Starting January 2026, the Thrift Savings Plan will offer in-plan Roth conversions for the first time. This update brings a tax planning strategy to federal employees that's been available in private-sector 401(k) plans for years.
Here's what you need to know about how it works, why it matters, and what to consider before converting.
A Roth conversion moves money from your Traditional TSP (pre-tax) to your Roth TSP (after-tax). You pay income taxes on the converted amount in the year you convert, but after that, the money grows tax-free and comes out tax-free in retirement.
Think of it as paying your tax bill now to eliminate it later.
The Mechanics: How TSP Conversions Will Work
Starting in January 2026, here's what the process looks like:
If you don't already have a Roth TSP balance, your first conversion will create one.
Roth conversions let you create a pool of tax-free money that you can draw from in retirement, providing flexibility in managing your retirement income.
Beginning in 2024, Roth TSP balances are no longer subject to Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) during the original owner’s lifetime, aligning the TSP with Roth IRA rules under the SECURE 2.0 Act
One reason people consider Roth conversions is the possibility that tax rates could be higher in the future than they are today.
Recent legislation—the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025—extended the individual income tax brackets established under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) beyond 2025. As a result, current federal tax rates are expected to remain in effect unless Congress enacts new changes.
Additionally, once you have multiple income sources in retirement—pension, Social Security, TSP withdrawals, and Required Minimum Distributions—your total taxable income may be higher than you expect.
Here's where TSP conversions differ significantly from IRA conversions: the TSP will not withhold taxes.
When you convert, the full amount moves into your Roth TSP, but you'll need to pay the resulting tax bill from funds outside your TSP—such as a checking or savings account.
This means two things:
The tax liability will depend on the amount you convert and your individual tax situation.
Different life stages create different opportunities:
While still working: your current income may be at its highest point during your career. Many active employees choose to wait until retirement, when income typically decreases.
Recently retired, before claiming Social Security: This is often considered a strategic window. Your income may drop significantly after retirement and before you begin Social Security, potentially creating favorable conversion opportunities. This window often lasts from retirement until you claim Social Security.
Between retirement and Required Minimum Distributions: Before age 73, you control exactly how much you withdraw from your TSP. After 73, the government requires minimum withdrawals whether you need the money or not. Converting before RMDs begin can reduce those future mandatory withdrawals.
Already receiving Social Security and a pension: You may have less flexibility to convert without increasing your income significantly. But smaller strategic conversions might still make sense, especially if you're trying to reduce future RMDs or leave tax-free money to heirs.
The best conversion strategy is rarely "all at once." Instead, many people:
The TSP will release final procedures, forms, and a conversion calculator before the feature launches. In the meantime:
TSP Roth conversions are a significant planning tool, but they're not appropriate for everyone. Success depends entirely on your individual situation, income timeline, and financial goals.
The opportunity is real: pay taxes at current rates to create tax-free income for the rest of your life. But the execution matters. Converting the wrong amount at the wrong time can create problems rather than solving them.
Before January 2026, take time to understand whether conversions fit your situation—and if they do, how much and when to convert.