What are the Tax Consequences to the
Beneficiary of My Annuity
By Shane Flait © 2011
Retirees especially like
annuities because annuities can assure them
an income for life. But some retirees will
die before beginning their annuity or
receiving all their guaranteed annuity
benefits. Their beneficiaries will then
receive those benefits. This article
explains how those beneficiaries are taxed
on those benefits.
Retirees often hold their
annuities as deferred annuities as a back-up
for those later retirement years when
they’ll begin annuity payments only when
other retirement income falters or when
savings become depleted. But if they die
before beginning their annuity, the
designated annuity beneficiary will have to
pay tax on all or a portion of those
benefits. The same is true for annuities
that have begun their payouts but those
payments are guaranteed for some term of
years beyond which the annuitant’s owner
died.
Annuities that are
created within a government regulated
qualified plan are called qualified
annuities. All the owner’s contributions to
them are deductible, so all the annuities
earnings and contributions will be taxed as
ordinary income no matter who receives those
annuity payouts.
But most annuities are
nonqualified. In this case the contributions
owners made to them are not deductible (i.e.
they are after tax contributions). These
contributions will never be taxed by anyone;
they constitute the ‘tax basis’ of their
annuity investment contract.
But all nonqualified
annuity earnings are tax-deferred. This
helps the annuity investment to annually
compound faster because part of those
earnings is not taxed away each year so it
can participate in future growth. However
those tax-deferred earnings will eventually
be taxed upon withdrawal – by either the
owner or his beneficiary.
Annuitant’s (owner’s)
taxation
If a partial withdrawal
is made, the IRS demands that all earnings
come out first before the any untaxed
contribution (i.e. the basis) comes out. So
these withdrawals - as long as there are
earnings within the annuity - are completely
taxable as income.
But under regular monthly
payments – as when the annuity is
‘annuitized’ - a portion of each payment is
not taxed but treated as a return of your
contributions (i.e. your tax basis) while
the remaining part is treated as earnings –
and taxed as income. This is one of the tax
benefits of annuitization payments. An
exclusion ratio is the ratio of the monthly
annuity payout that’s not taxed. It’s
calculated for you by the insurance company.
Under a life annuity,
it’s possible that an annuity owner will
live beyond his life expectancy and receive
enough payments to have recovered all his
contributions (i.e. his tax basis). When
that occurs, all of each subsequent payment
is fully taxed as earnings – i.e. there’s no
longer an exclusion ratio.
Beneficiary’s taxation
After-tax contributions
made by the deceased owner will remain
untaxed when received by the beneficiary as
I mentioned above. And of course, all those
tax-deferred earnings within the annuity
will be taxed as ordinary income to the
beneficiary.
Usually, if the annuitant
had begun receiving lifetime payments, no
benefits would be left for a beneficiary.
But if the contract called for a fixed term
guaranteed payments, the beneficiary would
received those remaining payments of that
fixed term taxed at the deceased’s exclusion
ratio.
If the annuity owner died
before beginning annuitization of his
annuity – so the annuity was still a
‘deferred annuity’- provision may be made to
give the beneficiary either a lump sum
distribution of the deferred annuity or a
series of payments. For the lump sum
payment, the beneficiary would only pay tax
on the earnings portion.
But if he takes a series
of guaranteed payments instead of a lumpsum,
the beneficiary would not be required to pay
taxes on any of the payments until the
deceased owner’s contribution were fully
received. So the annuity’s basis would
presume to be withdrawn first. Any payments
beyond that would be fully taxed as ordinary
income.
A beneficiary who earns a substantial income
already can lose a lot of that taxable
portion of the annuity as he’s it pushes him
into a higher tax bracket. That’s why a lump
sum distribution may be especially bad for
him.
Shane Flait is a writer and educator. See
more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com