- What is a pension?
- Do I have to do anything to manage my pension?
- What if I leave my company before I retire?
- How does vesting work?
- When can I access my pension money?
- Can I take out a loan from my pension plan?
- Should I take a lump-sum payout or monthly payments?
- What are the advantages of taking a lump sum?
- Should I invest my lump-sum payout in an annuity?
- What's the difference between a single-life annuity and a joint-and-survivor annuity?
- Will I pay tax on my pension payouts?
- How should my pension affect my retirement planning?
- Will having a public-sector pension affect my Social Security?
Whether you'll get pension payouts from a former employer when you retire depends on how long you held that job. The less time you spent with that employer, the smaller your payout tends to be. Moreover, your right to "keep" your traditional pension benefit is determined by your employer's vesting schedule.
Unlike 401(k)s, pensions aren't portable. You can't move a traditional pension account to your new employer or into an IRA rollover when you leave a job. (A cash-balance plan, by contrast, allows you to take your money with you when you leave a job.)
When you reach retirement age, you need to get back in touch with the folks who run the pension for your old company and apply for your benefit.