Marjorie Taylor Greene’s resignation timing secured her congressional pension

Crackpot Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene

When Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene announced that she would resign from Congress on January 5, 2026, 46 days before she left office.

The timing matters more than people may realize. Under federal law, members of Congress qualify for a pension, funded in part with taxpayer contributions, only after completing five full years of service.

The former Georgia congresswoman began serving on January 3, 2021, and her departure date left her with 1,829 days of service—five years and three days, just enough to meet the eligibility threshold.

Her pension would start at $8,717 at age 62, and, based on actuarial data, could total more than $265,000 over her lifetime.

Under the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS), members qualify for a full, deferred pension at age 62 if they have completed at least five years of service.

Because Greene entered Congress after 2013, she falls under the standard FERS pension formula for members.

Her pension is based on three factors: how long she served in federal roles, the average of her highest three years of salary (“high-3”), and an accrual rate of 1% per year.

Rank-and-file members earn $174,000 annually—a figure that has remained frozen for years due to Congress voting repeatedly to block its own cost-of-living adjustments (the subject of a lawsuit by several former members that could cost taxpayers $70 million).

Using the FERS formula, Greene becomes eligible for a starting annual pension of $8,717 in 2036, when she reaches age 62.

Because she divorced in 2022, it is unclear if the standard spousal-annuity reduction would apply to her benefit.

Greene’s estimated pension amount is lower than the average, according to available data NTUF compiled from the Congressional Research Service.

Based on the Social Security Administration’s life-expectancy calculator, a woman of Greene’s age today can expect to live roughly another 34.2 years—putting her projected lifespan at about 85 years.

If she begins collecting her pension at age 62 in 2036, she could receive benefits for an additional 23 years.

Assuming an average 2% annual cost-of-living adjustment, her total lifetime payout would exceed $265,000.

That amount could be higher or lower depending upon actual inflation over time. Under a law enacted in 2004, members are not able to opt out of FERS.

As part of a major 1983 reform that aligned federal retirement benefits with the Social Security system, members of Congress began paying into Social Security like most American workers.

Under FERS, lawmakers also have access to the Thrift Savings Plan—a defined-contribution account with employee and agency contributions—allowing them to supplement their pension with additional retirement savings.

For decades, the National Taxpayers Union and the NTU Foundation have tracked and analyzed congressional pensions and other retirement benefits to promote transparency and accountability.

Most recently, we estimated that former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s retirement after this Congress will net her an annual pension starting at nearly $108,800, among the highest available under FERS.

National Taxpayers Union’s research has informed bipartisan efforts such as the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act, the STOCK Act, and 2024’s No CORRUPTION Act, which aim to strengthen ethical standards and maintain public trust in government.


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