FEHB Five-Year Rule: 5 Facts to Protect Your Retiree Coverage
The short answer: The FEHB five-year rule generally lets you keep federal health coverage in retirement if you retire on an immediate annuity. You must also have been continuously enrolled in any FEHB plan, or covered as a family member, for the five years before retirement.
For many federal employees, health coverage is one of the most valued parts of the benefits package. The FEHB five-year rule is the test that decides whether that coverage can follow you into retirement. Understanding how it works well before your retirement date may help you avoid an unwelcome surprise.
What is the FEHB five-year rule?
The FEHB five-year rule is the eligibility test for carrying Federal Employees Health Benefits coverage into retirement. According to OPM, you generally must be entitled to retire on an immediate annuity. You must also have been continuously enrolled, or covered as a family member, in any FEHB plan for the five years immediately before your annuity starts.
- Two conditions must both be met. OPM states you must be entitled to retire on an immediate annuity. You must also have been continuously enrolled in FEHB for the required period (OPM Eligibility).
- “Any FEHB plan” counts. The five years do not have to be in the same plan or option; switching plans during Open Season does not reset the clock, per OPM.
- Family member coverage can count. Time covered as a family member under another person’s FEHB enrollment counts toward the five years, according to OPM.
- TRICARE time may count. Time covered under TRICARE can count toward the requirement. This applies if you are enrolled in an FEHB plan on the date you retire (OPM Annuitants reference).
- Waivers exist but are limited. OPM may waive the five-year requirement only in narrow circumstances, and the request must be made to OPM.
What exactly does the five-year enrollment requirement mean?
It means you must have been covered under the FEHB Program for the five years of service immediately before retirement. OPM describes this as continuous enrollment in any FEHB plan, or coverage as a family member, during that window.
An important detail is the word “any.” You do not need to stay in one plan or one option for five years. Changing carriers, switching from Self Only to Self Plus One, or moving plans during Open Season does not interrupt the count. The key is that some FEHB coverage stays in place.
What if you have fewer than five years of service?
OPM addresses this directly. If you have been eligible for FEHB for less than five years, a different test applies. You must have been enrolled for all service since your first opportunity to enroll. In other words, newer employees can still qualify if they signed up at their earliest chance and stayed covered.
How does the immediate annuity part of the FEHB five-year rule work?
The first half of the FEHB five-year rule is that you must be entitled to retire on an immediate annuity. An immediate annuity is one that begins within roughly a month after you separate from service.
OPM notes that this includes a Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) Minimum Retirement Age (MRA) + 10 retirement. Employees retiring under the MRA + 10 provision can still meet this part of the test. That holds even if they choose to postpone receiving the annuity. Confirming eligibility for an immediate annuity is a step some people take alongside checking the enrollment side of the rule.
Can TRICARE or family coverage count toward the requirement?
Yes, in defined situations. OPM states that time covered under the Uniformed Services Health Benefits Program, also known as TRICARE, can count toward the five-year requirement. This credit applies as long as you were covered under an FEHB enrollment at the time of your retirement.
This combination matters for many former service members. Being under TRICARE alone does not satisfy the rule. The published guidance ties the credit to having FEHB coverage in place on your retirement date. Time covered as a family member under someone else’s FEHB enrollment may also count toward the five years.
What about suspending FEHB for TRICARE or Medicare?
Separately from the five-year test, OPM allows eligible annuitants to suspend FEHB rather than cancel it. This option covers annuitants eligible for TRICARE, TRICARE-for-Life, CHAMPVA, Medicare Advantage, or Medicaid. They may suspend FEHB and later return during Open Season. They can also return immediately if they involuntarily lose the other coverage. Suspending preserves the ability to come back, which canceling does not.
Is a waiver of the FEHB five-year rule ever possible?
It can be, but only in limited cases. OPM may waive the five-year requirement when it determines that meeting it would be against equity and good conscience. You must request the waiver from OPM.
Waivers are discretionary and uncommon. Many people treat the standard five-year path as the reliable route. They view a waiver as a fallback rather than a plan. OPM’s FEHB Handbook outlines the steps for requesting one.
How can you confirm your own eligibility before retiring?
Reviewing your enrollment history early is one option some federal employees consider. The rule looks at the five years immediately before retirement. A coverage gap caught years in advance is often easier to address than one discovered at the last minute.
Pairing the FEHB review with related decisions can also help. Coverage rules connect to how you elect a FERS survivor annuity so a spouse can keep FEHB. The same enrollment records feed the broader FEHB eligibility verification process. Estimating costs is another piece, which our guide to FEHB retirement healthcare costs walks through.
Frequently asked questions about the FEHB five-year rule
Do the five years have to be in the same FEHB plan?
No. OPM specifies continuous enrollment in “any FEHB plan(s).” You can switch plans or options during Open Season without restarting the five-year count. The key is that some FEHB coverage remains in place.
Does coverage as a family member count toward the five years?
Yes. OPM states that time covered as a family member can count toward the five-year requirement. This applies when you are covered under another person’s FEHB enrollment.
I have fewer than five years of federal service. Can I still qualify?
Possibly. OPM notes a different test for those eligible for less than five years. You generally must have been enrolled for all service since your first opportunity to enroll.
Does TRICARE count toward the FEHB five-year rule?
It can. Time covered under TRICARE may count toward the requirement. OPM ties this credit to being enrolled in an FEHB plan on the date you retire.
What happens if I do not meet the requirement?
Generally, FEHB coverage cannot continue into retirement unless OPM grants a waiver. OPM may waive the requirement only in limited circumstances. You must submit the request to OPM.
Can I suspend FEHB in retirement instead of canceling it?
Yes. OPM allows eligible annuitants with coverage such as TRICARE, CHAMPVA, or a Medicare Advantage plan to suspend FEHB and return later. Suspending preserves future eligibility in a way that canceling does not.
Want to walk through how the FEHB five-year rule applies to your own service history? Fed Pilot, a woman-owned small business, offers free federal retirement benefits education workshops. The workshops are built for employees approaching retirement. Register for a free workshop and bring your questions about keeping health coverage into retirement.