20-Year+ Military Retirement Playbook

Transition Playbook for Military Retirees

Stack retired pay, VA disability, CRDP/CRSC, SBP, TRICARE/TFL, education, and tax strategy into one simple plan for your family.

Retirement deep-dive

Turn your 20-year career into a lifetime income stack.

Retired pay, VA disability, CRDP vs. CRSC, SBP, TRICARE/TFL, FEDVIP, Social Security, GI Bill, and VA loans—coordinated for you, your spouse, and your kids.

Jump to the overview
Big picture

You did 20. What's different at retirement?

A 20-year retirement isn't just a DD214 and a party—it's the point where multiple systems start paying you at once. At retirement you're often looking at:

  • Retired pay (High-3 or BRS) for life, with COLAs.
  • VA disability compensation (often tax-free), potentially at 50-100% or higher with SMC.
  • CRDP or CRSC restoring some or all of the VA offset.
  • SBP to protect your spouse's lifetime cash flow if you die first.
  • Lifelong TRICARE (and later TRICARE For Life with Medicare).
  • FEDVIP dental/vision, commissary/exchange/MWR, and potential Space-A travel.

The win isn't just “having benefits”—it's coordinating them so your retired pay, VA money, health care, and survivor protections all pull in the same direction.

Not legal/tax advice. Everything on this page is educational only. Rates and rules change; run your specific numbers by a qualified tax pro, financial planner, and (for benefits) DFAS, VA, and your service's personnel office.
Timeline

12-month countdown to retirement

The last year in uniform is when you lock in most of your “one-time” choices: SBP, transition programs, and pre-discharge VA claims.

1

12-6 months out: set the foundation

  • TAP: Complete initial counseling and core classes. Start 18-24 months out if possible; the earlier you go, the more you can act on.
  • Medical: Clean up your service treatment record. Make sure every chronic issue, line-of-duty injury, and mental-health diagnosis is actually in your file.
  • Baseline physical: Use separation exams to capture hearing loss, ortho issues, sleep apnea, migraines—anything you've been pushing through.
  • SkillBridge: If you want it, start mapping providers and getting command buy-in now.
2

180-90 days out: file claims & lock benefits

  • BDD claim: File your VA disability claim in the 180-90 day window using Benefits Delivery at Discharge if you're eligible.
  • Life insurance: Decide whether to convert SGLI → VGLI (guaranteed if you apply within 240 days) or go straight to medically underwritten term.
  • TRICARE plan: Decide Prime vs. Select starting on Day 1 of retired status; note TRICARE Young Adult for kids up to 26.
  • SBP pre-brief: Get an SBP briefing with your spouse before you sign anything.
3

90-30 days out: money and move logistics

  • VA loan timing: If you're closing on a house, make sure your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) shows funding-fee exemption—or know how refunds work if your rating comes later.
  • Withholding: Set your DFAS W-4P for retired pay and decide how much (if anything) to withhold from TSP withdrawals.
  • Finalize SBP: Any election less than full spouse coverage requires written spousal concurrence.
  • Permissive TDY / terminal leave: Align these with your PCS/house-hunting, SkillBridge, and your spouse's job search.
4

Day 1 and your first year as a retiree

  • Update DEERS, get retiree ID cards, and verify base access.
  • Confirm MyPay works in retiree status and check your first Retiree Account Statement (RAS) for SBP/withholding accuracy.
  • Enroll in TRICARE and, if you want it, FEDVIP dental/vision (you usually have a limited window).
  • Track your VA claim; respond quickly to C&P exam requests and consider adding secondary conditions with good evidence.
Forms change. DFAS, VA, and TRICARE all update forms and addresses regularly. Before you mail or e-sign anything, double-check the latest instructions on the official sites.
Transition programs

TAP, SkillBridge & pre-discharge VA claims

The last year in uniform is your best chance to use programs that disappear on Day 1 as a retiree. Use them to build your post-military income, not just to collect checkmarks.

Transition Assistance Program (TAP)

  • Initial counseling and the pre-separation briefing are required roughly a year out, but starting 18-24 months gives you time to re-tool your resume and networking.
  • Optional tracks cover higher education, vocational trades, entrepreneurship, and technical careers—pick the ones that match where you're actually going.
  • Spouses are usually allowed and encouraged to attend; ask your TAP office how to get them on the roster.

SkillBridge (DoD internship/apprenticeship)

  • Lets you spend up to 180 days in a full-time internship, apprenticeship, or training program while DoD keeps paying your base pay and benefits.
  • Requires a DoD-approved provider, a signed training plan, and command approval. The goal is either a job offer or a strong network, not just a “cool six-month break.”
  • Start scouting providers 6-9 months before your desired start date; review MOUs and expectations with your education/transition office.

Benefits Delivery at Discharge (BDD)

  • For active-duty members who can file a VA claim 180-90 days before a known separation/retirement date.
  • You file via VA.gov using the pre-discharge/BDD option, upload your records, and stay in the area for exams until you're out.
  • If you're outside the BDD window or don't qualify, file a standard claim as early as you can instead of waiting until months after retirement.

First-year support from VA

  • VA Solid Start calls you multiple times during the first year out—save the number and actually answer; they can connect you to health, education, and compensation resources.
  • Create your VA.gov and My HealtheVet accounts early so decision letters and benefit summaries are available as soon as they post.
  • Link up with a VSO (DAV, VFW, American Legion, state/county VSO) before you retire so someone knows your file when it's time for appeals, increases, or survivor claims.
Family & dependents

Spouses & kids: benefits on their own timelines

Your spouse and children don't just "tag along" with your retirement. Some of their benefits must be set up while you're still in; others kick in only if you later become P&T or pass away.

While you're still in: education & career

  • Post-9/11 GI Bill transfer: Must be approved while you're in uniform. Historically: at least 6 years served and a 4-year additional commitment (check current policy).
  • MyCAA: For eligible spouses (generally E-1-E-6, W-1-W-2, O-1-O-3). Helps pay for licenses, certifications, and some associate programs—this door closes once you retire.
  • SECO & spouse career services: Free coaching, resume help, and job-search tools. Some support extends briefly after separation; book appointments now.
  • Education centers: Use them for JST evaluations, degree planning, and FAFSA help while you still have walk-in access.

After retirement: health, school & survivor benefits

  • Health care: Spouse and kids retain TRICARE eligibility as long as DEERS is correct and premiums are paid. Guard/Reserve retirees may use TRICARE Retired Reserve until retired pay starts.
  • State & local benefits: Many states offer property-tax deductions, tuition waivers, and scholarships for dependents of disabled/retired veterans.
  • Survivor benefits: If you later die of a service-connected cause or are rated P&T, dependents may qualify for DIC, DEA (Chapter 35), Fry Scholarship, and—in some cases—CHAMPVA.
  • Documents: Keep DD214s, retirement orders, SBP election, VA rating letters, and marriage/birth/adoption certificates in one “when things go wrong” folder your spouse can actually find.
Clock check: Anything that has to be transferred or started while you're still in (GI Bill transfer, MyCAA, some spouse services) should be decided no later than 12-18 months before retirement.
Money stack

How to “double” and “triple” dip—legally

When you retire, you can often combine retired pay, VA disability, and either CRDP or CRSC. Add a civilian paycheck and Social Security later and you're effectively running multiple income streams at once.

Common stacks

  • Double dip: Retired pay + VA compensation, with CRDP restoring some or all of the VA waiver if you're eligible.
  • Triple dip: Retired pay + VA + CRDP/CRSC plus a civilian job or future Social Security.
  • Guard/Reserve twist: Reserve Component retirees may have different timing for when CRDP becomes payable (e.g., when retired pay actually starts).
Example (numbers just for illustration): You earn $3,000/month in retired pay and $1,200/month in VA compensation (tax-free). Without CRDP, you waive $1,200 of retired pay to get VA. With CRDP, some or all of that $1,200 is restored (taxable), so you're effectively receiving both VA and a larger retired-pay check. If your conditions are combat-related, CRSC might provide a tax-free alternative instead—run the math each year.
Healthcare

TRICARE, TRICARE For Life, FEDVIP & HSAs

Under 65: TRICARE & FEDVIP

  • Choose between TRICARE Prime and TRICARE Select for retirees; children are generally covered up to age 21 (23 if full-time students).
  • TRICARE Young Adult can extend coverage for adult children up to 26.
  • FEDVIP dental & vision is available via BENEFEDS. Enrolling from 31 days before to 60 days after retirement helps you avoid a dental coverage gap.
  • HSAs: If you're covered by TRICARE, you generally cannot contribute to an HSA because TRICARE is not an HSA-qualified HDHP. FSAs/HCFSA may still be available through a civilian employer.

At Medicare age: TRICARE For Life (TFL)

  • TFL starts automatically once you have Medicare Parts A & B. You must keep paying Part B premiums to maintain TFL.
  • In the U.S. and many territories, Medicare pays first and TFL wraps around as a near-zero-deductible supplement.
  • Overseas or for non-Medicare services, TFL can act as primary where applicable.
  • FEDVIP remains your dental/vision solution in the TFL years.
Action item: Set a reminder for your Medicare Part B enrollment window (usually around age 65, or earlier if disabled) so you don't accidentally lose TFL eligibility or pay late-enrollment penalties.
Education

Post-9/11 GI Bill transfer & strategy

Key rules

  • Transfer must be approved while you're in service. Historically this meant at least 6 years completed and agreeing to 4 more (check your service's current rules).
  • Spouses can typically use transferred benefits right away; kids often can't use them until you've served 10 years.
  • You manage allocations (who gets how many months) in milConnect, and can re-balance between dependents later if you still have service time left.

Stacking GI Bill with other programs

  • Yellow Ribbon: Helps cover higher tuition at private or out-of-state schools that partner with VA.
  • DEA (Chapter 35): For dependents of certain disabled veterans; pays a monthly stipend directly to the student and can sometimes be combined strategically with GI Bill.
  • State benefits: Many states provide their own tuition waivers or scholarships on top of GI Bill (CVO-style programs, etc.).
  • 529s & Roth IRAs: If GI Bill + state benefits cover most tuition, 529s can focus on room/board or end up feeding a Roth IRA via newer 529→Roth rules when it makes sense.
Housing & VA loans

VA home loan, funding-fee exemptions & refunds

Funding-fee exemptions

  • If you're receiving VA compensation—or have a qualifying pre-discharge memorandum rating—by the time you close on a loan, you're usually exempt from the VA funding fee.
  • The exemption should appear on your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) before you close; if not, ask your lender and VA to review your status.

Retroactive refunds

  • If you pay the funding fee at closing and VA later grants a rating with an effective date before closing, you may be due a refund.
  • Refunds typically go toward reducing the loan balance or are issued back to you—your lender and VA will coordinate the mechanics.
  • If your effective date is after the closing date, a refund is generally not issued under current policy.
Don't forget property tax. Many states give disabled or retired veterans homestead exemptions or deductions on their primary residence. File with your county assessor/auditor as soon as you're eligible and re-confirm annually if required.
Social Security

Social Security after WEP/GPO repeal

Under current law, the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO) have been repealed. That means many retirees who also receive government pensions (including certain military and civil-service combos) are no longer hit with those additional reductions.

What to do now

  • Log into your my Social Security account and review your latest benefit estimate. Make sure your earnings history is accurate—fix gaps and obvious errors now.
  • If you were previously impacted by WEP/GPO, confirm how your benefit is being recalculated and when any increases apply.

When to claim vs. your other income

  • Claiming at 62 gives you more years of checks but a smaller monthly amount; delaying up to age 70 increases the monthly benefit.
  • Because retired pay and VA compensation may already cover your basics, many retirees choose to delay Social Security to increase survivor benefits for a spouse.
  • Early Social Security can also pair with Roth conversions and controlled withdrawals in your 60s; that's a tax-planning conversation with a pro.
Annual habit: Check your Social Security statement once a year, just like you check your LES/RAS. Make sure earnings are correct and re-think your claiming plan if your health, marriage status, or income changes.
Taxes & TSP

Withholding, penalty rules & planning windows

Withholding & tax basics

  • Retired pay: Set your W-4P in MyPay. SBP premiums are withheld pre-tax, lowering your taxable retired pay.
  • VA disability compensation: tax-free at the federal level and in most states, which makes it a powerful cash flow floor.
  • TSP/IRAs: Plan which accounts you'll tap first and which you might convert to Roth in your 50s/early 60s.

Early withdrawal penalty exceptions

  • Age-55 rule (401k/TSP): If you separate from that employer in or after the year you turn 55 (50 for many public-safety roles), withdrawals from that plan can avoid the 10% early-withdrawal penalty. IRAs have different rules.
  • Disability exception: The IRS standard for “permanently and totally disabled” is not the same as a VA P&T rating. Get written tax advice before leaning on this exception.
  • 72(t) substantially equal periodic payments and a few other exceptions exist, but they're technical—and inflexible—once started.
Sequence idea (for many, not all): In your 50s and early 60s, live primarily on retired pay + VA while doing measured Roth conversions from traditional TSP/ IRA up to a target tax bracket. Delay Social Security to grow your benefit and survivor protection, then let Roth dollars be your tax-flexible “ace card” later in life.
Checklist

Quick checklist for 20-year retirees

1. Build your “retirement binder” DD214(s), retirement orders, VA rating letters, SBP election, marriage certificate, kids' birth/adoption records, POAs, and a one-page “who to call if I'm gone” list.
2. Lock in transition programs Complete TAP early, decide on SkillBridge, and file your VA BDD claim (or standard claim) in the correct window for your separation date.
3. Decide SBP on purpose Don't let SBP be a last-minute signature. Run the math with your spouse and an unbiased planner; understand what “no SBP” means if you die first.
4. Map your health coverage Choose TRICARE Prime vs. Select for now; set calendar reminders for FEDVIP windows and your future Medicare Part B enrollment tied to TFL.
5. Plan your income stack Sketch your post-retirement cash flow: retired pay, VA, CRDP/ CRSC, civilian pay, and eventual Social Security. Decide which levers you'll pull first if something goes wrong.
6. Set a yearly “benefits check-up” Once a year, review your DFAS RAS, VA ratings, TRICARE/FEDVIP, SBP, beneficiary designations, and Social Security statement. Adjust as your health, marriage, or income changes.
Mindset: You paid for these benefits with two decades of your life. The win now is to simplify and automate them so your spouse and kids can run the plan even if you're not the one at the keyboard.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Can I get both CRDP and CRSC?

No. You can only receive one in any given month. DFAS runs an annual “open season” where you can elect whichever yields the higher net benefit based on your ratings and tax situation.

Is CRSC always better because it's tax-free?

Not always. CRSC is tax-free, but the gross amounts can differ from CRDP. Your federal and state tax brackets, other income, and deductions all matter. Compare after-tax results, not just pre-tax numbers.

Does SBP still get reduced by DIC?

No. The SBP-DIC offset has been fully eliminated. Under current law, a surviving spouse can receive full SBP and full DIC at the same time.

TRICARE + HSA—can I do that?

Generally, if you're covered by TRICARE you cannot contribute to an HSA because TRICARE is not an HSA-compatible high-deductible plan. Once you have Medicare A & B and TFL, HSA contributions also stop. The exact details depend on all the coverage in your household—get a tax pro to confirm.

If I get VA-rated later, will my VA loan funding fee be refunded?

Often yes—but only if VA grants compensation with an effective date before your loan closing date. If your effective date is after closing, refunds are typically not issued under current rules.

Can I buy back active-duty time for a future FERS annuity?

Usually yes via a military deposit, but crediting that time toward a FERS pension often requires waiving your military retired pay (Reserve retired pay is treated differently). Get counseling from your agency HR and OPM before you decide.