1653.2—Qualifying retirement benefits court orders.
(a)
To be qualifying, and thus enforceable against the TSP, a retirement benefits court order must meet the following requirements:
(1)
The order must expressly relate to the Thrift Savings Plan account of a TSP participant. This means that:
(i)
The order must expressly refer to the “Thrift Savings Plan” or describe the TSP in such a way that it cannot be confused with other Federal Government retirement benefits or non-Federal retirement benefits;
(ii)
The order must be written in terms appropriate to a defined contribution plan rather than a defined benefit plan. For example, it should generally refer to the participant's TSP account or TSP account balance rather than a benefit formula or the participant's eventual benefits; and
(iii)
If the participant has a civilian TSP account and a uniformed services TSP account, the order must expressly identify the account to which it relates.
(2)
The order must either require the TSP to freeze the participant's account to preserve the status quo pending final resolution of the parties' rights to the participant's TSP account, or to make a payment from the participant's account to a permissible payee.
(iv)
The following examples would qualify to require payment from the TSP, although ambiguous or conflicting language used elsewhere could cause the order to be rejected.
Example (1). ORDERED: [payee's name, Social Security number (SSN), and address] is awarded $____ from the [civilian or uniformed services] Thrift Savings Plan account of [participant's name, account number or SSN, and address].
Example (2). ORDERED: [payee's name, SSN, and address] is awarded ____% of the [civilian and/or uniformed services] Thrift Savings Plan account[s] of [participant's name, account number or SSN, and address] as of [date].
Example (3). ORDERED: [payee's name, SSN, and address] is awarded [fraction] of the [civilian and/or uniformed services] Thrift Savings Plan account[s] of [participant's name, account number or SSN, and address] as of [date].
Code of Federal Regulations
(4)
A court order can require a payment only to a spouse, former spouse, child or dependent of a participant.
(b)
The following retirement benefits court orders are not qualifying and thus are not enforceable against the TSP:
(2)
An order relating to a TSP account that contains only nonvested money, unless the money will become vested within 30 days of the date the TSP receives the order if the participant were to remain in Federal service;
(3)
An order requiring the return to the TSP of money that was properly paid pursuant to an earlier court order;
(4)
An order requiring the TSP to make a payment in the future, unless the present value of the payee's entitlement can be calculated, in which case the TSP will make the payment currently; and
(5)
An order that does not specify the account to which the order applies, if the participant has both a civilian TSP account and a uniformed services TSP account.