service, or after age 50 with 20 years. The Secretary of Defense was also allowed, during fiscal years 2002 and 2003, to run a program letting DoD employees who met the age and service tests leave with immediate annuity under similar rules. Major organizational adjustment is a big reorganization, large reduction in force, big transfer of functions, or other major workforce reshaping to meet mission needs, cut staff, fix skill gaps, or reduce high-grade managerial positions.
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Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
5 U.S.C. § 8414
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60