Health coverage for employees who are currently working in state and local government is provided by the employee's current employer. Members of the Teachers' and State Employees' Retirement System can visit the State Health Plan's website for more information.
If you are retiring under TSERS and are eligible for State Health Plan retiree group coverage, you will be auto enrolled into a health plan after you have submitted, and the Retirement System has processed, your online retirement application or have submitted a Form 6E, Choosing Your Retirement Payment Option. Health coverage options may be limited if you wait too close to your retirement date to submit your retirement paperwork.
State Health Plan retiree group coverage begins on the first day of the month after your effective date of retirement.
NOTE: If you do not take action within the specified time period to change coverage, you (and your covered dependents) will remain, unless you drop coverage, in the assigned auto-enrolled retiree group health plan and pay the applicable premiums until the next State Health Plan Open Enrollment (or qualifying event). You do not need a qualifying event or to be within the open enrollment period to drop coverage for yourself and/or your covered dependents.
If you have questions about your health plan options, please visit the State Health Plan website or contact Customer Service at (855) 859-0966.
When you retire under TSERS, you may be eligible for health coverage under the State Health Plan (Plan) if you have at least five years of TSERS membership service earned as a teacher or state employee. Credit for unused sick leave or credit transferred from the Local Governmental Employees’ Retirement System (LGERS) does not count toward this five-year requirement. As a retiree, your cost, if any, for your individual Plan coverage depends upon:
NOTE: You must meet TSERS retirement eligibility requirements in order to retire under TSERS, and you must be receiving your TSERS monthly benefit to be eligible for Plan retiree coverage. Members hired on or after Jan. 1, 2021 are not eligible to receive retiree medical benefits.
All of the conditions described below are based upon current law .
If you were “first hired” before Oct. 1, 2006, and you have five or more years of TSERS membership service, and have not withdrawn that service or taken a refund, the state will pay all of the cost for your individual coverage under the Base PPO Plan (70/30) or the Medicare Advantage Base Plan as a TSERS retiree.
Individual coverage under other plans is available for an additional fee. In all cases, the full cost of dependent coverage, if elected, must be paid by you.
If you were first hired on or after Oct. 1, 2006, your cost at retirement for individual coverage under the Base PPO Plan (70/30) or the Medicare Advantage Base Plan is based upon the following retirement service credit requirements:
Individual coverage under other plans is available for an additional monthly fee. In all cases, the full cost of dependent coverage, if elected, must be paid by you.
If you were “first hired” by the state on or after October 1, 2006, the required 20 years of creditable service must include at least five years of TSERS membership service in order to receive free SHP coverage under the Base PPO Plan (70/30) or the Medicare Advantage Base Plan. The remaining years of creditable service may include any combination of the following types of service:
NOTE: When a member transfers service from LGERS to TSERS, the LGERS service is reclassified as TSERS creditable service.
If you were first hired on or after Jan. 1, 2021, you are not eligible to receive retiree
Eligible TSERS withdrawn service that is purchased by the member only counts as creditable service, not membership service. Also, any TSERS withdrawn service that is purchased does not count toward the five-year TSERS membership service requirement for SHP coverage at retirement.
In this guidance, the following definitions apply: