Month: April 2026

TIAA Traditional Withdrawal Options: Your Complete Guide to Four Payout Choices

If you have money in TIAA Traditional, you’ve probably wondered what your options are when it’s time to take your money out for retirement. Understanding your TIAA Traditional withdrawal options is one of the most important decisions you’ll make in your retirement planning journey. Yet, it’s also one of the most confusing aspects of TIAA retirement accounts.

What is TIAA Traditional?

It’s a fixed annuity that’s part of your 403(b) retirement account, specifically designed for employees of:

  • Non-profit organizations
  • Hospitals
  • Universities
  • Schools

Unlike variable investments that fluctuate with market performance, your TIAA traditional annuity provides stability through guaranteed minimum interest rates and participation in TIAA’s carefully managed general account.

Retirement planning decisions involving TIAA Traditional are particularly complex because it’s a unique product with specific rules and options. While this guide covers the four main payout choices available, it’s important to consider how these options align with your overall financial picture, including:

  • Other income sources
  • Other investments
  • Retirement timing
  • Risk tolerance
  • Legacy goals.

Understanding Your TIAA Traditional Options

TIAA Traditional is different from the variable annuity options in your 403(b) account, such as CREF stock, CREF growth, or CREF bond. While those investments tie your returns to market performance, TIAA Traditional provides returns based on TIAA’s general account performance. This massive, conservatively managed portfolio includes traditional bonds, commercial real estate, agriculture, timber, and other stable investments that TIAA has been managing for over 150 years.

There are several types of TIAA traditional contracts, and each has different rules and interest rates. You might have older contracts from contributions made decades ago, or newer contracts from recent contributions. Some contracts are fully liquid (marked with an “S” for supplemental), while others have liquidity restrictions. Furthermore, there are even certain “Plan Rules” within your organization that might create additional complexity around the availability and liquidity of funds.  Understanding which type of contract you have and your plan’s rules is crucial for determining your available options.

Option 1: Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) or Minimum Distribution Option (MDO)

The first way to access your TIAA traditional funds is through the required minimum distribution option, also called the minimum distribution option by TIAA. This option becomes available when you reach the age when the IRS requires you to start taking distributions from your tax-deferred retirement accounts.  If you miss an RMD, you could be subject to a 25% penalty! 

The RMD age has changed over the years due to legislation. Previously set at 70.5, it was raised to 72 by the SECURE Act. RMD now stands at 73 or 75, depending on your birth year. If you were born in 1960 or later, your required minimum distribution age is 75.

How the Math Works

The IRS provides a life expectancy table that determines your distribution factor based on your age. For example, if you turn 75 in 2025, your life expectancy factor is 24.6. You divide your account balance by this factor to determine your required distribution amount.

Example

Let’s say you have $1 million in a TIAA traditional account. At age 75, you would divide $1 million by 24.6, resulting in a required distribution of approximately $40,650, or about 4% of your account balance. As you age, your life expectancy decreases, which means your required distributions increase. By age 90, with a life expectancy factor of 12.2, that same $1 million would require a distribution of nearly $82,000.

This creates what I like to call the “Tax Trap of 401ks and IRAs.” If you have substantial Social Security payments and perhaps a pension, and you don’t need these tax-deferred assets for current income, those increasing RMDs can push you into higher tax brackets and trigger additional costs like Medicare surcharges or IRMAA.

The advantage of this option is continued tax deferral while pulling out the minimum required by the IRS. Before reaching RMD age, you can let your account continue growing tax-deferred without being forced into any payout structure. You can also change to other options later if your needs evolve.

Option 2: Interest-Only Withdrawals

The second option allows you to withdraw only the interest your TIAA traditional account earns while leaving your principal intact. Each of your TIAA traditional accounts has an associated interest rate that depends on when you made the contributions and what type of contract you have.

Contributions made in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s typically carry much higher interest rates than contributions made after 2009, when interest rates dropped to near zero following the Great Recession. However, even recent TIAA traditional contributions often provide interest rates of 4% to 4.5% or higher, which compare favorably to traditional bond investments that have averaged less than 2% annually over the past 10-15 years.

The interest rates also vary by contract type. Contracts without an “S” designation (such as RA and GRA contracts) typically offer higher interest rates but come with liquidity restrictions. These are usually funded by employer contributions. Contracts with an “S” designation (SRA and GSRA contracts) are supplemental contracts funded primarily by your own contributions. They offer slightly lower interest rates but provide full liquidity.

Example

Using our $1 million example with a combined interest rate of 4.5%, your account would generate approximately $45,000 in annual interest. With the interest-only option, you could receive this $45,000 as income while preserving your $1 million principal balance. You can typically choose to receive these payments monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, or annually, depending on your cash flow needs.

This option works well if you need supplemental income but want to preserve your principal for future needs or to leave as a legacy. The interest payments from pre-tax 403b accounts are treated as taxable income in the year you receive them, just like any other distribution from a tax-deferred account. However, there are usually restrictions on how frequently you can start and stop these payments. You’ll want to confirm the specific rules for your contracts.

Option 3: Annuitization – Creating a Lifetime Income Stream

The third option, and what many experts consider the most underutilized, is annuitization. This means exchanging your account balance for a guaranteed income payment that will continue for as long as you live, or for as long as you and your spouse live if you choose a joint option.

When you annuitize your TIAA traditional account, you’re essentially trading your account balance for an income stream you can never outlive. The amount of income depends on several factors:

  • Your age
  • Your account balance
  • The interest rates of your various contracts
  • The payout option you select

Real Example

A 67-year-old client with various TIAA traditional contracts dating back decades received an illustration showing a single life payout rate of 8.81% with a 10-year guarantee period. This means that for every $100,000 annuitized, this client would receive $8,810 annually for life.

The 10-year guarantee provides protection if you die early in retirement. If you pass away within 10 years of starting the annuity, payments continue to your beneficiary for the remainder of the guarantee period. So, if you die after five years, your beneficiary receives payments for five more years.  But if you outlive the 10-year guarantee period, there is no death benefit.

You can also choose joint life options that continue payments as long as either you or your spouse is alive. These typically offer lower payout rates because they’re expected to pay out longer, but they provide valuable protection for surviving spouses.

Payout rates vary significantly depending on when you made your contributions. Older contracts often have much higher payout rates. I’ve seen TIAA Traditional payout rates as high as 10% per year on older contracts from the 80s and 90s. 

TIAA’s long history and conservative management approach allows them to offer competitive rates to existing participants.

It’s important to understand that annuitization is an irrevocable decision. Once you exchange your account balance for the income stream, you cannot change your mind or access the principal. Additionally, these annuities are generally designed to be fixed with no guarantee of increased payments over time. 

This brings inflation risk into play more so than other investments.  However, the high baseline guaranteed income can stack on top of Social Security and allow for your more aggressive investments to compound longer.  Many are surprised that this can result in a higher legacy amount despite the lack of a death benefit.

Option 4: Transfer, Rollover, or Liquidation

The fourth option is to move your money out of TIAA Traditional entirely. Your ability to do this depends on what type of contracts you have.

If your TIAA traditional is in supplemental contracts (SRA, GSRA, and RCP), you have full liquidity. You can

  • Take the money out as a lump sum
  • Roll it into your own IRA
  • Transfer it to other investments within your 403(b) plan without restrictions.

However, if your money is in non-supplemental contracts (RA, GRA, or RC), you face liquidity restrictions because these contracts were funded primarily by employer contributions. For these illiquid contracts, you can use what’s called a Transfer Payout Annuity (TPA). A TPA provides your money in equal installments for a term determined by the type of contract.

  • RA Contracts: 10 payments over nine years
  • RC Contracts: 7 payments over 6 years
  • GRA Contracts: 5 payments over 4 years

If you elect to receive these payments as cash, each payment is taxable income. If you roll the TPA payments to an IRA or other qualified account, there are no immediate tax consequences.  You’ll need to check with TIAA to understand the specific rules for your contracts.

Many people choose this option because they’re frustrated with TIAA Traditional’s complexity or because they want to consolidate and simplify their retirement accounts. However, this decision deserves careful consideration because you’re giving up some unique benefits that are difficult to replicate elsewhere.

The Most Overlooked Option: Why Annuitization Deserves Serious Consideration

After working with hundreds of TIAA participants over the years, one pattern became clear.

Most people immediately gravitate toward option four (getting their money out) without seriously considering annuitization. This happens for several understandable reasons.

First, annuities have developed a negative reputation in the financial industry. Much of this stems from how annuities are often sold in the marketplace. Some salespeople are taking advantage of seniors and retirees, focusing on their own commissions rather than clients’ needs. This has created widespread distrust of anything labeled as an “annuity.”

Second, TIAA Traditional is genuinely complex, and many people simply want to move their money to something they understand better. The various contract types, liquidity restrictions, and payout options can feel overwhelming.

However, this rush to liquidate often overlooks the significant value that TIAA Traditional can provide in a well-designed retirement plan. Consider these advantages:

Bond Alternative

Over the past 10-15 years, traditional bonds have provided returns of less than 2% annually while experiencing significant volatility. TIAA traditional accounts typically earn 4% to 4.5% or more annually and never decrease in value. They can serve as an excellent bond alternative, allowing you to be more aggressive with your other investments.

Guaranteed Income Foundation

The annuitization option provides a guaranteed income foundation that reduces pressure on your other investments. With a baseline income from Social Security and a TIAA traditional annuity, you can afford to take more risk with your remaining investments to capture potential upside.

Superior Payout Rates

The payout rates available through TIAA traditional annuitization often exceed what you can obtain by purchasing commercial annuities in today’s market. The 8.81% payout rate in our example would be very difficult to replicate elsewhere.

Longevity Insurance

If you expect longevity for you or your spouse, the annuity continues paying regardless of how long you live. TIAA reportedly has clients in their hundreds who are still receiving payments.

The key is not to annuitize everything, but to consider using TIAA Traditional as one component of a diversified retirement income strategy. You might annuitize a portion of your TIAA Traditional to create a guaranteed income floor, while keeping other assets liquid for emergencies and growth potential.

Making the Right Choice for Your Situation

Choosing among these four options requires careful consideration of your complete financial picture. Here are some key factors to evaluate:

Income Needs

How much income will you need from your retirement accounts? If you have substantial Social Security and pension income, you might prefer to let the TIAA traditional continue growing tax-deferred. If you need current income, the interest-only or annuitization options might be more appropriate.

Other Assets

What other liquid assets do you have available for emergencies? If most of your wealth is in retirement accounts, maintaining some liquidity is important. But if you have substantial taxable investments or other liquid assets, you might be more comfortable annuitizing a portion of your TIAA Traditional.

Risk Tolerance

How comfortable are you with market volatility in your other investments? If TIAA Traditional serves as your bond allocation, you might be able to invest more aggressively elsewhere.

Legacy Goals

Do you want to leave assets to heirs? Annuitization reduces the assets available for inheritance, whereas the other options preserve more of the principal.  With that said, if you do live a long time, the benefits of annuitization could allow for your growth assets to compound without selling at the wrong time.

Tax Considerations

How will each option affect your overall tax situation? Large RMDs might push you into higher tax brackets, while annuity payments provide predictable taxable income.

Health and Longevity

Your health status and family history of longevity should influence your decision. If you expect a long retirement, annuitization becomes more attractive.

Conclusion

Your TIAA traditional account represents a valuable and unique retirement asset that deserves careful consideration. While the complexity can be frustrating, understanding your four main options – RMD/MDO, interest-only, annuitization, and rollover/liquidation – helps you make an informed decision that aligns with your retirement goals.

The most important takeaway is not to rush into liquidating your TIAA traditional simply because it’s complex. The guaranteed annuity rate and lifetime income options available through TIAA Traditional are increasingly rare in today’s financial marketplace. These benefits, combined with TIAA’s 150+ years of experience and conservative management approach, make TIAA Traditional a potentially valuable component of your retirement income strategy.

Before making any decisions, consider how each option fits within your overall financial plan. Think about your income needs, risk tolerance, legacy goals, and tax situation. If you’re unsure, consider working with a fee-only financial planner who can provide objective guidance without trying to sell you additional products.

Remember, you don’t have to choose just one option or make all decisions at once. You might use different options for different portions of your TIAA Traditional balance, or adjust your approach as your needs evolve in retirement. The key is understanding your choices so you can make decisions that support your long-term financial security and retirement goals.

At Imagine Financial Security, we help individuals over 50 with at least a million dollars saved navigate these complex retirement decisions. If you are looking to

  • Maximize your retirement spending
  • Minimize your lifetime tax bill
  • Worry less about money

You can start by taking our Retirement Readiness Questionnaire on our website at www.imaginefinancialsecurity.com, so we can learn more about how we can help you on your journey to and through retirement.

Not quite ready to take the questionnaire, but want helpful tips and resources? Sign up for our monthly newsletter and/or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

This is for general education purposes only and should not be considered as tax, legal, or investment advice.

5 Retirement Strategies for Navigating Market Volatility in 2026

The current geopolitical tensions involving Iran have sent ripples through global markets. If you’re approaching retirement or have recently retired, you’re probably feeling some anxiety about your financial future. As someone who works with retirees daily, I’m seeing a familiar pattern emerge—the same concerns that surfaced during the 2020 COVID crisis and the 2008 financial meltdown.

Right now, we’re witnessing significant market volatility due to the Iran conflict. This conflict has effectively shut down the Strait of Hormuz—a critical waterway that accounts for about 20% of global oil consumption. This disruption is driving up energy costs, squeezing business margins, and creating uncertainty about future economic conditions.

For those planning to retire within the next year or two, or those who’ve recently entered retirement, this volatility raises serious questions about timing and financial security.  In this blog post, we’ll touch on five retirement strategies to help you navigate this current market volatility. 

The One-More-Year Syndrome: Why Market Volatility Affects Retirement Decisions

During my recent client reviews, I noticed something troubling. Many clients who were planning to retire this year are now considering pushing back their retirement. This phenomenon, which I call the “One-more-year syndrome,” isn’t new. I witnessed the same pattern during the 2020 pandemic when global markets crashed and again during the 2008 financial crisis.

The concern is understandable. Sequence of returns risk—the danger of experiencing poor market performance early in retirement—can significantly impact your long-term financial security. Historical data shows that retiring during major market downturns, such as the early 2000s tech crash or the 2008 financial crisis, can be particularly challenging for retirees who don’t have proper strategies in place.

However, here’s what many people don’t realize:

Even those who retired during the difficult 2022 triple bear market—stocks down 20%, bonds down 13–15%, and cash losing value—have seen a strong recovery from 2023 to 2025. The key is having the right retirement strategies to weather these storms.

Understanding the Current Market Impact

The Iran conflict is creating specific challenges that retirees need to understand. Oil prices have jumped over 40%, and this impacts everything from shipping costs to business profitability.

What makes this situation particularly concerning for retirement planning is the potential impact on inflation. Coming into 2026, markets expected the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates two to three times. However, if oil prices remain elevated and inflation becomes stickier, those rate cuts may not materialize. This uncertainty affects both stock and bond markets, creating the kind of volatility that can disrupt traditional investment strategies for retirement.

The situation is further complicated by the broader implications for artificial intelligence infrastructure, which requires enormous amounts of energy. The current administration’s focus on energy independence and the potential impact on China’s energy supply adds another layer of complexity to global markets.

Essential Retirement Strategies for Market Volatility

The Guardrails Framework

One of the most effective retirement strategies for managing market volatility is implementing a guardrails system. The Guyton-Klinger framework provides a structured approach to adjusting your spending during market downturns.

Here’s how it works:

If your withdrawal rate increases by 20% due to portfolio losses (not increased spending), you implement a 10% reduction in your expenses.

For many retirees, this strategy is quite manageable because they often have significant discretionary spending. Instead of taking three major trips per year, you might reduce it to two. While this requires some lifestyle adjustment, it’s far better than running out of money entirely.

The beauty of this approach is that it’s not arbitrary. It’s based on historical analysis of what works during extended market downturns. This systematic approach to managing market volatility helps remove emotion from financial decisions during stressful periods.

Building Your Cash and Fixed Income Buffer

Another crucial element of sound investment strategies for retirement is maintaining adequate liquidity. Building up a substantial cash and fixed income buffer allows you to avoid selling stocks during market downturns. This strategy proved invaluable during the 2008-2009 crisis, which took about 5 years for the market to fully recover.

The question isn’t whether to build this buffer, but how large it should be. Some retirees feel comfortable with two years of expenses in cash and fixed income. Others prefer four or five years for maximum peace of mind. This decision depends on your risk tolerance and how much market volatility you can psychologically handle.

Your buffer can include money market accounts, high-yield savings, CDs, short-term treasuries, or a combination of these vehicles. The key is having enough liquid assets to cover your expenses without forcing you to sell stocks at the worst possible time. This approach allows your equity investments time to recover while you live off your safer assets.

Reconsidering Annuities in Your Portfolio

Many people have negative associations with annuities, often for good reasons, given how they’ve been oversold in the past. However, when used appropriately, annuities can serve as an effective tool for managing market volatility in retirement portfolios.

The advantage of fixed annuities over traditional bonds is the elimination of interest rate risk. While bond prices can decline when interest rates rise, a fixed annuity locks in your value each year. More importantly, annuities can be converted into guaranteed lifetime income streams, which reduces the pressure to sell stocks during market downturns.

This is particularly relevant for managing market volatility. Why? Because it provides a foundation of guaranteed income that doesn’t fluctuate with market conditions. Whether you’re considering a private annuity from companies like Lincoln or Principal, or you have access to institutional options like TIAA, these tools can provide valuable stability during uncertain times.

Alternative Income Strategies

Sometimes the best retirement strategies involve thinking outside traditional investment approaches. Part-time work, for instance, can significantly reduce pressure on your investment portfolio during volatile periods. This doesn’t mean returning to a stressful full-time career, but rather finding enjoyable, flexible work that provides additional income.

Many retirees find fulfillment in consulting work, retail positions, or service jobs that keep them active and social while providing financial benefits. The additional income reduces the amount you need to withdraw from your portfolio, giving your investments more time to recover from market downturns.

Strategic Social Security Timing

Your Social Security claiming strategy can also serve as a tool for managing market volatility. If you had planned to delay benefits until age 70 but find yourself in a prolonged market downturn, claiming earlier can reduce pressure on your investment portfolio.

There’s even a little-known provision that allows you to start Social Security benefits before full retirement age, but then stop them at full retirement age.  This allows you to capture delayed retirement credits up until age 70. This flexibility can be valuable if market conditions improve and you want to return to your original strategy of maximizing lifetime benefits.

The DURP Framework: Staying Disciplined During Uncertainty

The foundation of all effective retirement strategies is what I call the DURP framework: Disciplined, Unemotional, Repeatable Process. This approach is based on having a clear investment policy statement that guides your decisions regardless of market conditions.

Think of how major university endowments operate. They have clear goals, defined risk tolerance based on those goals, and specific asset allocation targets. When they need to generate cash flow, they sell from whatever asset class has performed best recently and is overweight in their portfolio.

During strong market years like 2025, when stocks returned about 16%, and bonds returned 7%, you would trim your equity allocation to generate additional cash flow. Conversely, during down markets like 2008, when stocks fell 37%, but bonds gained 6%, you could sell bonds to meet your cash flow needs while allowing stocks time to recover.

This systematic approach to managing market volatility removes emotion from the equation. It ensures that you’re buying low and selling high rather than the other way around.

What is Retirement Planning in Today’s Environment?

What is retirement planning in an era of increased market volatility and geopolitical uncertainty? It’s about creating flexible, robust strategies that can adapt to changing conditions while protecting your financial security.

Modern retirement planning must account for longer lifespans, lower expected returns, higher healthcare costs, and increased market volatility. It’s no longer sufficient to simply accumulate assets and hope for the best. Today’s retirees need sophisticated strategies that address sequence-of-returns risk, inflation protection, and income sustainability.

The key is to work with professionals who understand these complexities and can help you implement appropriate strategies before you need them. This can include:

  • Setting up guardrails
  • Building proper cash buffers
  • Optimizing your Social Security strategy

The time to plan is before the crisis hits.

Moving Forward with Confidence

While the current market volatility related to the Iran conflict is concerning, it’s important to remember that markets have weathered similar storms before. The key is having proper retirement strategies in place and the discipline to stick with them during challenging periods.

If you’re approaching retirement with over a million dollars in savings and feeling uncertain about how to navigate these turbulent times, you’re not alone. The strategies outlined here—from guardrails frameworks to cash buffers to strategic Social Security timing—have helped countless retirees successfully navigate market volatility.

The most important thing is to avoid making emotional decisions based on short-term market movements. Instead, focus on building a robust plan that can adapt to changing conditions while protecting your long-term financial security. Remember, you can’t time the markets perfectly. However, you can prepare for volatility and position yourself to weather whatever storms may come.

Managing market volatility in retirement isn’t about predicting the future. It’s about being prepared for multiple scenarios and having the flexibility to adapt as conditions change. With proper planning and professional guidance, you can maintain confidence in your financial future regardless of what global events may unfold.

At Imagine Financial Security, we help individuals over 50 with at least a million dollars saved navigate these complex retirement decisions. If you are looking to

  • Maximize your retirement spending
  • Minimize your lifetime tax bill
  • Worry less about money

You can start by taking our Retirement Readiness Questionnaire on our website at www.imaginefinancialsecurity.com, so we can learn more about how we can help you on your journey to and through retirement.

Not quite ready to take the questionnaire, but want helpful tips and resources? Sign up for our monthly newsletter and/or subscribe to our YouTube channel. This is for general education purposes only and should not be considered as tax, legal, or investment advice.