THE WAR CHEST LIBRARY — STRATEGY OVERVIEW

Your Military Retirement Income Protection Plan

Most military retirement plans account for two assets: the pension and the TSP. The War Chest adds a third — life insurance and annuities, used not as simple coverage but as a private asset class. Tax-free growth while you’re alive. A death benefit your family controls. Guaranteed income that never stops. This is the advanced income protection strategy built specifically for the military retirement transition.

For career officers (O-5 to O-8) and senior NCOs (E-8/E-9) within five years of retirement or recently separated — in good to excellent health, with pension income and a second-career chapter ahead.
Before We Start

The Life Insurance You Understood on Active Duty Was the Right Tool — for a Different Problem

When you were commissioned — young, on active duty, with a young family and a limited income — someone handed you an SGLI form and told you to fill in the death benefit amount. That was the right move for that situation. You needed coverage for your dependents. You had limited assets, limited income, and a lot of years ahead. A term policy was exactly the right tool.

That’s also the only frame most people ever get for what life insurance is. And when advisors said “buy term and invest the rest,” that made sense for someone in that situation, at that stage of life, with those products. So you moved on, focused on your career, and filed life insurance under “handled.”

Here’s what’s changed: you’re not that person anymore. If you’re a career officer or senior NCO within a few years of retirement, you’re at the top of the American income spectrum — pension, potential VA disability, and second-career income running simultaneously. You have assets. You have a financial picture that the standard playbook was never designed for.

And here’s the part most people haven’t heard yet: life insurance and annuities have advanced significantly. The products available to you today are not the whole life policies that were pushed on junior enlisted in the 1990s. Modern IUL and fixed indexed annuity structures can be designed specifically for the military retirement transition — cost-effective, flexible, and built to complement what you’re already doing, not replace it.

That’s the answer to the question Scott hears most: “Why haven’t I heard about this before? Why isn’t everybody doing this?” Because it wasn’t relevant to your situation on active duty. You didn’t have the income, the assets, or the specific retirement transition that makes this make sense. Now you do. The career change, the pension coming online, the shift from accumulation to protection — that’s the exact moment these strategies become relevant. And the advances in the products have made them more cost-effective and more adaptable than they’ve ever been.

We’re not asking you to rethink everything you’ve built. We’re asking you to add a third layer that the pension and TSP don’t provide — a private asset class that grows tax-free while you’re alive, protects your family when you’re gone, and puts you in control of the income and flexibility that government programs can’t give you.

The War Chest is not a product. It’s a framework — built from up to three components — designed to do the work that a pension, a TSP, and standard insurance programs don’t do for career military retirees. Think of it as the third asset class alongside the first two you already have.

The Framework

Three Things Worth Protecting.
Most Plans Only Cover One or Two.

Every financial decision you make after military retirement is ultimately trying to accomplish one of three things. Most people are strong in one or two of these areas — and have a real gap in the third. The War Chest is designed to close those gaps, or address all three at once.

Outcome 01

Family Protection

Your spouse keeps your full income — not 55 cents on the dollar — if something happens to you. SBP and VGLI cover part of this. They’re better than nothing. But SBP costs you for life and stops paying if your spouse predeceases you. VGLI escalates in cost every five years. The War Chest replaces both with a private structure you own and control — full death benefit, no expiration, no government dependency.

✓ Partially covered: SBP · Term life
Outcome 02

Retirement Security

A guaranteed income floor that never stops — regardless of what markets do, how long you live, or what happens to your TSP balance. Your pension does part of this. The War Chest adds a second income stream you designed — joint coverage for both spouses, indexed to grow with the market, with principal protected. A private pension that fills the gap between what your pension covers and what you actually need.

✓ Partially covered: Pension · TSP
Outcome 03

Wealth Building

Tax-free growth. Liquid access without penalties or required distributions. A death benefit that transfers to your heirs — not back to the government. A financial asset that builds equity you can deploy while you’re alive, for a business, a real estate investment, or a second-career transition. This is the third bucket most military retirees don’t have — the one where the IUL does its primary work.

✗ Often missing: No tax-free vehicle
The War Chest

The only private financial structure designed to address all three outcomes simultaneously — built specifically for the military retirement transition.

The Components

One Strategy. Three Tools.
You Don’t Need All Three on Day One.

The War Chest is built from up to three components. Each one solves a different part of the problem. Most people start with one or two based on their immediate priorities — and add the rest as their financial picture settles.

Component 01
Convertible Term Life

High death benefit at low cost. Protects your family during your highest-risk years — when income is high, dependents are present, and your full estate hasn’t been built yet. The convertibility is the key move. You lock in your health rating now — while you’re in above-average health — at a better rate than VGLI. As life plays out, you convert all or part to permanent coverage on your timeline. No new underwriting. No re-qualification.

Addresses: Family Protection. Bridges to permanent coverage as income and cash flow grow.

Component 02
Indexed Universal Life (IUL)

This is where the War Chest does its primary work. Cash value builds as you fund the policy — linked to market index performance with a floor at zero. Gains lock in annually. If the index drops, you credit zero. Not negative. Zero. Think of it as equity. You own it. Access it via policy loans — no bank, no age restriction, no required minimum distributions. Tax-free in, tax-free out. An LTC/chronic illness rider is built in.

Addresses: Wealth Building and Family Protection. The primary vehicle for tax-free income in retirement.

Component 03
Fixed Indexed Annuity (FIA)

A private pension. Guaranteed income that never stops — even if the account value reaches zero. As long as you’re alive, the insurance company keeps paying you. Set it up as joint income and both you and your spouse are covered, regardless of who passes first. Index-linked means the income can increase when the index grows. Principal is fully protected. Any remaining account value transfers to heirs — unlike SBP, nothing is forfeited if your spouse predeceases you.

Addresses: Retirement Security. Creates the income floor that makes everything else work.

The Balance

The War Chest Does Offense and Defense Simultaneously

Most financial strategies force a tradeoff — protect what you have, or grow it. The challenge for military retirees is that you can’t afford to be fully defensive. Inflation erodes fixed income over time. A pension worth $100K today buys less in 20 years if nothing is growing alongside it. Being fully invested in the market creates sequence-of-returns exposure in your early retirement years — the period when a downturn does the most damage. The War Chest sits in the middle. It protects and builds at the same time. Click any item to learn more.

⛉ Defense
Pension Protection — Full Value, Not 55%
SBP pays your spouse 55 cents on the dollar. The War Chest replaces the full present value of your pension — and doesn’t disappear if your spouse predeceases you.
VGLI / SGLI Replacement
VGLI costs escalate every five years after separation. A convertible term policy locks in your health rating now, at a better rate — and converts to permanent coverage on your schedule.
Joint Income Floor — Neither Spouse Left Exposed
The FIA provides guaranteed joint income. Both spouses receive income regardless of who passes first. Any remaining account value passes to heirs.
Long-Term Care Coverage Built In
The IUL includes a chronic illness / LTC acceleration rider. VA disability covers today’s expenses. The IUL rider covers a serious care need later in life without a separate policy.
Market Downside Eliminated
The IUL floor at zero means your policy value never goes negative in a down year. A 30% market correction credits zero to your policy — not a 30% loss. Your equity base is preserved.
The War Chest
⚔ Offense
Tax-Free Growth and Income Access
IUL cash value accumulates tax-deferred and comes out tax-free via policy loans. No IRS contribution limits tied to earned income. No RMDs. No ordinary income on withdrawal.
Liquidity — Access Any Time, Any Age
Policy loans are available at any age, for any reason — business capital, real estate, a transition, or a large unplanned expense. No bank. No qualification. No 59½ rule.
Inflation Hedge — Index-Linked Growth
Both the IUL and FIA use managed volatility index crediting. When the index grows, you participate. The goal is ~6% average — enough to stay ahead of inflation without market exposure.
Estate & Legacy Transfer — Tax-Free
The death benefit passes tax-free to whoever you designate. FIA residual value follows the same path. Unlike SBP, there’s no expiration — the benefit doesn’t end when your spouse passes.
Business and Transition Capital
Cash value is available to fund a business venture, real estate investment, or second-career transition — without disrupting your investment portfolio or triggering a taxable event.
How You Fund It

Where the Money Actually Comes From

One of the most common questions is about affordability. “I’m already managing SBP premiums, VGLI, TSP contributions, and a mortgage — where does the War Chest get funded?” The answer: it rarely requires new money from scratch. Most War Chests are built by redirecting money that’s already flowing out of your account, or deploying assets that aren’t working efficiently.

FUNDING SOURCES OUTCOMES THE WAR CHEST Your Private Financial Engine Term · IUL · FIA SBP Premium Redirect $300–$1,200/mo depending on pension VA Disability Income Tax-free in, tax-free out of IUL Second Career / Business Income Peak earning years — fund aggressively Retirement Accounts TSP, IRA, Roth, old 401(k) rollovers Taxable Brokerage / Investments Mutual funds, ETFs, stocks at market risk Idle Cash & Low-Yield Savings Checking, savings, money market Real Estate / Existing Policies Proceeds, rental income, 1035 exchanges Tax-Free Retirement Income IUL policy loans — no IRS, no RMDs Family Death Benefit Tax-free · Full pension value · Any heir Liquid Access — Any Time Business, real estate, emergencies

Most clients allocate 20–40% of future income — redirected, not added — during peak earning years. Goal: fully funded and paid up before full retirement.

How It Works Over Time

You Build It During Your Earning Years.
It Works for You the Rest of Your Life.

The War Chest isn’t built in a day. It’s designed to grow with you — from the peak earning years after separation, through full retirement, through health changes, and eventually through estate transfer to your family.

1 EARNING YEARS Active duty through early post-military career · Lock in health rating (Term) · Fund IUL with peak income · Redirect SBP / VGLI premiums · VA disability funds IUL Build the War Chest 2 FULL RETIREMENT Second career winds down, full income picture in place · FIA income floor activates · IUL loans supplement pension · Policy fully funded / paid up · Tax-free income stream running Deploy the War Chest 3 HEALTH CHALLENGES Later-life care needs, chronic illness, long-term care · LTC / chronic illness rider activates · Accelerated death benefit available · FIA income continues uninterrupted · No market exposure to worry about Protected by the War Chest 4 ESTATE TRANSFER Legacy, heirs, charitable giving, final settlement · Death benefit passes tax-free · FIA residual value to heirs · No probate, no delays · Beneficiary designation — your call Transferred by the War Chest
The Tax Problem

Most Military Retirees Are Sitting on a Tax Liability They Haven’t Seen Yet

Your TSP is tax-deferred, not tax-free. Every dollar you pull from it in retirement gets taxed as ordinary income — on top of your pension. For many military retirees, that puts you in a higher bracket than you planned for. The three-bucket framework shows where the War Chest fits — and why the third bucket is the one most military retirees don’t have.

Bucket 01

Taxable

  • Savings & checking accounts
  • Brokerage / investment accounts
  • Real estate income (before depreciation)
  • Business income

Pay taxes on growth every year. Full access anytime — but every withdrawal is a taxable event. Good for short-term liquidity. Poor for long-term wealth building.

Bucket 02

Tax-Deferred

  • TSP (Traditional)
  • Traditional IRA / 401(k)
  • Rollover accounts
  • Deferred compensation plans

Taxes delayed — not avoided. RMDs begin at 73. Every withdrawal taxed as ordinary income. In retirement, your TSP withdrawals stack on top of your pension. The tax bill is larger than most people expect.

Bucket 03

Tax-Free

  • IUL (War Chest) — policy loans
  • Roth TSP / Roth IRA (if applicable)
  • VA disability income
  • Municipal bond interest

Growth is tax-deferred. Access via policy loans is tax-free. No RMDs. No ordinary income on withdrawal. This is the bucket most military retirees don’t have — and the one the IUL fills.

How the Growth Works

Index-Based Crediting — Not the Same as Being in the Market

The IUL and FIA don’t invest directly in the market. They use insurance-based index crediting — a mechanism that links returns to index performance without direct market exposure. Here’s what that means in practice.

Direct Market Investment (Hypothetical — for illustration only) 0% +14% +8% −14% +11% −18% +6% +9% Yr 1 Yr 2 Yr 3 Yr 4 Yr 5 Yr 6 Yr 7 Insurance Index Crediting (IUL / FIA — floor at 0%, uncapped) 0% +8% +5% 0% +8% 0% +6% +7% Yr 1 Yr 2 Yr 3 Yr 4 Yr 5 Yr 6 Yr 7 FLOOR Down year Down year Down years credit zero — not negative Gains lock in annually
Floor
0%
Down years credit zero — your policy never loses value
Target Average
~6%
Not trying to beat the market. Stay rich — don’t get rich.
Index Type
Uncapped
Managed volatility indexes — not just the S&P 500. No ceiling on credits.

Illustrative only. Actual index crediting depends on participation rates, spreads, and index performance specific to each policy. Past index performance does not guarantee future credits. No return projections are implied or guaranteed.

Find Your Starting Point

Which Components Are Right for You Right Now?

Answer five questions about what matters most to you financially — now that you’re building the post-military chapter. We’ll show you which parts of the War Chest address your specific priorities, and which components are the right starting point for your situation.

Question 01 of 05
If something happened to you tomorrow — what concerns you most about your family’s financial picture?
Question 02 of 05
When you think about your TSP, IRA, or other investment accounts — what worries you most?
Question 03 of 05
How much of your retirement income do you want guaranteed — completely separate from what markets do?
Question 04 of 05
What matters most to you in terms of legacy and your family’s long-term picture?
Question 05 of 05
Right now — what’s your primary priority for new money you’re saving or earning?

What Percentage of Your Financial Picture Should Be Protected, Liquid, and Tax-Advantaged?

Most investors think in terms of asset allocation — stocks, bonds, cash. The War Chest is simply a different allocation: assets with a downside floor, tax-free access, and a death benefit built in. Look at everything you’ve already saved — retirement accounts, brokerage assets, savings — plus what you’ll add going forward. What percentage of that total picture do you want sitting in this category? Adjust the slider to see what different allocation levels mean.

10%20%30%40%
20%
of your total financial assets allocated to the War Chest
Downside Protection
Meaningful
Tax-Free Access
Moderate
Death Benefit Range
$500K–$1M+

Directional only — not a projection. Actual War Chest sizing depends on age, health rating, policy design, and your total asset picture. A strategy call maps the right allocation for your specific situation.

Honest Assessment

Who This Works For — and Who It Doesn’t

The War Chest isn’t for everyone. Here’s an honest look at when it’s the right tool — and when the math or circumstances don’t support it.

This works best when…

  • You’re an O-5 to O-8 or E-8/E-9 with above-average retirement pay — the premium math works in your favor
  • You’re in good to excellent health — health rating is rewarded with better pricing and higher funding capacity
  • You want flexibility and liquidity alongside protection — not just a death benefit
  • You’re building toward a second career, business, or investment-active post-military life
  • You have TSP or retirement account balances that need tax diversification
  • You want an income your spouse can’t outlive — joint, guaranteed, and separate from SBP

This may not be the right fit if…

  • Health issues prevent qualification for preferred insurance rates — the economics change significantly at standard or below-standard ratings
  • Retirement pay is below the threshold where premiums make the math work — typically below $50K/year combined pension + disability
  • SBP is genuinely the better option for a specific family situation — we’ll tell you honestly if that’s the case after looking at the numbers
  • You’re early in your military career with no immediate retirement planning window — the right time is within 5 years of separation
Common Questions

Two Questions That Come Up in Almost Every Conversation

Roth Conversion

“Should I convert my TSP or IRA to a Roth?”

This question comes up in almost every conversation about tax strategy. The short answer for most military retirees: a Roth conversion is rarely the right move — and here’s why.

In the years right after separation, most career officers and NCOs are in a higher tax bracket than they realize. Pension income plus second-career income often puts you at 24–32% federal. Converting a large TSP balance to Roth at that bracket creates a significant taxable event at the worst possible time — you’re accelerating taxes when your rate is near its peak.

Whether a conversion makes sense depends on your current bracket, projected retirement income, full asset picture, and timeline. It’s a case-by-case analysis, not a default recommendation. If you’re wondering about this for your situation, that’s exactly what a strategy call is for.

For most clients, the IUL provides a better path to tax-free income going forward — without the conversion tax event, without contribution limits tied to earned income, and without RMDs.

Existing Policies

“I already have a whole life policy from early in my career.”

A lot of career military officers and NCOs have whole life policies they purchased in their 20s or 30s — often from insurance companies that marketed heavily to the military community. If you have one of these, it may be worth taking a look at what’s actually in it.

If the policy has accumulated cash value, a 1035 exchange allows you to move that cash value tax-free into an IUL — without triggering a taxable event, without losing the accumulated equity, and without starting from scratch on your health rating.

This isn’t always the right move — it depends on the terms of your existing policy, the cash value amount, and your current coverage picture. But if you’re sitting on a whole life policy you haven’t reviewed in years, it’s worth knowing the option exists.

Consult your tax advisor regarding any 1035 exchange transaction. This is not tax advice.

Ready When You Are

See What a War Chest Looks Like for Your Numbers

The framework only becomes real when it’s applied to your specific pension, health rating, TSP balance, and income timeline. A 30-minute strategy call is enough to map out whether this makes sense for your situation — and what it would actually look like, with numbers.

We work with career officers and senior NCOs nationwide. Independent broker — we find the right structure for your situation, not the most convenient one.

Guide Combined CTA — Books + Toolkit | War Chest Library
The Military Retiree's Guide to SBP vs. Life Insurance The TSP Rollover Blueprint
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