Newly retired1 “full career”2 members of the New York Police Department (NYPD) collected an average of $103,859, according to new data posted today at SeeThroughNY.net, the Empire Center’s transparency website.

The data, received from the New York City Police Pension Fund (PPF), has been anonymized as PPF have chosen to withhold the names of pensioners, claiming potential threats to their personal safety.3

Total pension payments to the 54,571 retired NYPD police officers climbed to $3.59 billion during the fiscal year 2025 – an eight percent increase from the FY2024 total of $3.32 billion.

 

The pension plan covering the NYPD officers had a total of 28 members who received more than $300,000 in pension payments. 389 members were paid at least $200,000 — a 47 percent increase from FY2024 (264). 8,633 members were paid least $100,000 — a 30 percent increase from FY2024 (6,657).

 

 

The officer with the highest payout received $512,927, retiring on May 27, 2021, with a service credit of 40.3 years.

In addition to regular pensions, total payments may include retroactive payments from past contract settlements, reclassification of benefits due to pending disability applications at retirement, or Accident Disability Retirement benefits.

Surge in New Retiree Payments

Newly retired members—those retiring between July 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024, and collecting their first full-year pension in FY2025—included 1,502 “full career” individuals. The average “full career” new retiree pension of $103,859, was a 16 percent increase from previous fiscal year’s $89,878. Among them, three retired officers received more than $300,000; 38 received more than $200,000, and 666 received more than $100,000.

New retirees saw a surge in payments with the total amount rising to $156 milliona 63 percent increase from the previous year’s total of $106 million. Such sharp increases were last seen during the pandemic when retirements spiked as many veteran officers accelerated their exits.

One likely reason for the spike could be the surge in new retiree overtime that followed the pandemic. Staffing shortages, backlogged court operations, and event deployments all pushed overtime hours—and therefore late-career earnings—to unusually high levels. Because the pension formula uses a member’s Final Average Salary (FAS) based on the most recent three years of pay, those inflated earnings directly translated into higher lifetime benefits.

The Empire Center earlier published the New York City Government Payroll Report for FY2025, which highlighted the $1.09 billion of overtime payments made by the NYPD – the largest of any agency, and one-third of NYC’s total overtime expenditure.

 

Data Notes:

  1. Newly retired members refer to those employees who retired during FY2024 (between July 1, 2023 and June 30, 2024) and received a full year of benefits during FY2025.
  2. Full career employees refer to those employees who retired with 20 or more years of service credit.
  3. Since 2009, the Empire Center has filed FOIL requests with PPF requesting several data points, including retiree names (as is customarily given by every other state pension system) for analysis and posting at SeeThroughNY. The police pension fund has refused to provide retiree names, even after a lawsuit filed by the Empire Center and the passage of a state law its sponsors intended to make the names available.

The Empire Center, based in Albany, is an independent, not-for-profit, non-partisan think tank dedicated to promoting policies that can make New York a better place to live, work and raise a family.

You may also like

A Bullying Lawyer Trapped an Innocent Woman in a Five-Year Court Battle – but New York Law can’t Make her Whole

We like to associate the law with justice—protecting the innocent and punishing the wrongdoers. But sometimes our laws punish the innocent and protect the wrongdoers instead. Dutchess County mom Vika Shock learned this the hard way. In November 20 Read More

New York at the Crossroads. WILL IT MODERNIZE LIABILITY LAW OR EXPAND IT?

Executive Summary   New York’s Litigation Environment In a wide range of areas, New York law subjects residents and businesses to greater liability than other states. Consider, for example, that: Unlike most other states, Ne Read More

New York’s School Districts Plan To Spend Over $37K Per Student

Cover Image Credit: / at Wikipedia School districts presenting budgets to voters on Tuesday, May 19, plan to spend an average of $37,033 per student, up 4.9 per Read More

Overtime on State Payroll Jumps 21%

104 employees made over $500k in 2025 total annual pay. 2,450 employees were paid more than Gov. Kathy Hochul's Read More

How Pension ‘Spiking’ Drives Up Costs for New York Taxpayers

Each year, hundreds of newly retired government workers across New York garner a benefit that would be unheard-of in the private sector: pensions that exceed the salaries they received while still on the job. This is possible only because most current Read More

New York’s Electricity Prices 70 Percent Above the National Average

Recent data from the Energy Information Administration and Empire Center for Public Policy show New York’s average residential electricity prices at 29.99 cents per kilowatt hour. This is 70 percent higher than the U.S. average of 17.6 cents per kilowat Read More

Over Five Years Later, Arbeeny Family Support Still Critical to Promoting Government Transparency

Albany, NY — The Arbeeny family and the Empire Center are marking five years of partnership in remembrance of Norman Arbeeny, who passed away six years ago today after contracting COVID-19 in a Brooklyn nursing home.   To honor Nor Read More

Empire Center Breaks Down Albany’s Pork Barrel Spending

Albany legislators steered over $83 million in grants to 293 local projects between April and December 2025 , according to under a Freedom of Information Law request. The governor and state legislators hand-picked the grantees for mor Read More