Firefighter Pension Maximization Case Study: Strategy in Action

See How One Firefighter Protected His Family and Increased His Retirement Income

Pension maximization can seem complicated in theory—but it’s often easier to understand in practice.

That’s why we’ve created this case study based on real-world numbers and scenarios (anonymized for privacy) to show exactly how a firefighter used life insurance to maximize his pension, protect his spouse, and boost his monthly income.

If you’re nearing retirement, this is the kind of side-by-side analysis you need to make the right decision.


Meet “John”: A Firefighter Nearing Retirement

✅ Age: 52
✅ Years of service: 28
✅ Final average salary: $80,000/year
✅ Pension multiplier: 3% per year

John is ready to retire after nearly three decades of service. He’s married to Sarah, age 50.

He wants:

✅ Enough monthly income to enjoy retirement comfortably
✅ To make sure Sarah is protected if he dies first
✅ A smart plan to beat inflation over the long haul


John’s Pension Options

Based on his service and salary, John’s base pension calculation is:

✅ 28 years × 3% = 84% of final average salary
✅ Annual pension = $67,200
✅ Monthly pension = $5,600

His pension system offers:

✅ Single-Life Option

    • $5,600/month for life

    • Stops at death

✅ 100% Joint-and-Survivor Option

    • $4,750/month for life

    • Continues at $4,750/month to Sarah if John dies first

Cost of Survivor Benefit:
$5,600 – $4,750 = $850/month reduction
That’s $10,200/year less, every year.


The Lifetime Cost of the Survivor Election

If John and Sarah both live 30 years in retirement, choosing the 100% survivor option costs them:

✅ $10,200/year × 30 years = $306,000

That’s over a quarter-million dollars in lost income to buy survivor coverage from the pension system.

John wondered:

“Is there a better way to protect Sarah?”


Exploring Pension Maximization

John considered pension maximization as an alternative strategy:

✅ Elect the single-life pension for $5,600/month.
✅ Use part of the extra $850/month to buy life insurance.
✅ Leave the rest as extra spendable income.


Getting a Life Insurance Quote

John worked with an advisor who specializes in firefighters.

✅ Age: 52
✅ Excellent health
✅ Non-smoker

For $400/month, he could secure a $500,000 permanent life insurance policy.

✅ Tax-free death benefit for Sarah
✅ Guaranteed for life

This policy would cost less than half of the pension’s built-in survivor reduction.


John’s Pension Maximization Math

✅ Single-life pension: $5,600/month
✅ Insurance premium: $400/month
✅ Net monthly income: $5,200

Compared to the 100% survivor option at $4,750/month:

✅ + $450/month extra income while both are alive
✅ + $500,000 tax-free to Sarah if John dies first

Even if John died early in retirement, Sarah would receive more than the survivor pension would have provided—and in a flexible, lump-sum format she could invest or spend as needed.


Benefits for John and Sarah

✅ Higher Income Now
They keep an extra $450/month for travel, hobbies, and healthcare.

✅ Flexible Protection for Sarah
The $500,000 death benefit can replace pension income, pay off debt, or be invested for inflation-adjusted withdrawals.

✅ Tax-Free Legacy
Life insurance proceeds aren’t taxed as income.

✅ Potential Cost Savings
Over 30 years, they’d spend ~$144,000 in premiums (400 × 12 × 30) instead of $306,000 in lost pension income.

✅ Inflation Hedge
Unlike a fixed survivor annuity, the insurance payout can be invested for growth.


Important Considerations They Weighed

John and Sarah didn’t make the decision blindly. They also considered:

✅ Health underwriting: John qualified for good rates now, but waiting might have made insurance more expensive or unavailable.
✅ Longevity risk: If John lived well into his 90s, the pension’s survivor option would have been cheaper over time.
✅ Inflation planning: They discussed investing part of the death benefit to protect against rising costs.
✅ Sarah’s needs: They chose coverage large enough to replace pension income for decades.


The Final Decision

After reviewing all the numbers side by side, John and Sarah chose pension maximization.

✅ Higher income for their retirement lifestyle
✅ Full protection for Sarah if John passed first
✅ More control, flexibility, and potential savings over their lifetimes


How PensionLift Helps Firefighters Like John

At PensionLift, we help firefighters and their families:

✅ Review pension options and survivor election costs
✅ Price out tailored life insurance solutions
✅ Model side-by-side scenarios like John’s
✅ Factor in inflation, COLA, and DROP plans
✅ Create clear, customized retirement strategies

Our mission: Help you keep more of your pension while ensuring your spouse is fully protected.


Take the Next Step

Ready to see your own numbers? Don’t guess at the biggest retirement decision you’ll make.

Schedule Your Free Pension Strategy Call

We’ll help you build your own maximization plan with personalized, professional guidance.


Related Reading

👉 Firefighter Pension Maximization Guide 
👉 How Firefighter Pension Survivorship Elections Work
👉 Using Life Insurance to Maximize Firefighter Pensions

 

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