Plan
Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System
State
Arkansas
Funded Ratio
83.9%
Assets
$10.30B
Members
100,875
Health Grade: B — Adequately funded — meeting most funding benchmarks
FY2023 data Grade B Public Plans Database

Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System

Funded ratio, unfunded liability, member counts, ARC coverage, and 23-year financial history for Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System — sourced from the Public Plans Database (Boston College CRR) and cross-checked against actuarial valuations.

Funded Ratio: 83.9% (Healthy) Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System funded ratio compared to national public pension benchmark. FUNDED RATIO 83.9% Healthy Nat'l avg 73.5% 0% 60 70 80 100% Healthy > 80% · At-risk 70-80% · Critical < 60%
Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System funded ratio is 83.9 percent — classified as Healthy. National public-pension benchmark is 73.5 percent.
B
Financial Health Grade
Adequately funded — meeting most funding benchmarks

Funded Ratio

83.9%

actuarial assets / liabilities

Unfunded Liability

$1.97B

actuarial shortfall

Total Members

100,875

active + retired + vested

1-Year Return

10.4%

net investment return

1.9pp vs 5-yr avg

5-Year Avg Return

8.5%

annualized, net of fees

ARC Payment

15.4%

of actuarially required contribution

How Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System Funded Ratio Compares

Plan Funded Ratio 83.9%
National avg

A ratio of 83.9% compared against the national public-pension average of 73.5%.

Healthy Threshold

Plans above 80% are generally considered adequately funded by NASRA standards.

Participant Composition

Participants: 43.4K active, 42.3K retired, 0 separated Plan participant breakdown showing active workers, retirees, and separated-vested members. PARTICIPANT MIX 100.9K total members 43% 42% Active 43.4K Retired 42.3K Separated 0 Active-to-Retiree 1.03 · Transitioning
Plan participant breakdown: 43.4K active workers, 42.3K retirees, 0 separated-vested members. Sustainability rating: Transitioning.

The active-to-retiree ratio is a leading indicator of long-term plan sustainability — plans with more retirees than active contributors face mounting cash-flow pressure as benefit payments outpace incoming contributions.

Investment Policy Mix

Asset Allocation: 55% equity, 25% fixed income, 17% alternatives Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System investment policy mix as reported in Form 5500 Schedule H disclosures. ASSET ALLOCATION $10.3B market assets · Form 5500 Schedule H 55% 25% 17% Equity 55.0% Fixed Inc. 25.0% Alternatives 17.0% Cash 3.0% Investment Stance: Growth-Tilted · Equity + Alts 72%
Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System asset allocation: 55% equity, 25% fixed income, 17% alternatives, 3% cash. Investment stance: Growth-Tilted.

Public pension plans report their asset allocation in Form 5500 Schedule H Part I disclosures. Equity-heavy mixes capture market upside but introduce volatility; fixed-income tilts protect funded status during downturns at the cost of long-run return.

Historical Funded Ratio

Year Funded Ratio
2024 83.9%
2023 81.4%
2022 83.6%
2021 83.7%
2020 79.0%
2019 78.5%
2018 78.7%
2017 77.6%
2016 80.4%
2015 79.1%
2014 77.8%
2013 74.3%
2012 68.9%
2011 70.7%
2010 74.1%
2009 78.0%
2008 89.7%
2007 89.1%
2006 83.0%
2005 86.0%

What the Data Says About Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System

Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System reports a funded ratio of 83.9% as of fiscal year 2023, earning a financial health grade of B in the Public Plans Database. The plan holds $10.30B in market assets against an unfunded liability of $1.97B. As a General State plan operating under Arkansas sponsorship, it covers 100,875 members (43,352 active contributors, 42,276 retirees drawing benefits). These figures aggregate from Form 5500 filings submitted to the Department of Labor and actuarial valuations reported through NASRA.

A funded ratio above 80% signals that Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System has substantial assets to meet projected obligations, placing it above the national public-pension average of roughly 72–75%. Employer contributions covered 15.4% of the Annual Required Contribution in the most recent reporting cycle, while the plan posted a 5-year average investment return of 8.5%. The relationship between contribution adequacy and investment performance determines whether the unfunded liability narrows or expands year over year.

For Arkansas taxpayers and plan members, the $1.97B unfunded gap represents the actuarial shortfall that must eventually be closed through a combination of contributions, investment returns, or benefit modifications. Unlike private-sector pensions governed by ERISA and backstopped by the PBGC, public plans like Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System rely on the full faith and credit of Arkansas — meaning funding shortfalls flow through to state and local budgets rather than a federal insurance program. This information summarizes official Public Plans Database disclosures and is provided for research and educational purposes only. It is not financial, legal, or retirement-planning advice; active and retired members with specific benefit questions should consult their plan administrator directly.

Membership

43,352
Active Members
42,276
Retirees
100,875
Total Members

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System fully funded?

Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System has a funded ratio of 83.9% as of FY2023, earning a health grade of B. A funded ratio of 100% means the plan has enough assets to cover all projected liabilities. Ratios above 80% are generally considered adequately funded; ratios below 60% indicate significant underfunding and risk to future benefits.

What happens if Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System runs out of money?

Public pension plans like Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System are backed by the sponsoring government entity — in this case Arkansas. If a plan's assets are insufficient, the state or local government is typically required to make up the difference through increased contributions, benefit adjustments, or tax measures. Unlike private pensions, public pensions are not insured by the PBGC, but they do carry the full faith and credit of the sponsoring government.

What does a funded ratio of 83.9% mean?

A funded ratio of 83.9% means that Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System currently has assets equal to 83.9% of its projected benefit obligations. The unfunded liability — the gap between assets and liabilities — stands at $1.97B. This is considered adequately funded.

How does Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System compare to other public pensions?

Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System is a General State plan in Arkansas serving 100,875 members. Nationally, the average funded ratio for public pension plans tracked by the Public Plans Database is approximately 72–75%. Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System's funded ratio of 83.9% places it above the national average, reflecting strong fiscal management.

How many members does Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System have?

Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System covers 100,875 total members, including 43,352 active employees and 42,276 retirees currently receiving benefits. The ratio of active members to retirees is a key indicator of plan sustainability — when the number of retirees grows relative to active contributors, funding pressure increases.

What is the ARC payment percentage for Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System?

Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System pays 15.4% of its Annual Required Contribution (ARC). Consistently underpaying the ARC accelerates the growth of unfunded liabilities and places future benefits at greater risk. Employer contribution patterns are tracked annually in the Public Plans Database.

Related

Data sourced from official Public Plans Database and actuarial valuations from federal and state pension systems. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by Kiznis Studio Editorial

Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the Public Plans Database (PPD). Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.

All federal data sources used on this page