CARES Act Withdrawals From TSP Averaged $26,270

The nearly 4,000 withdrawals totaled almost $100 million.

Reported by Lee Barney

After the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act was signed into law on March 27, the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (FRTIB) created a CARES Act project that included four key provisions to enable Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) participants and beneficiaries to respond to financial management needs during the pandemic.

Those four provisions were: changes in 2020 required minimum distributions (RMDs), loan payment suspensions, an increase in the maximum loan amount to $100,000 and CARES Act withdrawal provisions.

The TSP reported that, among the more than 6 million TSP participants, there were only 3,797 CARES Act withdrawals. The average withdrawal was $26,270. The total amount of CARES Act withdrawals came to nearly $100 million.

There were 787 CARES Act loans greater than $50,000. CARES Act loans averaged $74,402 and totaled $58.6 million.

As to how this compares with CARES Act withdrawals and loans from 401(k) plans, Fidelity reported that, as of June 30, 711,000 individuals had taken a CARES Act distribution from their retirement account. This represents 3% of eligible employees on Fidelity’s workplace savings platform. The overall average withdrawal amount was $12,100, while the median withdrawal amount was $4,800.

Among T. Rowe Price’s large plan market, which it defines as plan with more than $25 million in assets, only 4.2% of participants who have access to coronavirus-related distributions (CRDs) have taken a withdrawal, and fewer than 1% have taken out a COVID-19-related loan.

Among Alight Solutions’ participants, there have been approximately 140,000 withdrawals, representing 4% of the eligible population. Interestingly, 51% of these people elected the maximum amount: either $100,000 or 100% of available funds.

Tags
401k, coronavirus, coronavirus-related distributions, Thrift Savings Plan,
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