California public safety members — police officers, deputies, firefighters, corrections officers, probation officers — retire under some of the most generous pension formulas in the country. But almost none pay into Social Security. That means your county pension plus a 457(b) Deferred Comp account are it. Get the 457(b) right and you retire comfortably at 50 or 55. Get it wrong and you outlive a rich-looking pension check that was never designed to carry a 30-year retirement alone. Capital Wealth works with every one of California's 20 county retirement systems plus CalPERS Safety.
Most police officers, firefighters, deputies, and probation officers work under one of three pension system categories in California. The formulas differ, but the planning principles are the same: understand your pension, fill the Social Security gap with a 457(b), and protect the survivor benefit with life insurance.
Covers most city police, city fire, California Highway Patrol, state corrections, and many local agency safety employees. Classic tier: 3% at 50 or 3% at 55. PEPRA tier: 2.7% at 57. Runs through the state CalPERS system.
20 California counties operate independent pension systems under the County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 (the "1937 Act"). Examples: LACERA (LA County), OCERS (Orange), SBCERA (San Bernardino), SDCERA (San Diego). Safety tiers in each.
Los Angeles Fire & Police Pensions (LAFPP) is a standalone city plan for LAPD and LAFD. Other cities like San Francisco (SFERS) operate their own safety tiers. A small handful of fire districts have independent plans as well.
Safety members accrue pension benefits faster than general members because of shorter careers and higher physical demands. CalPERS Safety uses the same formula as General — final compensation times years of service times an age factor — but the factor schedule is richer and the minimum retirement age is lower.
The CalPERS Safety monthly pension formula:
Minimum retirement age: 50 under Classic tier (3% at 50 / 3% at 55); 50 under PEPRA (2.7% at 57) — though the factor at age 50 is heavily reduced. Normal retirement is where the factor hits its nominal value (50 for 3%@50, 55 for 3%@55, 57 for 2.7%@57). Most officers retire at exactly the normal retirement age to capture the full factor.
| Age | Factor |
|---|---|
| 50+ | 3.000% |
| 49 | 2.700% |
| 48 | 2.400% |
| 47 | 2.100% |
| 46 | 1.800% |
The most generous safety tier. 3.0% factor at age 50 plus 25% automatic survivor continuance for eligible spouse. Capped at 90% of final compensation regardless of service years.
| Age | Factor |
|---|---|
| 50 | 2.000% |
| 52 | 2.200% |
| 54 | 2.400% |
| 55 | 2.500% |
| 56 | 2.600% |
| 57+ | 2.700% |
Applies to all safety members hired on/after 1/1/2013. Final comp based on highest 36 consecutive months. Pensionable compensation capped at the PEPRA limit (non-SS members: $178,820 for 2026).
Worked example. A city police officer retires at age 50 under CalPERS Safety 3% at 50, 25 years of service, $145,000 final compensation (highest 12 months):
Same officer under PEPRA 2.7% at 57 at age 57 with 25 years of service and $140,000 final comp (highest 36 months):
Classic-tier safety is about 15% richer at a lower retirement age. That's why the 457(b) math differs for pre-2013 vs post-2013 safety members — PEPRA officers need more personal savings to hit the same income target.
Plug in your tier, retirement age, years of service, and final compensation. The calculator applies the CalPERS Safety age-factor schedule, caps at the 90% of final compensation maximum, and shows you the monthly check, the income-replacement percentage, and a chart of how the benefit changes if you retire at a different age.
Final comp = highest 12 consecutive months under Classic, highest 36 months under PEPRA. PEPRA caps pensionable comp at $178,820 in 2026 for non-Social-Security members.
Estimates only. Actual benefit depends on your specific tier election, reciprocity, IRC 415(b) limits, optional survivor elections (Option 1, 2, 2W, 3, 3W, 4), and any post-retirement COLA. Run a final calc through your retirement system before making decisions.
Twenty California counties operate their own pension systems under the 1937 Act, independent of CalPERS. Each has a General tier (for civilian employees) and a Safety tier (for deputies, probation, corrections, and in some cases fire). The plan numbers and normal retirement ages vary by county — click your system for the detail we keep on file.
If your client is LAPD, LAFD, SFPD, SFFD, San Jose PD/FD, or another big-city officer or firefighter, they are not in CalPERS or the 1937 Act — they are in a standalone city retirement system. Those plans get their own section below.
Most California cities enroll their officers and firefighters in CalPERS Safety, but a handful of large cities operate their own standalone retirement systems with their own tiers, formulas, and plan administrators. If your member is LAPD, LAFD, SFPD, SFFD, San Jose PD/FD, or San Diego City PD/FD, they are in one of these plans. Click your system for the safety tier breakdown.
California Highway Patrol officers are in CalPERS Safety — they are not in their own standalone plan. Use the calculator at the top of this page with the appropriate tier: Classic 3% at 50 for officers hired before 1/1/2013, or PEPRA 2.7% at 57 for officers hired on or after 1/1/2013. CHP enjoys the most generous CalPERS Safety formula schedule and is one of the original peace-officer/firefighter (POFF) categories. Final compensation is highest 12 consecutive months under Classic / highest 36 months under PEPRA.
LA County Sheriff deputies, LA County Fire (unincorporated areas), probation officers, and DA investigators are in LACERA. It has seven plans (A-G) depending on hire date. Pre-2013 safety hires are generally in Plan B. PEPRA-tier safety hires (on/after 1/1/13 without reciprocity) are in Plan G Safety.
| Age | Factor |
|---|---|
| 40 | 2.000% |
| 45 | 2.350% |
| 50+ | 3.000% |
Safety members qualify for service retirement at age 50 with 10 years of service, or any age with 20+ years. No career factor. Final compensation = highest 12 consecutive months.
| Age | Factor |
|---|---|
| 50 | 2.000% |
| 53 | 2.300% |
| 55 | 2.500% |
| 57+ | 2.700% |
Service retirement at age 50 with 5 years of service. Final comp = highest 36 consecutive months. Pensionable compensation capped at the PEPRA limit.
Most California safety members do not pay into Social Security through their safety employment. That single fact changes the entire retirement planning picture. Your county pension or CalPERS Safety benefit is designed to replace 70–90% of your final compensation at normal retirement — which sounds great, until you realize you'll retire at age 50 or 55 with a 30+ year retirement ahead of you, no Social Security ever starting (or starting at a reduced level through WEP), and inflation eating the purchasing power of your pension check by half over three decades.
A CalPERS Safety 3% at 50 officer retires at 50 with $108,750/year pension. Assume 2% COLA and 3% inflation. By age 80 — 30 years into retirement — the pension's purchasing power has dropped by roughly 26%. No Social Security coming at 67. Medicare doesn't cover long-term care. The 457(b) you built during your working years is what fills that gap, funds the early-retirement years, bridges to Medicare, and provides the flexibility a fixed pension never will.
The CalPERS or county pension replaces ~75% of final compensation for most safety careers. A comfortable retirement typically targets 85–100% of final pay. That 10–25% gap is what your 457(b) exists to fill — plus the rising-cost and early-retirement needs above.
To produce $36,250/year at a 4% safe withdrawal rate, you need roughly $906,000 in a 457(b) or IRA at retirement. That sounds like a lot, but safety careers are uniquely suited to get there — which is the entire point of the 457(b).
A 457(b) is a deferred compensation plan offered by state and local governments — including every California county, CHP, state, CalPERS employers, and almost every city. For safety members, it's the single most powerful retirement savings tool available. It stacks cleanly on top of your pension.
Money comes out of your paycheck before federal and California state income tax. Your taxable W-2 drops dollar-for-dollar by what you contribute.
Most plans also offer a Roth version. Contributions are after-tax, but all growth and future withdrawals are tax-free — valuable if you expect to be in a high tax bracket in retirement.
The 457(b) is the only retirement account with no 10% early withdrawal penalty for separation from service at any age. Retire at 50? Pull from the 457(b) immediately — no penalty.
The "Pre-Retirement Catch-Up" lets you contribute up to 2× the normal limit in the three years before normal retirement age. Potentially $49,000/year for three consecutive years.
| Layer | Limit |
|---|---|
| 457(b) standard contribution | $24,500 |
| Age 50+ catch-up | +$8,000 |
| Age 60–63 super catch-up | +$11,250 |
| 3-year pre-retirement catch-up | +$24,500 |
| Max combined (3-yr catch-up) | $49,000 |
You can choose either the age-50 catch-up OR the 3-year pre-retirement catch-up in any given year, but not both. The 3-year version usually wins.
| Separate annual limit | Yes |
| Shares limit with 401(k)? | No |
| Shares limit with 403(b)? | No |
| Allows Roth? | Most plans |
| Rollover in-service at 59.5 | Most plans |
| RMDs begin | Age 73/75 |
A safety member with a second job that offers a 401(k) (moonlighting as a trainer, security consultant, etc.) can max both plans in the same year — effectively doubling their pre-tax capacity.
The single most powerful feature of a 457(b) for safety members is the 3-Year Pre-Retirement Catch-Up provision. In the three calendar years before your plan's normal retirement age, you can contribute up to double the normal annual limit — but only if you have unused contribution room from prior years to "recapture."
How it works. If your plan's normal retirement age is 50 (typical for 3%@50 safety) and you never maxed the 457(b) in your early career, you can catch up in 2026, 2027, and 2028 — contributing up to $49,000/year (double the $24,500 standard limit), for a potential $147,000 of additional pre-tax savings in those three years.
At a 44% combined marginal tax rate (CA + federal), that's roughly $65,000 in cash tax savings across three years, plus the tax-deferred growth on the full contribution through retirement.
Capital Wealth runs the eligibility calculation for every client to confirm the available catch-up window, then sets up automatic payroll deferrals in the county's plan to capture every dollar. For many safety members, this is the difference between retiring comfortably at 50 and having to work additional years.
Together we log into myCalPERS or your county system portal (LACERA, OCERS, SBCERA, etc.) and download a current benefit estimate at 3 retirement ages.
We determine if your agency participates in Social Security (most don't) and model Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) if you have non-safety work history on file.
Final compensation minus projected pension equals the annual income your 457(b) must produce. We target 4% safe withdrawal to back into a savings target.
Most safety members benefit from a split — pre-tax while earning top-tier pay, Roth in the early career and retirement-catch-up years.
If you're within 3 years of normal retirement, we file the catch-up election with your employer's plan and max the boosted limits.
We model life-only vs joint-survivor with an insurance overlay — safety members' spouses deserve a survivor strategy built on real numbers. Run the calculator →
Police officer retires at 50 with 25 yrs service, $145K final. Pension $108K/yr. 457(b) with $900K balance pays $36K/yr at 4% SWR. Retire at 50, no Social Security gap penalty — the 457(b) has no early-withdrawal penalty.
Sheriff civilian retires at 62 with 30 yrs service, $105K final. Pension $76K/yr. Plus Social Security ~$32K starting at 67. Bridge income from 457(b) ages 62-66 covers the SS gap.
Teacher retires at 62 with 30 yrs service, $95K final. Pension $66K/yr (with career factor). No Social Security through teaching (WEP applies to any outside work). 403(b) of $500K pays $20K/yr at 4% SWR.
Send us your most recent CalPERS or county benefit statement and current 457(b) balance. We'll model your retirement at multiple ages, flag the 3-year pre-retirement catch-up window, and show you what your pension + 457(b) look like together through life expectancy. No obligation.
Book a Safety Pension Review