How Retirement Works for Public Employees in North Carolina
For decades, North Carolina’s teachers, police officers, and state employees have relied on the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System (TSERS). But the reality today is clear: pensions alone won’t cut it.
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Understanding TSERS
– Covers teachers, government staff, law enforcement, and state employees
– Provides defined benefit pensions based on years of service + salary
– Funded by employee contributions, employer match, and investments
Challenges today:
– Cost-of-living adjustments often don’t match inflation
– Healthcare costs are rising faster than pension growth
– Fewer employees stay long enough to qualify for maximum benefits
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The Retirement Gap in North Carolina
Even with full service, TSERS often replaces only 50–65% of income.
Meanwhile, the average cost of living in NC is $52,000 per year per person. In Charlotte and Raleigh, the number is higher.
That leaves a pension gap for most public employees.
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The Better Path: Banking Like a Bank™
At Banker’s Blueprint, we teach NC public employees to:
– ? Build predictable income outside Wall Street risk
– ? Eliminate debt to free up cashflow
– ? Create liquidity for emergencies and opportunities
– ? Protect legacy for the next generation
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Internal Links:
– [Charlotte City Page](/north-carolina/charlotte/)
– [Raleigh City Page](/north-carolina/raleigh/)
– [Greensboro City Page](/north-carolina/greensboro/)
– [Download the FFB Checklist](/checklist)
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Call to Action
Don’t let a pension gap dictate your future.
Download the FFB Checklist
Book a 15Min Retirement CheckUp