• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

The final days

snake020

Contributor
My ASOSH on BOL and NSIPS shows 20 years and I have my retirement orders letter that PERS-9 sent to me last year effective next month. Is there anything else I need to do besides disappear in the ether and eventually get a retiree ID once someone updates my status in DEERS?
 

FormerRecruitingGuru

Making Recruiting Great Again
My ASOSH on BOL and NSIPS shows 20 years and I have my retirement orders letter that PERS-9 sent to me last year effective next month. Is there anything else I need to do besides disappear in the ether and eventually get a retiree ID once someone updates my status in DEERS?

My Navy HR website: https://www.mynavyhr.navy.mil/Career-Management/Reserve-Personnel-Mgmt/Reserve-Retirements/

I would take the time to go through the pertinent details and make sure you’ve done everything possible and are aware of the “Grey Area” details.

Otherwise, normal “unit check out” stuff assuming you’re still involved.
 

Randy Daytona

Cold War Relic
pilot
Super Moderator
My target audience for this post is those that crossed the rainbow bridge into reserve retirement.
The info above is pretty good. Only things to add are to check on the Reserve Component Survivor Benefit Program and make sure you have the proper election; also might want to write down and login once a month to your dfas / mypay account so it stays active until you retire. You may want to order your service records and medical records. Finally, you may want to call PERS-912 and have them send you a copy of your point capture total as a backup. Congratulations!

BTW: pension is Point Total / 360 x 0.025 x Base pay (high 3)

Base pay is determined by your point total. Even though you have your 20 good years, if you have 5400 points your base pay year would be year 15 (5400 / 360 = 15)
 

Hair Warrior

Well-Known Member
Contributor
BTW: pension is Point Total / 360 x 0.025 x Base pay (high 3)
Questions:
1. I’m assuming this formula is for legacy retirement not BRS.
2. Does the “high 3 base pay” auto adjust for inflation as military salaries keep increasing after you retire? I believe this is how it works but haven’t seen that explicitly stated.

P.S. BZ @snake020 FWFS TYFYS
 

Flash

SEVAL/ECMO
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
My ASOSH on BOL and NSIPS shows 20 years and I have my retirement orders letter that PERS-9 sent to me last year effective next month. Is there anything else I need to do besides disappear in the ether and eventually get a retiree ID once someone updates my status in DEERS?

I would make sure to download your OMPF before you turn everything in, while I am a pack rat I still ended up missing a handful of things that the OMPF had. If you have done any active duty time you could also ask PERS for an estimate of when you will get your retirement, it isn't official but it'll give you an idea if you and the Navy are on the same sheet of music with that, you can do it after you retire but if you do it now you have an easier chance to correct it if wrong.
 

sevenhelmet

Quaint ideas from yesteryear
pilot
My ASOSH on BOL and NSIPS shows 20 years and I have my retirement orders letter that PERS-9 sent to me last year effective next month. Is there anything else I need to do besides disappear in the ether and eventually get a retiree ID once someone updates my status in DEERS?

As I understand it, you're correct. Assuming your address on NSIPS is up to date, you should receive your 20 year letter in the mail within about 6-8 weeks, and be able to apply for a retired ID at some point after your official retired date (no idea how long DEERS retired entry takes, and I expect to have complications with the ID office since nothing with them is ever straightforward).

I'm in a similar category- will be low-crawling over the 20 year line in a couple of weeks. Cheers, and congrats!
 

LAMPS Ninja

I love LAMPS?
pilot
Finally, you may want to call PERS-912 and have them send you a copy of your point capture total as a backup. Congratulations!

I recently retired at the first opportunity after reaching 20 years. I could still access BOL for a few weeks after my official retirement date, and I was able to download an updated ASOSH that showed 20 good years' worth of point totals. The only difference on this "final report" was the extra 1 point for membership for the 2 weeks between reaching 20 years and the 1st of the following month.
 

Griz882

Frightening children with the Griz-O-Copter!
pilot
Contributor
Does the “high 3 base pay” auto adjust for inflation as military salaries keep increasing after you retire? I believe this is how it works but haven’t seen that explicitly stated.
I might be misunderstanding your question…but…your retirement pay is adjusted every year via a COLA formula run off your initial retirement calculation, not in line with military pay increases. So, if you retire as an O-5 reservist with X number of points that allows you a high 3 of $4641 a month your pay will only go up by COLA, for example 3% even if military pay is increased by 10% across the board.
 
Top