How Are Annuities Taxed?
Annuity taxation depends on whether the annuity is qualified (funded with pre-tax money) or non-qualified (funded with after-tax money).
Qualified Annuities (401k/IRA Rollovers)
If you fund an annuity with a 401(k) rollover or traditional IRA funds:
- Money went in pre-tax — you’ve never paid taxes on it
- Growth is tax-deferred
- All withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income
- RMDs apply starting at age 73
- 10% early withdrawal penalty if under 59½
Non-Qualified Annuities (After-Tax Money)
If you fund with personal savings (not from a retirement account):
- Your principal (cost basis) already been taxed
- Growth is tax-deferred
- Only the growth portion is taxed upon withdrawal (LIFO method)
- No RMDs required (unless inside an IRA)
- Exclusion ratio for SPIAs — only the gain portion of each payment is taxable
The Exclusion Ratio for Immediate Annuities
For non-qualified SPIAs, the IRS calculates an “exclusion ratio” — the portion of each payment considered a tax-free return of principal. For example, if you paid $100,000 and will receive a total of $200,000 in payments, 50% of each payment is tax-free until your basis is recovered.
1035 Exchange: Tax-Free Swap
Under IRS Section 1035, you can exchange one annuity for another without paying taxes on accumulated gains — as long as the exchange is done properly (directly between carriers). This allows you to upgrade to a better product without a tax hit.
Estate and Inheritance Tax
Annuity death benefits paid to beneficiaries are subject to income tax on the gain. They do not receive a step-up in basis like stocks and real estate do. Plan accordingly.
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