Texas Municipal Retirement System
The Texas Municipal Retirement System is a statewide retirement system that provides retirement, disability, and death benefits for employees of participating Texas municipalities. TMRS was established in 1947 by Texas state law and is administered in accordance with the Texas Municipal Retirement System Act. Although established under state law, TMRS receives no state funding. The System offers a choice of benefits so that each participating city can design a plan to suit its needs and budget. Each city's plan is funded independently by that city. Retirement benefits for employees of participating cities are paid from the employees’ contributions, city contributions, and the System's investment income.
Distinguishing Features of the System
TMRS administers a program for almost 1,000 Texas cities, providing retirement, disability, and survivor benefits to active and retired municipal employees of participating Texas cities. Distinguishing features of the System are:- TMRS is a statewide retirement system that cities may elect to join
- TMRS is a “hybrid” cash-balance defined benefit retirement plan rather than a traditional, formula-based defined benefit plan
- TMRS does not receive any state funds and does not administer a health care plan
- Benefits are based on a Member’s account balance at retirement. The retirement benefit is funded through mandatory employee contributions, city contributions, and investment income
- Investment income pays approximately 70% of an employee’s retirement benefit
Funded Status - The funded status of TMRS, as a system, was 89.4% as of 12/31/2024. This funded ratio has trended upward over the past few years.
Investments
TMRS administered $43.2 billion in assets as of December 31, 2024. The Investments Department at TMRS follows these Total Portfolio Performance Objectives:- Achieve a Total Rate of Return, over rolling five-year periods, consistent with the assumed long-term rate of return on TMRS assets adopted by the board
- Exceed an appropriate benchmark reflective of asset class participation over rolling five-year periods