Taxes Are the Quiet Return Killer

You can optimize your rate. You can minimize fees. But taxes on investment returns — applied every year, before compounding — silently erode wealth in ways that don't show up in any annual statement.

Annuities have a specific set of tax advantages. Some are significant. Some are overstated. Here's the plain-language breakdown.

Tax Deferral: The Core Advantage

Non-qualified annuities (funded with after-tax dollars, outside of an IRA or 401(k)) grow tax-deferred. You don't pay income tax on interest, gains, or earnings until you withdraw — regardless of how long the money is in the contract.

Why this matters:

A taxable account earns interest and owes tax in the year earned. That reduces the balance available to compound in year 2. And year 3. Over a decade, the compounding on money that would have gone to taxes adds up.

The benefit is largest when:

The benefit is smaller (but still present) when:

The Exclusion Ratio on Annuity Income

When you receive income from a non-qualified annuity (like a SPIA), a portion of each payment is a return of your original after-tax premium — not taxable. Only the gain portion is taxable as ordinary income.

The IRS calculates an exclusion ratio based on:

Example: If your premium is $100,000 and expected total payments are $200,000, the exclusion ratio is 50%. Each payment you receive is 50% tax-free (return of premium) and 50% ordinary income.

Once you've received your full premium back (you've "recovered your cost"), 100% of subsequent payments become taxable.

This is categorically different from a fully taxable investment — and it's one reason SPIAs and income annuities can be more tax-efficient than portfolio withdrawals for some retirees.

1035 Exchanges: Moving Without a Tax Event

Internal Revenue Code Section 1035 allows you to transfer the value of one annuity contract directly to another — without triggering a taxable event at the time of the exchange.

This matters because most annuities accumulate gains over time. If you cash out a $150,000 annuity that you originally funded with $100,000, you'd owe income tax on the $50,000 gain. A 1035 exchange bypasses that — the gain carries forward to the new contract, and tax is deferred until actual distribution.

Common uses of 1035 exchanges:

The exchange must be direct carrier-to-carrier (not distributed to you first). And not every combination is eligible — confirm with your carrier or advisor before initiating.

IRAs and Qualified Annuities

Annuities can also be held inside an IRA or other qualified plan. In this case:

Putting a tax-deferred product inside an already-tax-deferred account is often unnecessary. The value of the annuity in this context is the income guarantee or principal protection — not the tax treatment.

What's Overstated

Some annuity marketing emphasizes tax deferral as the primary advantage in every scenario. That's too broad.

Tax deferral is most valuable when the accumulation period is long, the tax bracket is high, and the money would otherwise sit in a taxable account earning interest. For money already in an IRA, or for short time horizons, the tax advantage is marginal.

The right question isn't "do annuities have tax advantages?" (they do). It's "do those advantages apply meaningfully to my situation?" That depends on your bracket, your timeline, your existing account structure, and what you're comparing against.

Practical Takeaway

Tax questions specific to your situation belong with a CPA or tax advisor. The concepts here are educational — the application requires your numbers.

Questions about your specific situation? Contact Devin for a free, no-pressure rate comparison. Licensed in multiple states. No commitment required.