Title 50 › Chapter 38— CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY › Subchapter II— CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY SYSTEM › Part F— Period of Service for Annuities › § 2082
Allows a participant to count certain work done before joining the system toward their retirement. That includes earlier civilian Federal service that would count under chapter 83 of title 5 and honorable active military service (and certain Public Health Service or NOAA corps service) done before the separation that leads to the annuity. Service is excluded if retirement deductions were not taken for civilian service on or after October 1, 1982, if contributions were refunded, or if required contributions were not transferred. If a deposit was not made for civilian service before October 1, 1982, the annuity is cut by 10 percent of the unpaid deposit unless the person chooses to drop that service. You cannot get credit for service already giving you another Federal annuity unless you waive that annuity and make a deposit or transfer contributions. When employees move directly between Federal retirement systems, the government and employee contributions (with interest), except voluntary contributions, transfer with them and the employee is treated as consenting; the same rule applies when leaving to another system. Military service rules are different by hire date. If you first became a Federal employee before October 1, 1982, your military before the separation generally counts (subject to other rules). If you first became a Federal employee on or after October 1, 1982, only military before January 1, 1957 counts automatically; military after 1956 counts only if you pay a deposit with any interest. If you get retired military pay for a period, you generally cannot also get credit for that time unless the retired pay is for a qualifying service-connected disability or falls under chapter 67 of title 10. If you or your family are entitled to Social Security based on your earnings, most military service after December 1956 is excluded from your Federal annuity unless you paid the required deposit. Survivors may make deposits to get credit. The deposit for military service after December 1956 is 7 percent of the basic pay for those periods (7.25 percent for 1999 and 7.4 percent for 2000). Deposits must be based on pay records or estimates, must be made within two years after the later of October 1, 1983 or the date the person first became a Federal employee, and the money is placed into the retirement fund.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
50 U.S.C. § 2082
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60