Most California teachers don’t realize they’re on track for a retirement income gap until it’s almost too late.
Take Melissa, a 52-year-old elementary teacher in San Bernardino. After attending her first CalSTRS meeting, she was shocked to learn that her projected pension at age 62 would replace only 54% of her final salary. She had expected 80–90%.
Like many teachers, she had no 403(b), no supplemental plan, and assumed her district or union automatically “handled her retirement.”
Her reaction is one nearly every California educator has the first time they look at their true pension math.