How Does A Thrift Savings Plan Work? | Make Your Money Work

A Thrift Savings Plan is a payroll-funded retirement account where federal workers invest in low-cost funds, earn matching dollars (when eligible), and grow tax-advantaged savings.

The Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) can feel like “set a percent and forget it.” That’s where people slip. The match has rules. Taxes have rules. Your fund choice decides how bumpy the ride gets. If you learn the basics once, you can run the plan with a few small decisions each year.

Below is the full flow: who can use the TSP, how money moves from paycheck to investments, how matching works, how the funds differ, and what to do when you leave federal service.

What The TSP Is And Who Can Use It

The TSP is the federal government’s workplace retirement plan, built for federal civilian employees and uniformed service members. It’s a defined-contribution account, so your balance depends on what you put in, what your agency adds (when eligible), and how your investments perform. The official overview is on the TSP “About” page.

Most participants are in one of these groups:

  • Federal civilian employees (FERS or CSRS)
  • Uniformed services members (active duty or Ready Reserve)
  • Eligible beneficiaries holding an inherited TSP account

If you’re new, the best mental model is: the TSP is your retirement “bucket,” and each fund is a different way to invest what’s inside that bucket.

How Does A Thrift Savings Plan Work? From Paycheck To Account

The TSP runs on a repeatable paycheck cycle:

  1. You set your contribution. Most people choose a percent of basic pay. Some payroll systems let you set a dollar amount.
  2. Your payroll sends the money. Contributions post to your TSP after each pay period closes.
  3. Agency money may be added. FERS and BRS participants can receive an automatic 1% plus matching on the first part of their contribution.
  4. Your investment settings direct the cash. New money follows your “contribution allocation.” Your current balance sits in the funds you already hold.

You control two knobs: where new money goes, and how your existing balance is split. Changing one does not automatically change the other, so it’s worth checking both.

Contributions, Matching, And Vesting Basics

Your account can include your own contributions plus agency/service contributions, based on your coverage. The TSP’s official breakdown of categories is on Contribution Types.

Traditional Versus Roth Contributions

For your own contributions, you can usually pick Traditional or Roth:

  • Traditional: money goes in before income tax, then withdrawals are taxed later.
  • Roth: money goes in after income tax, then qualified withdrawals can be tax-free.

A clean way to decide is to compare your tax bracket today with what you expect after you stop working. Many people also split contributions between the two to spread tax risk.

Matching Dollars

If you’re under FERS (civilian) or BRS (uniformed), matching can add a steady boost to your savings. Matching is tied to what you contribute each pay period, up to the plan’s match cap. If cash flow is tight, aiming for the full match level is often the first target, since those dollars don’t come from your pocket.

Vesting In Plain Terms

Your own contributions are always yours. Some agency contributions can require a minimum service period before you keep them if you leave federal service. If you might separate early, check your account’s vesting status before you plan a move.

Contribution Limits And A Simple Way To Hit Them

The TSP follows IRS elective deferral limits. For 2026, the IRS sets the employee elective deferral limit at $24,500, with an age-50+ catch-up amount of $8,000. These figures appear in the IRS 2026 limits announcement.

If your goal is “max the TSP,” make it mechanical:

  • Take your annual target and divide by the number of paychecks you receive each year.
  • Set that amount as a steady per-paycheck contribution rate.
  • Re-check after any pay change so you don’t miss the target by December.

If you want matching all year, avoid contributing your full annual amount too early unless your payroll system still matches after you stop contributing for the year. A steady contribution rate is the easiest match-friendly approach.

How TSP Funds Work And How To Pick One

The TSP offers a small set of broad-market funds with low expenses. You can choose a Lifecycle (L) Fund that bundles several funds into one, or you can blend the individual funds yourself. L Funds are explained on the official Lifecycle Funds page.

What Each Fund Is Built To Do

The five core funds are building blocks. L Funds mix them for you. The table below gives you the “what” and the “feel” in one view.

Fund Main Exposure Typical Use
G Fund Special U.S. Treasury securities Stability and short-horizon money
F Fund U.S. bonds Income and smoothing stock swings
C Fund Large U.S. stocks Core growth engine
S Fund Small and mid U.S. stocks Extra growth potential with more swings
I Fund International developed stocks Diversification beyond the U.S.
L Funds Pre-mixed blend of G, F, C, S, I One-choice portfolio tied to a time horizon
Mutual Fund Window Additional mutual fund choices via a separate feature More options, plus added complexity and costs

L Funds Versus A Custom Mix

L Funds fit people who want one decision today and light maintenance later. Each fund’s target year signals the time frame. Farther target years generally hold more stocks; nearer target years generally hold more bonds and G Fund as retirement gets closer.

A custom mix can work if you’re willing to rebalance and stay calm during market drops. If you build your own, write down your target percentages first, then rebalance back to them on a schedule you can keep.

Two Settings That Confuse New Users

  • Contribution allocation: where new money goes.
  • Interfund transfer: how you move your existing balance among funds.

Many people change only the contribution allocation and assume the whole account moved. It doesn’t. A quick check inside your account keeps this from lingering for years.

Taxes And Withdrawals: The Parts That Affect Take-Home Pay

The TSP gives you two tax paths: Traditional and Roth. They can both sit in the same account, yet they are tracked separately behind the scenes.

Traditional TSP

Traditional contributions reduce taxable pay today, so your paycheck taxes can be lower while you’re working. When you take money out later, withdrawals are generally taxed as ordinary income.

Roth TSP

Roth contributions do not reduce taxable pay today. If a Roth withdrawal is “qualified” under IRS rules, both contributions and earnings can come out tax-free. If the withdrawal is not qualified, earnings can be taxable.

Early Withdrawal Reality

Pulling retirement money early can cost more than most people expect. Besides income tax, some early distributions can trigger an extra 10% tax. If you’re weighing a withdrawal, run the numbers for your full tax bill for that year, not just the cash you receive.

Loans And Withdrawals: What They Do To Your Retirement Math

The TSP is meant for retirement, yet it includes rules for loans and certain withdrawals while you still work. These features can help in a pinch, yet they also shrink the amount staying invested.

Loans

A TSP loan borrows from your balance and repays through payroll deductions. You pay interest back into your account. The trade-off is opportunity cost: the borrowed amount is not invested during the loan period. If you separate from service with a loan outstanding, repayment deadlines can become tight, which can trigger taxation on unpaid amounts.

In-Service Withdrawals

Active participants have limited in-service withdrawal categories, with eligibility rules tied to age or hardship. Before you rely on this route, read your plan’s current withdrawal rules inside your account so you know what is allowed and what documents are required.

What Happens When You Leave Federal Service

When you separate, you usually have a few clean choices. The right one depends on fees, convenience, your tax plan, and whether you want to keep TSP-only features like the G Fund.

Here are the common paths:

  • Leave your money in the TSP: keep the fund menu and low costs.
  • Roll over to an IRA: wider investment menu, yet provider fees vary.
  • Roll over to a new employer plan: keeps savings in a workplace plan if the new plan is solid.
  • Take a distribution: can trigger taxes and, in some cases, early-withdrawal penalties.

If you plan a rollover, a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer is usually the cleanest path. It avoids missed deadlines and reduces the odds of withholding surprises.

Move Why People Pick It What To Double-Check
Stay In The TSP Low expenses and simple fund menu Keep contact info and beneficiaries current
Rollover To IRA More investment choices All-in fees at the provider
Rollover To Employer Plan One place to track retirement money Plan rules and fund quality
Partial Withdrawal Cash for a goal while keeping the rest invested Tax withholding and timing
Full Withdrawal Simplify accounts or use cash Total tax impact for the year
Installment Payments Steadier cash flow in retirement How payments affect taxes each year

A Simple TSP Routine That Stays Useful For Years

You don’t need weekly tweaks. A small routine keeps you on track without turning the TSP into a hobby.

Once Per Pay Raise

  • Increase your contribution rate by 1–2 percentage points if your budget allows it.
  • Check whether you’re still on pace for your annual goal.

Twice Per Year

  • Rebalance back to your target mix, or confirm you’re still happy with your L Fund.
  • Confirm your contribution allocation still matches your plan.

Once Per Year

  • Review beneficiaries.
  • Review whether Traditional, Roth, or a blend still fits your tax picture.

This routine is boring in the best way. It keeps the match flowing, the allocation aligned, and the paperwork tidy.

References & Sources