Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance Act


The Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance Act is a United States federal statute passed by the 83rd U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on August 17, 1954. The act provided for a group life insurance policy for most federal employees, similar to those provided for employees of most large industries.
The act established the Federal Employee Group Life Insurance program, which covers over 4 million federal employees and is the largest group life insurance program in the world. Under the program, new federal employees are automatically enrolled in a basic insurance program with the option of waiving enrollment, and may also obtain additional coverage for themselves and their families. Insurance premiums are deducted from the employees' payroll checks. The cost of the plan is shared between the employee and the federal government in a 2:1 ratio for Basic coverage only, any Optional coverage is paid fully by the employee.
The FEGLI program also covers NASA astronauts, in particular, those astronauts who died on board the space shuttles Challenger and Columbia.

FEGLI Coverage

For specific references to the below items, see .

Levels of Available Coverage

FEGLI offers four levels of coverage: Basic and three Options. In order to enroll in any Option, the employee must be enrolled in Basic.
Accidental death and dismemberment insurance is included under Basic and Option A at no additional charge, and is paid in addition to life insurance if applicable. There is no AD&D coverage under Options B or C. For accidental death, payment is 100% of the above amounts. For accidental dismemberment payment is 100% if two or more of the above are lost in the same accident, 50% if only one of the above is lost. In a specific accident no more than 100% of benefits can be paid and all injuries or death resulting from the same accident within one year of the accident are considered one event; however, in a subsequent accident benefits are paid separately.

Coverage during Employment

Employees are automatically enrolled in Basic upon appointment unless they choose not to enroll, while Optional coverage must be selected within 60 days of appointment, and in both cases enrollment and coverage are guaranteed regardless of the employee's prior medical history. Otherwise, coverage can only be obtained during an open season, by providing satisfactory medical information, or a qualifying "life event". If an employee leaves government service with no coverage and subsequently returns, the break must be at least 180 days in order to become eligible once again barring either a rare open season, proof of satisfactory medical information, or life event.

Premiums during Employment

The employee pays 2/3 and the government pays 1/3 of Basic coverage premiums. The rates for Basic coverage are the same for all employees regardless of age.
The employee pays all cost of Optional coverage. The rates for each Option are determined by age ranges in increments of five years.
Premiums are paid either bi-weekly or monthly, depending on the frequency of employee's pay, and are automatically deducted from pay.

Coverage at Retirement

In order to maintain continuous coverage at retirement, the employee must take an immediate annuity and must have maintained coverage for five years preceding. Unlike with the Federal Employees Health Benefits system, the five year rule cannot be waived by the employee's agency. If a deferred annuity is taken, coverage is suspended from the date of retirement until the date the annuity begins.
At retirement, the employee must choose how much coverage to take into retirement, and how much coverage will be reduced beginning at age 65 or, if still working at age 65, at retirement. An employee cannot increase coverage at retirement or at any time thereafter.
After age 65 the employee may choose coverage options with no cost to the employee but which reduce levels of coverage over time, or may choose to continue higher levels of coverage for additional premiums paid. An employee cannot increase coverage in retirement, only to reduce or discontinue it. If no choices are made, coverage is discontinued and cannot be reinstated.
AD&D benefits cease upon the employee's retirement and do not continue into retirement.

Premiums at Retirement

For retirees under age 65, the employee and government will continue to pay the same ratio of cost for Basic coverage as during employment at a rate which remains the same regardless of age, if the employee chooses the "75% Reduction" option. Payments for lesser Basic coverage reductions and for Optional coverage are paid fully by the employee.
Beginning the second full month after the retiree turns age 65, Basic coverage with 75% Reduction, Option A, and Options B/C with Full Reduction is free; Basic coverage and Options B/C coverage with lesser or no reduction requires a premium which increases with age.

Payment at Death

Upon the death of an employee/retiree, death benefits are paid as follows:
Upon the death of any insured under Option C, benefits are paid to the employee/retiree, but if the employee/retiree dies before payment, payment is then made to the beneficiaries who would be paid under Basic coverage, excluding any assignment of insurance.