Serving Those Who Served
Transitioning from military service to civilian life is one of the most complex financial transitions a family can navigate. In a matter of months, your income structure, benefits, tax situation, housing, and insurance can all change simultaneously. At Clear Insight Wealth Management, military transitions are a core part of our practice — we have the experience to help you make confident decisions at every step.
We are a founding member of the Military Financial Advisors Association (MFAA) and have worked extensively with active duty service members, retirees, and their families. We understand military pay, pensions, benefits, and the unique financial decisions that come with leaving the service.
Common Financial Questions During Military Transition
What happens to my military pension when I leave the service?
If you have served 20 or more years, your military pension provides a steady lifetime income that forms the foundation of your retirement plan. We help you integrate your pension with new civilian income, optimize your tax strategy, and coordinate your pension with other retirement savings to build long-term financial security.
What should I do with my TSP when I separate?
The Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) is one of the best retirement savings vehicles available. When you leave the military, you have several options: leave your TSP where it is, roll it into a civilian employer's 401(k), or roll it into an IRA. The right choice depends on your new employer's plan, your investment needs, and your overall retirement strategy. We help you evaluate all options before making this important decision.
How does the Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) work?
The Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) provides a monthly benefit to your surviving spouse or eligible beneficiaries if you die before them. Electing SBP at retirement is an irrevocable decision that must be made at separation. We walk you through the cost-benefit analysis so you can make an informed decision — and coordinate SBP with life insurance, estate planning, and any special needs planning for your family.
What are my health insurance options after leaving the military?
TRICARE continues to be available to military retirees and their families, though the options and costs change at separation. Many civilian employers also offer health insurance, sometimes with stipends for employees who waive coverage. We help you compare TRICARE options alongside employer plans to identify the right combination for your family with no coverage gaps.
Should I use my VA loan benefit to buy a home?
VA loans offer significant advantages: no down payment requirement, no private mortgage insurance, and competitive rates. However, they are not always the best option for every situation. We help you compare VA and conventional loan options in the context of your overall financial plan, budget for relocation costs, and make a housing decision that supports your long-term goals.
Client Story: Jack & Jill’s Transition to Civilian Life
After 25 years of service, Jack was ready to trade his uniforms for a fresh start. Jill was ready to leave most recent job and embrace their transition to civilian life. Their transition was exciting — a move across the country, a new home, and encore careers. But with so many changes at once, they faced the same challenges that most military families encounter when stepping into civilian life.
Here’s how Clear Insight Wealth Management helped them — and how we help many families like them.
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Jack’s military pension was steady. However, this was the first time they were both looking for new jobs. Jack’s new civilian job came with a great salary, a 401(k) with matching, and stock options. Jill’s new job was as a state employee with pension options, deferred compensation, and a 403b. Suddenly, their income picture looked very different from their years in uniform.
Our Approach: We built a financial plan that integrated their pensions, civilian salaries, and new retirement benefits so they could grow wealth without paying unnecessary taxes.
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Losing SGLI and navigating new health plans can be overwhelming. Both Jack and Jill’s employer offered health insurance and stock options, but they weren’t sure how to fit those together with TRICARE. Jack’s employer offered a health care stipend for employees who did not claim coverage. Jill’s employer had generous family benefits.
Our Approach: We walked them through their health, dental, and life insurance options, making sure there were no coverage gaps and helping them choose the right mix of benefits.
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Relocating across the country meant making a big housing decision. Jack and Jill wanted to use their VA loan benefit, but weren’t sure if it was their best option.
Our Approach: We helped them compare VA and conventional loans, budget for hidden relocation costs, and choose financing that kept their mortgage in line with their long-term goals.
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Between Jack’s pension, new salary, stock options, and Jill’s salary, their tax picture became much more complex than when they were in uniform. In addition they suddenly found themselves subject to state and local income taxes for the first time in more than two decades.
Our Approach: We created a tax strategy to minimize bracket creep, plan for stock option taxation, and take advantage of deductions available in their new state of residence.
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Jack and Jill also wanted to ensure their children — including one with special needs — would be cared for long into the future.
Our Approach: We helped them define their estate planning goals, integrated their Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP), and coordinated with special needs planning options to protect their child’s eligibility for benefits and provide for long term security. All while ensuring that they built a solid plan for their other children.
The Outcome
Today, Jack and Jill are thriving in their encore careers, living in their dream home, and building toward the future they envisioned after the military. With a solid plan in place, they’ve gone from uncertainty and stress to clarity — and now have the confidence to say yes to the life they worked so hard to earn.
Military Transition FAQs
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We provide comprehensive financial planning designed specifically for the military-to-civilian transition. This includes integrating your military pension with civilian income, optimizing your TSP or rolling it to an IRA, navigating TRICARE and new health insurance options, evaluating VA loan benefits, planning for the tax changes that come with civilian employment, and coordinating the Survivor Benefit Plan with your estate plan.
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Some of the most important financial decisions at military separation include: Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) election at retirement, TSP rollover or continuation decisions, health insurance selection (TRICARE vs. civilian employer), life insurance transition from SGLI to civilian coverage, housing decisions including whether to use VA loan benefits, and retirement savings strategy with a new civilian employer. Many of these decisions are irrevocable, so getting guidance before you separate is critical.
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Yes. We work with active duty service members as well as those approaching transition and military retirees. Active duty clients often benefit from financial planning around TSP contribution strategy, deployment financial planning, benefit optimization, and preparation for an eventual transition to civilian life.