Revealing your earnings on an Immediate Annuity
Understanding the earnings your money generates for you in an immediate annuity helps your evaluate your investment.
A single premium immediate fixed annuity (SPIFA) gives you a fixed monthly payment for the term of the annuity. That term may be a certain number of years or for the remainder of your life.
The amount the insurance company will pay you depends on the amount of premium you pay and prevailing interest rates in addition to expenses and your life expectancy if it’s a lifetime payout.
Companies will quote you their monthly payout to you but not the interest rate (interest rates on immediate annuities are typically 2%-4%). Nevertheless, since all earnings of the company are dependent on interest-based investments, higher prevailing rates will allow them to make higher monthly payments – and vice versa.
Earnings and taxation of your investment
What you earn is the excess of payouts over the premium you pay. Every payout is considered part earnings and part return of premium. The fraction of each payout that’s taxable is the ratio of the total excess payout to the premium.
To illustrate let’s take a hypothetical example of the payout over a 10 year term certain to illustrate both taxation and the effective interest that produces earnings. We’ll use the average monthly payout quote based on 16 insurance companies for a $50,000 premium for a 10 year payout term for a 70 year old man. This average quote is $515 per month. Prevailing interest rates at time of this quote are 3.30, 3.48, and 4.06 % for 1 yr, 5 yr and 10 yr US treasuries respectively.
The total payout over ten years is $61,800. So, the earnings on the premium investment is $11,800 which is the excess received over the premium paid. That’s an earnings of 23.6% (= $11,800/$50,000) –but over ten years! Of each payment, only 19% is taxable because of the way IRS taxes immediate annuities.
The example shown above is strictly hypothetical based on the assumptions described and is not representative of an investor’s actual earnings or tax consequences.
Your effective interest rate
Because the annuity company’s constant payout schedule returns both earnings and premium payments back to you, it can only earn interest with the premium payments it retains. In the beginning it has most all the premium to earn interest with. But this decreases linearly to no premiums left at the term’s end. Equivalently from an averaging point of view, we can consider the annuity company having only half your premium for the whole term to earn interest while the other half goes back without earnings to bolster the payouts – as is the annuity’s purpose.
So, we can deduce the “effective interest” the man earned by assuming only $25,000 (half his premium) did all the earning of the $11,800 excess payout over the 10 years. A compounded annual interest rate of 3.72% applied to $25,000 will increase it by $11,800. To see the numbers for your situation, use the immediate annuity calculator.
Note that annuities once annuitized cannot be surrendered for value. Income from deferred annuities is taxed as ordinary income and withdrawals prior to age 59 ½ are subject to a 10% penalty. Income from annuitization is taxed part as ordinary income and part as return of capital. Any guarantees are based on the claims paying ability of the insurance company. Annuities should be considered long term investments.
Tags: immediate annnuity













September 23rd, 2009 at 6:35 pm
Seems like a quality way of investing your money, is there any risk involved??? I have not necessarily invested all to much in recent years, so I am thinking now is the time if any to start. Can I have a few pointers as to where is the best place to purchase annuities? Medical Assistant TrainingCNA Training
November 6th, 2009 at 2:35 pm
Is there any way to make use of annuities for short term investments?
January 3rd, 2010 at 4:30 am
Annuities are very much like mutual funds in that they too have fund … no loss of accumulated earnings (no downside) and no investment decisions to make. Indexed annuities are fast becoming the annuity of choice to …
March 5th, 2010 at 1:35 am
… no loss of accumulated earnings (no downside) and no investment decisions to make. Indexed annuities are fast becoming the annuity of choice to …
but Is there any way to make use of annuities for short term investments?
March 20th, 2010 at 10:31 pm
Are annuities only something that are offered in america or do they offer them in other countries as well. The reason ask is that I am in Australia and our banks have never heard of them. Well they have never offered them.
April 28th, 2010 at 5:29 am
First of all you have to distinguish between fixed annuities and variable annuities. Fixed annuities represent annuities with fixed payments. They are commonly used for low risk investments. Furthermore fixed annuities offer a fixed rate, but are not regulated by the so called SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission).
Variable annuities, however, are regulated by the SEC and represent annuities with variable and non-fixed payments.
May 28th, 2010 at 2:06 am
No there is not any way to make use of annuities for short term investments?
June 6th, 2010 at 7:42 pm
Only Americans provide or not in other countries to provide their annuity. The reason I asked them, in Australia and we have never heard of banks. So they never have to give them
June 9th, 2010 at 3:30 am
Very interesting what you tell us about annuities. Maybe I should think about an investment in annuities as well. Sound as if it could be rewarding.
June 24th, 2010 at 4:04 am
Is there is any way to make use of annuities for short term investments? mean any possibility?? Please tell…
August 3rd, 2010 at 11:41 am
If you have no idea how your earnings in an immediate annuity it could be a hazard for them.
August 12th, 2010 at 5:43 am
The new class of index annuities allows you to defer today and either annuitize (lock in a guaranteed set of income payments), or receive a very high guaranteed set of payments–which the flexibility of starting or stopping these payments. These new benefits are called “Guaranteed Withdrawal Benefits”, and this high level of flexibility is very attractive for today’s investors.
August 18th, 2010 at 11:18 pm
Thanks for nice blog.Is there any risk in investment.can we invest our earning in annuity
August 18th, 2010 at 11:21 pm
Your blog is nice.Can we make our short investment in annuity.