2025 Session Last amended: 2020 session

§ 490.124 — Maturity of Benefits; Retirement and Survivors' Annuities

Plain-Language Summary

This section sets out how judges' retirement annuities are calculated. Tier I judges earn 3.2% of their final average compensation for each year of service after 1980. Tier II judges earn 2.5% per year. Judges who retire early get a reduced annuity of one-half percent less per month before their normal retirement date. Disabled judges receive full salary for up to one year, then a retirement annuity of at least 25% of their final average compensation. Survivors of deceased judges receive 60% of the judge's projected annuity.

Practical Notes
The difference in accrual rates between tiers (3.2% vs. 2.5%) has a major long-term impact on retirement income. Early retirement significantly reduces benefits — a judge retiring several years early could receive substantially less. Judges should model their retirement income under both early and normal retirement scenarios before deciding when to retire.