Welcome to Teachers Financial Vibes
Over 55% of Teachers Don't Understand Their Retirement Plans. Which Stage Are You?
Why Teachers Choose TFV
Stop Losing $557,000 to 403(b) Fees
- Current reality: Teachers pay 1.2-1.8% fees (some pay 3-4%)
- What you should pay: Under 0.5%
- Over 30 years: That’s $557,000 lost
Navigate Your State’s Pension System
- 10 states covered with exact formulas
- Example: “California teachers: 2% at 60 vs 2% at 62 – which are you?”
- “Texas Rule of 80 calculator inside”
Survive the Summer Income Gap
- $45K salary = $9,000 gap | $75K salary = $15,000 gap
- Calculator shows exactly how much to save by May
- Summer income strategies: Tutoring $25-$80/hr, Summer school $33/hr avg
Get Your Student Loans Forgiven (Actually)
- PSLF approval rate: 93.3% (up from 1%!)
- 1 million+ teachers approved, $74B+ forgiven
- TLF: $17,500 for STEM/special ed, $5,000 others
Frequently Asked Questions
Short Answer: Yes, but not for the same teaching years.
Here's How It Works:
Think of it like running two separate races, one after the other.
Strategy:
- Years 1-5: Apply for Teacher Loan Forgiveness (TLF)
- Get $17,500 forgiven if you teach math, science, or special ed
- Get $5,000 forgiven if you teach other subjects
- Years 6-15: Switch to Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)
- Get your remaining balance completely forgiven
Real Example: Sarah starts teaching with $80,000 in student loans.
- After 5 years: TLF forgives $17,500 → Balance down to $62,500
- After 10 MORE years (year 15 total): PSLF forgives the remaining $62,500 → $0 balance
Bottom Line: Use TLF first as a "down payment," then finish with PSLF for the rest.
Short Answer: For many teachers, one more year can mean $250,000+ more in lifetime retirement income.
Real Story:
Maria is a New York teacher, age 55, with 29 years of service:
- If she retires now: $29,400 per year for life
- If she works ONE more year: $42,000 per year for life
The Math:
- Extra income per year: $12,600
- If she lives to age 75 (20 years): $12,600 × 20 = $252,000 more
- If she lives to age 85 (30 years): $12,600 × 30 = $378,000 more
Why Such a Big Jump?
Pension formulas multiply your years × a percentage × your salary. That 30th year often hits a "sweet spot" in the formula, plus your final salary is usually your highest.
The Trade-Off:
Working one more year means:
- ✓ You earn: ~$60,000 salary PLUS $252,000+ in extra lifetime pension
- ✗ You lose: One year of retirement freedom
Use Our Calculator: Every teacher's situation is different based on your state's pension formula.
Short Answer: High fees can cost you over half a million dollars in retirement savings.
The Shocking Math:
Let's say you have $500,000 saved in your 403(b) and 30 years until retirement.
Scenario 1: High Fees (2%)
- Your final balance: $1,254,000
- Total fees you paid: $746,000
Scenario 2: Low Fees (0.5%)
- Your final balance: $1,811,000
- Total fees you paid: $189,000
The Difference: You lose $557,000 by paying high fees instead of low fees.
Here's Why This Happens:
Fees don't just take your money once—they take it every single year. And then you lose out on the growth that money would have earned. It compounds against you.
Simple Example:
- If you have $100,000 and it grows 7% but you pay 2% in fees, you only keep 5%
- Over 30 years, that 2% difference turns into a $557,000 difference
What Fees Should You Pay?
- ✓ Good: Under 0.5% per year
- ⚠️ Okay: 0.5% - 1% per year
- ❌ Bad: Over 1% per year
- 🚨 Terrible: Over 2% per year (get out now!)
Action Step: Check Your 403(b) Fees, Most teachers don't even know what they're paying. We'll help you find out in 2 minutes.