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pdfApplication For Refund of Retirement Deductions
Civil Service
Retirement System
Civil Service Retirement System
To avoid delay in payment: (1) Carefully read and comply with all instructions;
(2) Complete application in full;
(3) Typewrite or print in ink.
1. Name (last, first, middle)
2. Date of birth (mm/dd/yyyy)
5. List all other names you have used (including maiden name, if applicable)
Form Approved:
OMB Number 3206-0128
3. Social Security Number
4. Are you a citizen of the
United States of America?
6. Previous applications filed
(indicate by "X")
Yes
No
Retirement Annuity
Deposit or Redeposit
Refund
Voluntary Contributions
7. List below all of your civilian and military service for the United States Government or District of Columbia.
Department or Agency
(Including bureau, branch, or division
where employed)
Location of Employment
(City, state and ZIP code)
Title of Position
Periods of Service
Beginning Date
(mm/dd/yyyy)
8. Have you accepted any further employment with the Federal or District of Columbia government (or arranged for such employment)
to become effective within 31 days from the ending date of your last period of service?
9. If you answer "Yes" to item 8, are Civil Service Retirement System or
Federal Employees Retirement System deductions being withheld (or
will they be withheld) from your salary during such employment?
10. Date of new appointment
(mm/dd/yyyy) (expected
date if not yet employed)
Yes
No
13. Are you now married? If "Yes," attach SF 2802A, Current/Former Spouse's Notification of
Application for Refund of Retirement Deductions, or other information as explained on the reverse of
SF 2802A. The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) cannot pay your refund without this
information.
Ending Date
(mm/dd/yyyy)
Indicate whether
Civil Service
Retirement
deductions were
withheld from your
salary. (Check one)
Withheld
Have you paid
deposit or redeposit
for any period,
including military
service after 1956?
(Check one)
Fully or
Not
Partially
Paid
Paid
Not
Withheld
Yes, complete items 9, 10, 11, and 12.
11. Department or agency, including bureau,
branch, or division, in which you are (or will
be) employed
No, skip to item 13.
12. Location of new employment (City, state, and ZIP code)
14. Have you been divorced on or after May 7, 1985, from a person to whom you were married for at least 9 months? If
"Yes," follow the instructions in the SF 2802A. OPM cannot pay your refund without this information.
No
No
Yes, give name of current spouse:
Yes
Use the space provided on the back of this form to list all such living former spouses.
WARNING
APPLICANT CERTIFICATION: I understand that I am not legally entitled to receive a refund if I am reemployed or otherwise assigned to a position under the Civil Service Retirement
Any intentionally false or mislead- System or Federal Employees Retirement System within 31 days of separating from my most recent position. I agree to notify OPM if I am employed again within this period and will return
ing statement, certification, or or repay any refund paid to me under those circumstances.
response you provide in this
application is a violation of the law I hereby certify that all statements in this application, including the information I have given pertaining to current and former spouses in items 13 and 14 and on the back, are true to the
punishable by a fine of not more best of my belief and knowledge.
than $10,000 or imprisonment of Your signature (Do not print)
Date
E-mail address
Your area code and telephone number
not more than 5 years, or both. (18
(
)
U.S.C. 1001)
Your Address
Number and street
For agency use only
Signature of agency official
Date received
I certify that this agency
We cannot authorize payment to
received this Standard
this address if it is erased or
City, state, and ZIP code
Title
Agency payroll office no.
Form 2802 on the date
otherwise changed.
shown at the right.
U.S. Office of Personnel Management
CSRS/FERS Handbook for Personnel and Payroll Offices
NSN 7540-00-634-4251
2802-115
Previous editions are unusable.
Standard Form 2802, page 1
Revised March 2006
Information About Former Spouses
If you answered "Yes" in item 14, list all living former spouses to whom you were married for at least 9 months and from whom you were
divorced on or after May 7, 1985.
Date of Marriage
Date of Divorce
Name of Former Spouse
(mm/dd/yyyy)
(mm/dd/yyyy)
Rollover Election
If your refund is less than $200, we cannot roll it over. We will pay it directly to you. Indicate below how you wish to have your refund
paid if it is $200 or more. Please carefully read all of the information provided with this form, including the Special Tax Notice Regarding
Rollovers, before you make your decision. An error in completing this election could delay your payment or cause payment in a manner you
did not intend. If you elect to roll over less than 100% of your refund, the total amount you roll over to any one organization must be at least
$500. (Make one choice in each section below, unless you need additional information. If you need additional information before making
this election, check the box in the last section.)
If my total refund is $200 or greater
INTEREST PORTION (taxable portion) of my refund Pay ALL by check made payable to me, with 20% Federal income tax withholding.
Pay ALL by check made payable to my Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) or Eligible Employer Plan. (Your financial institution or employer plan must
complete the financial institution certification below.)
Name of financial institution or employer plan___________________________________________________________________________________________
Mail the check to
the above institution or plan.
me. I will deliver the check to the above institution or plan.
Pay ALL to my Thrift Savings Plan Account. (You must sign and submit form TSP-60, Request for a Transfer Into the TSP, to OPM. Form TSP-60 is available on
the internet at http://www.tsp.gov.)
CONTRIBUTION PORTION (after tax portion) of my refund (The Thrift Savings Plan will not accept this portion of your refund.)
Pay ALL by check made payable to me.
Pay ALL by check made payable to my IRA or Eligible Employer Plan. (Your financial institution or employer plan must complete the financial institution
certification below.)
Name of financial institution or employer plan___________________________________________________________________________________________
the above institution or plan.
Mail the check to
me. I will deliver the check to the above institution or plan.
I need additional information before I decide.
I elect to have my refund computed and a rollover package with all my options sent to me before I decide how it should be paid. (Electing this option delays
payment of your refund at least an additional 30 days.)
Certification from Financial Institutions or Eligible Employer Plans
Name of institution or eligible employer plan
Address of institution or plan
Account number of IRA or eligible employer plan
Certification: My signature below confirms the account number for the individual named on page 1. As a representative of the financial institution or plan named above, I
certify that this institution or plan agrees to accept the funds described above as a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer from the Office of Personnel Management, to deposit them in
an eligible IRA or eligible employer plan as defined in the Internal Revenue Code, and to account for these monies in compliance with the Internal Revenue Code. I understand
that my signature below authorizes the transfer of taxable and/or non-taxable funds as indicated above.
Typed or printed name of certifying representative
Telephone number with area code
Signature of certifying representative
Date of certification (mm/dd/yyyy)
Name of institution or eligible employer plan
Address of institution or plan
Account number of IRA or eligible employer plan
Certification: My signature below confirms the account number for the individual named on page 1. As a representative of the financial institution or plan named above, I
certify that this institution or plan agrees to accept the funds described above as a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer from the Office of Personnel Management, to deposit them in
an eligible IRA or eligible employer plan as defined in the Internal Revenue Code, and to account for these monies in compliance with the Internal Revenue Code. I understand
that my signature below authorizes the transfer of taxable and/or non-taxable funds as indicated above.
Typed or printed name of certifying representative
Telephone number with area code
Signature of certifying representative
Date of certification (mm/dd/yyyy)
PRINT
SAVE
CLEAR
Standard Form 2802, page 2
Revised March 2006
Notice to Applicant
1. If you have more than five years of service, you may be entitled
to annuity rights which you will forfeit by receiving this refund
unless you are later reemployed subject to the Civil Service
Retirement System or the Federal Employees Retirement
System. (Note: Payment of the refund will end any eligibility
your former spouse(s) may have to coverage under the Federal
Employees Health Benefits Program.) You should also be aware
that even if you are later reemployed, the period of time covered
by the refund cannot be used in computing your future annuity
benefits unless (1) you redeposit the refund, plus interest, to the
retirement fund, or (2) the period(s) covered by the refund ended
before October 1, 1990. (Note: If you receive a refund for a
period of service ending before October 1, 1990, and you later
become eligible for nondisability retirement, you will receive
credit for the service covered by the refund in your annuity
computation — even if you choose not to pay the redeposit by
the time your annuity begins. However, if the redeposit is not
paid, your annuity will be actuarially reduced to reflect
nonpayment of the redeposit.) Refunded service may be used for
annuity title and average salary purposes regardless of when the
service was performed or whether you redeposit the refund.
The amount of the redeposit will be the sum of the refund you
received plus interest from the date the refund was paid to the
date you pay the redeposit (or commencing date of annuity, if
earlier.) The interest you will be charged on this refund will be
equivalent to the rate of interest earned by new retirement fund
investments as determined each year by the Secretary of the
Treasury. Since 1985, this rate has ranged from a low of 3.8% to
a high of 13%.
2. If you were separated on or after October 1, 1956, refund of
retirement deductions is prohibited unless your separation
occurred and your application is received by your employing
office or the U.S. Office of Personnel Management at least 31
days before the earliest commencing date of any annuity for
which you are eligible.
3. Refund of retirement deductions is also prohibited if you are
currently employed in a position subject to Civil Service Retirement deductions or to Federal Employees Retirement deductions
or will be so employed within 31 days from the date of the separation on which your claim for refund is based.
4. If you are now or have ever been covered by the Federal
Employees Retirement System, you cannot use this application
to request a refund, even if you are requesting a refund of Civil
Service Retirement deductions. You must use Standard Form
3106, Application For Refund of Retirement Deductions (Federal Employees Retirement System).
5. If you are (or will be) contesting your separation in an administrative or judicial procedure which may result in the retroactive
cancellation of your separation, the authority for the Office of
Personnel Management to pay you this refund will also be
cancelled. A refund payment based on a separation that is
subsequently cancelled is an erroneous payment that will be
collected as a debt to the United States.
6. Your refund is not payable until at least 31 days have passed
since your separation.
7. Interest will be paid on your refund if the refund covers more
than one year of service subject to retirement deductions and you
have total civilian service of fewer than five years.
8. This application should not be offered to a financial institution or
other person as collateral or security for a loan. The retirement
law [5 U.S.C. 8346(a)] provides that an employee's retirement
contributions are not assignable. A former employee must apply
for a refund personally and payment must be made directly to
him or her or rolled over into his or her account. However,
outstanding debts to the U.S. Government can, at the
Government's request, be withheld from a refund, provided all
legal requirements are met.
Federal Tax Withholding
Although the refund of your contributions to the Civil Service
Retirement fund is not subject to Federal income tax, any interest
paid on your contributions is taxable in the year that it is paid,
unless you roll over the interest portion of your refund to another
eligible retirement plan. Make any rollover election on page 2 of
this form after carefully reading the Special Tax Notice Regarding
Rollovers on pages 4 and 5.
Where to File Your Application
1. If you have been separated 30 days or less, this application
should be forwarded to the office in which you were last
employed.
2. If you have been separated more than 30 days, forward this
application to:
U.S. Office of Personnel Management
Retirement Operations Center
P.O. Box 45
Boyers, PA 16017-0045
Our Internet Address
We provide forms and other information at:
http://www.opm.gov.
Privacy Act Statement
Title 5, U.S. Code, Chapter 83, Civil Service Retirement, authorizes solicitation of this information. The data you furnish will be used to determine your eligibility to receive a
refund of retirement deductions. The information may be shared and is subject to verification via paper, electronic media, or through the use of computer matching programs,
with national, state, local, or other charitable or social security administrative agencies in order to determine and issue benefits under their programs or to report income for tax
purposes. It may also be shared and verified, as noted above, with law enforcement agencies when they are investigating a violation or potential violation of civil or criminal
law. Executive Order 9397 (November 22, 1943) authorizes the use of the Social Security Number to distinguish between the applicant and people with similar names. If you
do not furnish your Social Security Number, OPM may be unable to determine your eligibility to receive a refund of retirement deductions.
Public Burden Statement
We think this form takes an average 45 minutes to complete, including time for reviewing instructions, getting the needed data, and reviewing the completed form. Send
comments regarding our estimate or any other aspect of this form, including suggestions for reducing completion time to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, OPM Forms
Officer (3206-0128), Washington, D.C. 20415-7900. The OMB Number, 3206-0128, is currently valid. OPM may not collect this information and you are not required to
respond, unless this number is displayed.
Retain this page for your records.
Standard Form 2802
Revised March 2006
Page 3
Special Tax Notice Regarding Rollovers
Your refund consists of a taxable portion (any interest payable) and
an after-tax portion (the actual retirement contributions that you paid
into the retirement system). This notice explains how you can
continue to defer federal income tax on the interest portion of your
refund and contains important information you will need before you
decide how to receive your refund.
This notice is provided to you because your refund is eligible for
rollover by you or the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to a
traditional Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) or an eligible
employer plan. A rollover is a payment by you or OPM of all or part
of your benefit to another plan or IRA that allows you to continue to
postpone taxation on that benefit until it is paid to you. Your
payment cannot be rolled over to a Roth IRA, a SIMPLE IRA, or a
Coverdell Education Savings Account (formerly known as an
education IRA). An "eligible employer plan" includes a plan
qualified under section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code,
including a 401(k) plan, profit-sharing plan, defined benefit plan,
stock bonus plan and money purchase plan; a section 403(a) annuity
plan; a section 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity; and an eligible section
457(b) plan maintained by a governmental employer (governmental
457 plan).
An eligible employer plan is not legally required to accept a rollover.
Before you decide to roll over your payment to an employer plan, you
should find out whether the plan accepts rollovers and, if so, the types
of distributions it accepts as a rollover. You should also find out
about any documents that are required to be completed before the
receiving plan will accept a rollover. Even if a plan accepts rollovers,
it might not accept rollovers of certain types of distributions, such as
after-tax amounts. The portion of your refund that represents your
actual retirement contributions, is an after-tax amount. (The interest
payable on this amount is a taxable amount.) If this is the case, you
may wish instead to roll your distribution over to a traditional IRA or
split your rollover amount between the employer plan in which you
will participate and a traditional IRA. If an employer plan accepts
your rollover, the plan may restrict subsequent distributions of the
rollover amount or may require your spouse's consent for any
subsequent distribution. A subsequent distribution from the plan that
accepts your rollover may also be subject to different tax treatment
than distributions from OPM. Check with the administrator of the
plan that is to receive your rollover prior to making the rollover.
If you have a Federal Retirement Thrift Savings Plan account, you
may roll over the taxable portion (interest portion) of your refund into
that account. The Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) will not accept
non-taxable monies (the actual retirement contributions that are being
refunded). To accomplish a rollover to the TSP, you will need to
submit form TSP-60 to us. See Part II, Direct Rollover for more
information.
Summary
There are two ways you may be able to receive a refund that is
eligible for rollover.
1) Your refund payment can be made directly to a traditional IRA that
you establish or to an eligible employer plan that will accept it and
hold it for your benefit ("DIRECT ROLLOVER"); or
2) The payment can be PAID TO YOU.
If you choose a DIRECT ROLLOVER of your refund:
• The interest portion of your payment (the taxable portion) will not
be taxed in the current year and no income tax will be withheld.
• You choose whether your refund payment will be made directly to
your traditional IRA or to an eligible employer plan that accepts
your rollover. Your payment cannot be rolled over to a Roth IRA, a
SIMPLE IRA, or a Coverdell Education Savings Account because
these are not traditional IRAs.
• The interest portion of your payment (the taxable portion) will be
taxed later when you take it out of the traditional IRA or the eligible
employer plan. Depending on the type of plan, the later distribution
may be subject to different tax treatment than it would be if you
received a taxable distribution from OPM.
If you choose to have your refund PAID TO YOU:
• You will receive 80% of the interest portion (taxable amount) of the
payment, because OPM is required to withhold 20% of that amount
and send it to the IRS as income tax withholding to be credited
against your taxes. You will receive all of your actual retirement
contributions, since taxes have already been paid on this amount.
• The interest portion of your payment will be taxed in the current
year unless you roll it over. If you receive the payment before age
59-1/2, you may have to pay an additional 10% tax.
• You can roll over all or part of the refund payment by paying it to
your traditional IRA or to an eligible employer plan that accepts
your rollover within 60 days after you receive the payment. The
amount of the interest portion rolled over will not be taxed until
you take it out of the traditional IRA or the eligible employer plan.
• If you want to roll over 100% of the payment to a traditional IRA or
an eligible employer plan, you must find other money to replace the
20% of the taxable portion (interest amount) that was withheld. If
you roll over only the 80% of the interest amount that you received,
you will be taxed on the 20% that was withheld and that is not
rolled over.
Your Right to Waive the 30-Day Notice Period
Generally, neither a direct rollover nor a payment to you can be made
until at least 30 days after your receipt of this notice. Thus, after
receiving this notice, you have at least 30 days to consider whether or
not to have your withdrawal directly rolled over. If you do not wish to
wait until this 30-day notice period ends before forwarding your refund
application to your former agency or OPM, you may waive the notice
period by making an election indicating whether or not you wish to
make a direct rollover.
More Information
I. Payments That Can and Cannot Be Rolled Over
Refund payments are "eligible rollover distributions." This means that
they can be rolled over to a traditional IRA or to an eligible employer
plan that accepts rollovers. They cannot be rolled over to a Roth IRA, a
SIMPLE IRA, or a Coverdell Education Savings Account. Both the
taxable portion (interest) and the after-tax portion (actual retirement
contributions) can be rolled over.
After-tax Contributions. After-tax contributions (your actual retirement
contributions, excluding any interest paid) may be rolled into either a
traditional IRA or to certain employer plans that accept rollovers of the
after-tax contributions. The following rules apply:
a) Rollover into a Traditional IRA. You can roll over your after-tax
contributions to a traditional IRA either directly or indirectly. The
actual retirement contributions being refunded to you are after-tax
contributions. You do not owe any tax on this amount. Only the
interest portion is taxable.
If you roll over after-tax contributions to a traditional IRA, it is your
responsibility to keep track of, and report to the IRS on the
applicable forms, the amount of these after-tax contributions. This
will enable the nontaxable amount of any future distributions from
the traditional IRA to be determined.
Once you roll over your after-tax contributions to a traditional IRA,
those amounts CANNOT later be rolled over to an employer plan.
b) Rollover into an Employer Plan. You can roll over after-tax
contributions to an employer plan using a direct rollover if the other
plan provides separate accounting for amounts rolled over,
including separate accounting for the after-tax employee
contributions and earnings on those contributions. You CANNOT
roll over after-tax contributions to a governmental 457 plan. If you
want to roll over your after-tax contributions to an employer plan
that accepts these rollovers, you cannot have the after-tax
contributions paid to you first. You must instruct OPM to make a
direct rollover on your behalf. Also, you cannot first roll over
after-tax contributions to a traditional IRA and then roll over that
amount into an employer plan.
Continued on page 5
Standard Form 2802
Revised March 2006
Page 4
II. Direct Rollover
A DIRECT ROLLOVER is a direct payment of your refund to a
traditional individual retirement arrangement (IRA) or an eligible
employer plan that will accept it. You can choose a DIRECT
ROLLOVER of all or any portion of your refund, as described in Part I
above. You are not taxed on the taxable portion of your payment
(interest amount) for which you choose a DIRECT ROLLOVER until
you later take it out of the traditional IRA or eligible employer plan. In
addition, no income tax withholding is required for any taxable portion
of your refund for which you choose a DIRECT ROLLOVER. You
cannot choose a DIRECT ROLLOVER if your refund payment is less
than $200.
DIRECT ROLLOVER to a Traditional IRA. You can open a traditional
IRA to receive the direct rollover. If you choose to have your refund
paid directly to a traditional IRA, contact an IRA sponsor (usually a
financial institution) to find out how to have your payment made in a
direct rollover to a traditional IRA at that institution. If you are unsure
of how to invest your money, you can temporarily establish a
traditional IRA to receive the payment. However, in choosing a
traditional IRA, you may want to make sure that the traditional IRA
you choose will allow you to move all or a part of your payment to
another traditional IRA at a later date, without penalties or other
limitations. See IRS Publication 590, Individual Retirement
Arrangements, for more information on traditional IRAs (including
limits on how often you can roll over between IRAs).
DIRECT ROLLOVER to an Eligible Employer Plan. If you are
employed by a new employer that has an eligible employer plan, and
you want a direct rollover to that plan, ask the plan administrator of
that plan whether it will accept your rollover. An eligible employer
plan is not legally required to accept a rollover. Even if your new
employer's plan does not accept a rollover, you can choose a DIRECT
ROLLOVER to a traditional IRA. If the employer plan accepts your
rollover, the plan may provide restrictions on the circumstances under
which you may later receive a distribution of the rollover amount or
may require spousal consent to any subsequent distribution. Check
with the plan administrator of that plan before making your decision.
Change in Tax Treatment Resulting from a DIRECT ROLLOVER.
The tax treatment of any payment from the eligible employer plan
or traditional IRA receiving your DIRECT ROLLOVER might be
different than if you received your benefit in a taxable distribution
directly from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
Direct Rollover to the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP). If you choose to roll
part or all of the taxable portion of your distribution into your TSP
account, you need to submit form TSP-60, Request for Transfer Into the
TSP, along with your refund application. This form is available on the
internet at http://www.tsp.gov. Fill out your portion of the form; we
will complete our portion and fax it to the TSP office for processing.
The form must be approved by the Thrift Savings Board and the Board
must notify OPM to transfer the funds.
III. Payment Paid to You
If your payment can be rolled over (see Part I on the previous page) but
the payment is made directly to you, the interest portion is subject to
20% federal income tax withholding (state tax withholding may also
apply). The payment is taxed in the year you receive it unless, within
60 days, you roll it over to a traditional IRA or an eligible employer
plan that accepts rollovers. If you do not roll it over, special tax rules
may apply.
Income Tax Withholding:
Mandatory Withholding. If any portion of your payment can be rolled
over under Part I above and you do not elect to make a DIRECT
ROLLOVER, OPM is required by law to withhold 20% of the interest
portion (taxable amount). This amount is sent to the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) as federal income tax withholding. For example, if you
can roll over a taxable payment of $10,000, only $8,000 will be paid to
you because OPM must withhold $2,000 as income tax. However,
when you prepare your income tax return for the year, unless you make
a rollover within 60 days (see "Sixty-Day Rollover Option" below), you
must report the full $10,000 as a taxable payment from OPM. You
must report the $2,000 as tax withheld, and it will be credited against
any income tax you owe for the year. There will be no income tax
withholding if your payments for the year are less than $200.
Sixty-Day Rollover Option. If you receive a payment that can be rolled
over under Part I above, you can still decide to roll over all or part of it
to a traditional IRA or to an eligible employer plan that accepts
rollovers. If you decide to roll it over, you must contribute the amount
of the payment you received to a traditional IRA or eligible employer
plan within 60 days after you receive the payment. The portion of your
payment that is rolled over will not be taxed until you take it out of the
traditional IRA or the eligible employer plan.
You can roll over up to 100% of your payment that can be rolled over
under Part I above, including an amount equal to the 20% of the taxable
portion that was withheld. If you choose to roll over 100%, you must
find other money within the 60-day period to contribute to the
traditional IRA or the eligible employer plan, to replace the 20% that
was withheld. On the other hand, if you roll over only the 80% of the
taxable portion that you received, you will be taxed on the 20% that
was withheld.
Example: The taxable portion of your payment that can be rolled over
under Part I above, is $10,000, and you choose to have it paid to you.
You will receive $8,000, and $2,000 will be sent to the IRS as income
tax withholding. Within 60 days after receiving the $8,000, you may
roll over the entire $10,000 to a traditional IRA or an eligible employer
plan. To do this, you roll over the $8,000 you received from OPM, and
you will have to find $2,000 from other sources (your savings, a loan,
etc.). In this case, the entire $10,000 is not taxed until you take it out of
the traditional IRA or an eligible employer plan. If you roll over the
entire $10,000, when you file your income tax return you may get a
refund of part or all of the $2,000 withheld.
If, on the other hand, you roll over only $8,000, the $2,000 you did not
roll over is taxed in the year it was withheld. When you file your
income tax return, you may get a refund of part of the $2,000 withheld.
(However, any refund is likely to be larger if you roll over the entire
$10,000.)
Additional 10% Tax If You Are under Age 59-1/2. If you receive a
payment before you reach age 59-1/2 and you do not roll it over, then,
in addition to the regular income tax, you may have to pay an extra tax
equal to 10% of the taxable portion of the payment. The additional
10% tax generally does not apply to (1) payments that are paid after
you separate from service with your employer during or after the year
you reach age 55, (2) payments that are paid because you retire due to
disability, (3) payments that are paid directly to the government to
satisfy a Federal tax levy, (4) payments that are paid to an alternate
payee under a qualified domestic relations order, or (5) payments that
do not exceed the amount of your deductible medical expenses. See
IRS Form 5329 for more information on the additional 10% tax.
Additional Tax Information
This notice summarizes only the federal (not state and local) tax rules
that might apply to your payment. The rules described above are
complex and contain many conditions and exceptions that are not
included in this notice. Therefore, you may want to consult with the
IRS or a professional tax advisor before you take a payment of your
refund from OPM. You can find more specific information on the tax
treatment of payments from qualified employer plans in IRS
Publication 575, Pension and Annuity Income, and IRS Publication
590, Individual Retirement Arrangements. For an overview of the tax
consequences of payments from the Civil Service Retirement System
and Federal Employees Retirement System, you can also consult IRS
Publication 721, Tax Guide to U.S. Civil Service Retirement Benefits.
These publications are available from your local IRS office, on the
IRS's Internet Web Site at www.irs.gov, or by calling
1-800-TAX-FORMS.
SF 2802
Revised March 2006
Page 5
Current/Former Spouse's Notification of Application for Refund of Retirement Deductions
Under the Civil Service Retirement System
If you apply for a refund of retirement deductions, you must notify your current spouse. Also, you must notify any former spouse from whom you were
divorced on or after May 7, 1985, if the following conditions apply: (1) You have 18 months of creditable civilian service; and (2) You were married to the
former spouse for at least 9 months. Refer to the information and instructions given on the other side of this form.
Part 1 - To Be Completed By Applicant
Instructions: To notify each current or former spouse of your application for a refund of your retirement deductions, complete Part 1 with your name, date
of birth and Social Security Number and have the current or former spouse complete Part 2. The current or former spouse's signature must be witnessed in
Part 3. You may not be a witness. After Parts 2 and 3 have been completed, the form must be returned to you for attachment to your refund application. (Use
a separate form for current spouse and each former spouse.)
Name (Last, first, middle)
Date of birth (mm/dd/yyyy)
Social Security Number
Part 2 - To Be Completed by Current or Former Spouse
Instructions: Complete Part 2 and have two witnesses complete Part 3 and then return the form to the applicant. Payment of the refund of retirement
deductions will end any entitlement you may have to a survivor annuity or portion of any annuity to which the applicant would otherwise have been entitled.
If a court order expressly relates to the applicant's retirement deductions and you believe that payment of the refund would end a court-ordered entitlement
you have to a survivor annuity or to a portion of an annuity to which the above-named person is entitled, see the information provided below regarding such
court orders. (Complete Part 2 and have the witnesses complete Part 3 even if you are submitting a court order.)
I have read the paragraph above and I Signature (do not print)
understand that the above-named
individual is applying for a refund of
Name (Type or print legibly)
retirement deductions under the Civil
Service Retirement System.
Date signed (mm/dd/yyyy)
Part 3 - To Be Completed by Witnesses
We, the undersigned, certify that Part 2 of this form was signed by the current or former spouse of the person named in Part 1 in our presence.
Signature
Date signed (mm/dd/yyyy)
Signature
Name of witness (type or print legibly)
Name of witness (type or print legibly)
Address (Number and street)
Address (Number and street)
City, state and ZIP code
City, state and ZIP code
Date signed (mm/dd/yyyy)
Information About Sending Court Orders to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
If you are legally separated or divorced from the applicant, you should
know that a refund would end your potential entitlement to a survivor
annuity and to any portion of any annuity to which the applicant would be
entitled. If you have a court order that expressly relates to any portion of the
applicant’s retirement deductions, you should send a copy of the court
order to OPM with a cover letter giving:
1. The name, date of birth, and Social Security Number of the person
applying for the refund;
2. Your statement that the court order has not been amended, superseded, or
set aside.
3. Your name, date of birth, and mailing address; and
4. If the court order states that any payments to you are subject to
termination upon your remarriage, a statement that either (1) you have
remarried and the date of the remarriage, or (2) that you have not
remarried and that you will notify OPM within 15 days after any
remarriage in the future.
If the court order gives you a survivor annuity after the death of the
applicant, also attach a copy of your birth certificate, if available.
The court order can be honored only if it is received before the refund is
paid to the applicant. Payment of the refund will end any entitlement you
may have to a survivor annuity or a portion of any annuity to which the
applicant would otherwise have been entitled. Payment of the refund will
also end any eligibility you have to coverage under the Federal Employees
Health Benefits Program. Send a copy of the court order and your cover
letter to the following address and complete the blocks below:
Office of Personnel Management
Retirement Operations Center
Attn: Refunds
P.O. Box 45
Boyers, PA 16017-0045
A former spouse who remarries before reaching age 55 is not entitled to a
survivor annuity, unless you and the applicant were married for at least
30 years and you remarried on or after January 1, 1995. (Termination of the
remarriage does not restore a former spouse’s entitlement to a survivor
annuity.) Remarriage does not affect a former spouse’s court-ordered right
to receive a portion of any annuity during the annuitant’s lifetime, unless the
court order provides otherwise. A former spouse may also lose entitlement
according to the court order.
I believe I have a court order that meets the criteria described above. I am immediately submitting a copy of the court order and the required cover letter to
the address provided above.
Signature (Do not print)
U.S. Office of Personnel Management
CSRS/FERS Handbook for Personnel
and Payroll Offices
Date of court order (mm/dd/yyyy)
Today's Date (mm/dd/yyyy)
SF 2802A
Revised March 2006
Previous editions are not usable.
Notification To Current and Former Spouses of Your Refund Application
The Civil Service Retirement law provides that your retirement
contributions may be refunded to you only if you notify the following
persons that you are applying for a refund:
1. Affidavits signed by two individuals who witnessed your attempt to
personally notify the current or former spouse. The witnesses must
attest that they saw you give or try to give (personally) the
notification form to your current or former spouse to whom your
purpose should have been clear.
• any current spouse (including any person from whom you are
legally separated) and
or 2. The current mailing address of the current or former spouse. (You
may use the box at the end of this column to give the address.) The
Office of Personnel Management (OPM) will attempt to notify (by
certified mail return receipt requested) the current or former spouse
at the address you give. OPM will not pay you the refund until we
receive the signed return receipt. If the notice is undeliverable at the
address you give, your refund may not be paid unless you
subsequently show that the notification requirement should be
waived as described below. If you decide you want OPM to make
notification, it will cause a 6- to 8-week delay in the payment of
your refund.
• any former spouse from whom you were divorced on or after
May 7, 1985.
You are not required to notify a former spouse if you were not married to
that person for a total of at least 9 months or you do not have a total of at
least 18 months of creditable civilian service.
You should provide a copy of Standard Form 2802A, Current/Former
Spouse’s Notification of Application for Refund of Retirement
Deductions (this form, front and back), to (1) your current spouse,
if any, and (2) if you have at least 18 months of creditable civilian
service, each former spouse that meets the above criteria. The current
and/or former spouse(s) must sign the form and have the signature
witnessed by two persons. You cannot be one of the witnesses.
Additional copies of the SF 2802A should be available from your
employing office or you can photocopy both sides of the form for each
spouse/former spouse.
If you do not know the current whereabouts of a spouse or former spouse,
OPM may waive the requirement to notify that person. A waiver may be
granted if you submit with your refund application:
1. A determination by a court or administrative agency empowered to
make such determinations that the person is missing; or
In addition, the law provides that payment of your refund is subject to
the terms of any court order (related to a divorce or legal separation)
that expressly relates to any portion of your refund, if the payment of
the refund would end the entitlement of a spouse or former spouse to
a survivor annuity or a portion of your annuity. A court order cannot
bar payment of a refund if you do not have a future annuity entitlement
under the Civil Service Retirement System.
2. Notarized statements from yourself and two other persons (one of
whom is not related to you) stating that the person’s whereabouts
are unknown and detailing efforts to locate the person.
I have been unable to notify the following current or former spouse. (Enter
name and current mailing address, including ZIP code, of the current of
former spouse.)
Attach all signed and witnessed notification forms to your refund
application.
If your current or former spouse refuses to acknowledge the notification or
you are otherwise unable to obtain the acknowledgment, you must submit
one of the following:
Privacy Act Statement
Public Law 99-335, which established current and former spouse notification requirements, authorizes solicitation of this information. This information may
be shared with national, state, local, or other charitable or social security administrative agencies to determine and issue benefits under their programs or
when they are investigating a violation or potential violation of civil or criminal law. Executive Order 9397 (November 22, 1943) authorizes the use of the
Social Security Number to distinguish between the applicant and people with similar names. The Government may use your number in collecting and
reporting amounts that you owe the Government. Failure to provide information may delay or prevent refund of your retirement deductions.
Public Burden Statement
We think this form takes an average 15 minutes per response to complete, including the time for reviewing instructions, getting the needed data, and
reviewing the completed form. Send comments regarding our estimate or any other aspect of this form, including suggestions for reducing completion time
to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, OPM Forms Officer (3206-0128), Washington, D.C. 20415-7900. The OMB Number 3206-0128 is currently
valid. OPM may not collect this information, and you are not required to respond, unless this number is displayed.
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Reverse of SF 2802A
Revised March 2006
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | Printing H:\FORMFLOW\SF2802~1.FRP |
Author | csbenson |
File Modified | 2007-09-10 |
File Created | 2006-05-10 |