FRS Pension Plan vs. Investment Plan: How to Choose
“Did I choose the wrong plan?”
If that question has hit you on the drive home — or at 2 a.m. — you’re not alone. It’s the most common worry I hear from FRS members.
So here’s the honest answer almost no one gives you: there’s no better FRS plan. There’s the right one for your life. One plan is built for people who want certainty. The other for people who want control.
How most people try to decide — and why it leaves them stuck
You picked a plan years ago, maybe on a form you barely had time to read. Now the choice is back, and you want to get it right.
Most people try to settle it the same three ways:
- They ask a coworker what they did. But their hire date, their job class, and their family aren’t yours.
- They skim the MyFRS guide or run the calculator. It hands you a number — not what that number means for your taxes, your spouse, or your health insurance.
- They tell themselves they’ll figure it out later. By then, some of the biggest choices are already locked in.
None of that is wrong. It’s just not enough — because the plan you pick is only the first domino.
The difference in one sentence
A pension is a paycheck someone else promises to send you for the remainder of your retirement years. The Investment Plan is a pot of money you grow yourself — and then turn into your own paycheck.
Everything else is detail. Here’s the detail.
What the FRS Pension Plan is
The Pension Plan is a guaranteed check for life.
You don’t manage a dime of it. FRS runs a formula — your years of service, your age, and your highest-earning years — and turns it into a check that lands every month after you retire, for as long as you live. Choose the right option and that check can protect your spouse, too.
The longer you serve, the bigger it gets. You’re vested — meaning the benefit is truly yours — after eight years (or six, if you were first enrolled before July 1, 2011).
The catch: you give up control. That money isn’t yours to move, tap early, or leave to your kids.
The Pension Plan trades flexibility for certainty.
What the FRS Investment Plan is
The Investment Plan is your money, in your name, that you invest.
Money goes in from you and your employer, you choose how it’s invested, and what you retire with depends on how much went in and how it grew. You’re vested in one year, and it’s portable — leave FRS-covered work and the balance goes with you. Since 2018 it’s been the default for most new hires; about 75% land in it, many without ever actively choosing it (Florida SBA, FY 2024–25 Annual Investment Report).
The catch: there’s no guaranteed check. When you retire, this balance becomes your paycheck — and it has to last as long as you do.
The Investment Plan trades certainty for control.
FRS Pension Plan vs. Investment Plan: side by side
| Pension Plan | Investment Plan | |
|---|---|---|
| Plan type | Defined benefit — a guaranteed monthly check for life | Defined contribution — an account you own and invest |
| Who invests the money | FRS does it for you | You choose from a menu of funds |
| Who carries the market risk | FRS | You |
| When it’s yours (vesting) | 8 years (6 if hired before July 1, 2011) | 1 year |
| Retirement income | A set monthly check for life | Depends on your balance and how you draw it — no guaranteed check |
| Yearly raises (COLA — a raise that helps your check keep up with prices) | 3% on service earned before July 1, 2011; none on later service | None built in — growth depends on your investments |
| If you leave FRS work | Built to reward a long career; limited portability | Fully portable — take your vested balance with you |
| Leaving money to family | Survivor options you choose at retirement | Whatever’s left goes to your beneficiary |
| Default for new hires (since 2018) | No | Yes — most new hires |
| Fits people who want | Certainty and a long public-service career | Control, flexibility, and portability |
You get one one-time “second election” to switch plans while actively employed. Sources: MyFRS (Comparing the Plans — Vesting & Cost-of-Living Adjustments); Florida SBA, FY 2024–25 Annual Investment Report.
So which one is right for you?
It comes down to one honest question:
Do you want a check you can count on, or an account you can control?
Neither answer is wrong. A guaranteed check is peace of mind that never stops, even if you live to 95 — but the money isn’t yours to move or pass on. A balance you control is yours to invest and leave behind — but the risk sits with you.
A few questions sort it fast:
- How long will you stay in FRS-covered work? A long career leans Pension. A shorter or uncertain one leans Investment Plan.
- How do you feel when the market drops? If a bad year would keep you up at night, certainty is worth a lot. But here’s the other side: if retirement is still years away, time is on your side — a down market gives your money room to recover before you ever touch it. The longer your runway, the less a rough year stings.
- What does your spouse need if you go first? That answer alone changes the math for many families.
The plan you pick is only the first domino
Here’s the part that catches people off guard.
You get one chance to switch plans — the “second election.” So the plan choice isn’t even forever.
But the decisions that come after it usually are:
- The retirement date you pick.
- The DROP window you enter — or miss. (DROP — a program that lets pension members lock in their benefit and keep working for a few years.)
- The payout option you sign.
- The day you take your first distribution — the moment you start pulling money out.
Most of those can’t be undone. Get one wrong and it can quietly cost you — or your spouse — for the rest of your life.
That’s why this matters. Not the plan you’re in. The chain of decisions your plan sets off as retirement gets close. It’s why the questions stop being “how does a pension work” and start being personal:
- “Can I actually afford to retire in five years?”
- “Will my pension be enough?”
- “Which payout option protects my spouse if I go first?”
- “If I roll my money out, am I making a mistake I can’t take back?”
What I actually believe — and how I help
If you’re in the Investment Plan, here’s what I believe: for the right person, it’s one of the most powerful tools the FRS offers. But most members never learn how their money is actually invested. Close that gap — the right mix for your situation, plus time — and it can give you a retirement you’re genuinely proud of.
If you’re in the Pension Plan, here’s what’s great about it: while you keep working and drawing a paycheck, you’re building a guaranteed retirement benefit at the same time. That can feel like a grand slam.
But here’s the other side. Same plan — two very different realities:
- Regular Class members — most FRS employees (teachers, county, city, and state workers) — retire on an average pension of about $1,933 a month (roughly $23,200 a year).
- Special Risk members — law enforcement, firefighters, and correctional officers — retire on an average pension of about $4,600 a month (roughly $55,200 a year).
Figures derived from the FRS Pension Plan actuarial valuation, 2025.
For many Regular Class members, that check alone doesn’t feel like enough — especially with the cost of living climbing every year. That’s why your DROP savings [the money that builds up while you’re in DROP] matter so much:
- Done right, it’s the difference between getting by and feeling secure.
- And the date you pick and the option you choose? That’s where pensions are quietly won or lost — and you only choose once.
Either way, the hard part isn’t the plan. It’s seeing how your choice connects to everything else — your taxes, your health insurance before Medicare, your spouse, your Social Security.
That’s the conversation I help you have. We put your whole picture on one page, in plain English, so you can decide once and never look back.
Frequently asked questions
Can I switch between the FRS Pension Plan and Investment Plan?
Yes — once. Every FRS member gets a one-time "2nd Election" to move from one plan to the other, in either direction. To use it, you must be an actively employed FRS member receiving salary. It is a real do-over, but you only get one.
Is the Pension Plan or the Investment Plan better?
Neither is better on its own — it depends on you. What matters most: how long you will stay in FRS-covered work, how you handle market ups and downs, and what your spouse and family need. The right answer for your coworker can be the wrong answer for you.
I am close to retirement — does my plan choice still matter?
It matters, but the bigger decisions are the ones that come next: when to retire, how to turn your plan into income that lasts, and — if you are in the Pension Plan — your DROP timing and payout options. Many of those cannot be undone. That is when a second set of eyes pays off most.
What happens to my Investment Plan money if I leave Florida state employment?
Your Investment Plan account is portable. Once you are vested — after one year of service — the balance is yours. If you leave FRS-covered work, you can keep it invested in the plan or roll it over. The Pension Plan works differently and rewards a longer career.
How long until I am vested in each plan?
The Investment Plan vests after one year of service. The Pension Plan vests after eight years (or six years if you were first enrolled in the FRS before July 1, 2011). Source: MyFRS, Comparing the Plans — Vesting.