Eastman Kodak Pension Lump Sum Calculator
Calculate the IRS 417(e) present value of your Eastman Kodak Retirement Income Plan (PBGC administered) benefit and compare it to any buyout offer you've received.
Kodak filed for bankruptcy in January 2012 and emerged in 2013, but the pension plan was terminated and transferred to the PBGC during the reorganization. Approximately 56,000 Kodak retirees and employees had their pension obligations transferred to PBGC. Benefits above the PBGC guarantee limit were reduced. Kodak's pension was one of the largest PBGC takeovers in the 2010s.
Typical monthly benefit
$800 - $2,500
per month, varies by tier and years of service
Enter your monthly benefit from your Eastman Kodak pension statement. Use the 2026 segment rates or enter custom rates from your plan's actuarial notice.
Eastman Kodak Pension: What You Need to Know
The Eastman Kodak Retirement Income Plan (PBGC administered) covers imaging technology workers with specific eligibility requirements based on years of service and, in some cases, collective bargaining agreements. Benefits vary significantly by hire date, plan tier, and whether you are in a union or management track.
Plan status: PBGC administered
Kodak filed for bankruptcy in January 2012 and emerged in 2013, but the pension plan was terminated and transferred to the PBGC during the reorganization. Approximately 56,000 Kodak retirees and employees had their pension obligations transferred to PBGC. Benefits above the PBGC guarantee limit were reduced. Kodak's pension was one of the largest PBGC takeovers in the 2010s.
Buyout history
The Kodak pension plan was terminated in 2012 and transferred to PBGC administration. PBGC does not offer lump sums -- it pays guaranteed monthly amounts subject to statutory limits. Participants with benefits above the guarantee limit received reduced payments permanently. Kodak's retiree community remains active in monitoring PBGC payments.
Understanding your lump sum offer
If Eastman Kodak has offered you a lump sum, that number was calculated using the IRS 417(e) formula with the applicable segment rates for your plan year. The minimum lump sum the plan must offer is the present value of your accrued benefit discounted at those segment rates.
Plans can offer more than the minimum, but rarely do. If the lump sum offer is close to what this calculator produces using the current segment rates, the offer is actuarially fair. If it's significantly lower, it's worth asking your plan administrator which lookback month they used and confirming the mortality table.
For 2026 plan years, the segment rates from November 2025 are 5.03% for years 1-5, 5.35% for years 6-20, and 5.57% for years 21 and beyond. Compare these against the rates in your lump sum election notice, which should appear in the offer paperwork.
Tax considerations
The lump sum is taxable in the year you receive it unless you roll it directly to a traditional IRA or your new employer's 401(k). A direct rollover (plan to IRA) is not a taxable event. Taking the cash is. If you take cash, the plan is required to withhold 20% for federal taxes, and you'll owe the remaining taxes when you file.
A $400,000 lump sum taken as cash with $80,000 withheld still results in tax at ordinary income rates on the full $400,000. For most retirees in that range, the total federal and state tax bill on a cash distribution runs $100,000 to $140,000 in the year of receipt. The rollover avoids all of that until you take distributions later.
When the lump sum makes sense
For Eastman Kodak retirees specifically, the lump sum can make sense when: you have serious health concerns and don't expect to reach the break-even age, you have other guaranteed income sources (Social Security, spouse's pension) that cover your baseline expenses, or you're a disciplined investor comfortable managing a seven-figure portfolio.
The annuity is typically the right answer for people who don't have other guaranteed income, whose spouse is younger and may outlive them significantly, or who simply don't want to manage a large portfolio in retirement. The guaranteed payment doesn't fluctuate with markets. It shows up every month regardless of what the S&P did.
Disclaimer: This calculator is for educational purposes only. Benefit amounts, plan terms, and applicable rates vary by individual and may have changed. Verify your specific benefit details with your Eastman Kodak plan administrator or HR contact before making any election.
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Frequently asked questions
Does Eastman Kodak offer a pension lump sum?
The Kodak pension plan was terminated in 2012 and transferred to PBGC administration. PBGC does not offer lump sums -- it pays guaranteed monthly amounts subject to statutory limits. Participants with benefits above the guarantee limit received reduced payments permanently. Kodak's retiree community remains active in monitoring PBGC payments.
How do I find my pension benefit amount?
Contact Eastman Kodak's benefits service center or log in to your benefits portal. Your annual pension statement shows your current accrued benefit amount. For terminated-vested participants (people who left before retiring), your benefit is the accrued amount at your separation date, not your final salary.
What happens to my pension if I die before collecting?
If you are married, federal law (ERISA) requires the default form of payment to be a Joint and 50% Survivor Annuity unless you waive it with your spouse's notarized consent. If you die before your benefit start date and you are vested, your spouse is typically entitled to a pre-retirement survivor annuity. Specifics depend on your plan documents.
Can I take a partial lump sum and keep some as an annuity?
Some plans offer a partial lump sum option that lets participants take a portion as a lump sum and convert the remainder to an annuity. Whether Eastman Kodak's plan offers this depends on your specific plan documents. Ask your benefits administrator before assuming the choice is all-or-nothing.