Variable Annuity Taxation
Understanding the tax treatment of variable annuities is critical for the Series 6 exam and for making suitable recommendations. The rules differ significantly between qualified and non-qualified annuities, and withdrawals have important tax consequences.
Tax-Deferred Growth
The primary tax advantage of all annuities is tax-deferred growth:
- No current income tax on investment earnings
- Taxes paid only when money is withdrawn
- Allows compounding of pre-tax dollars
Key Benefit: In a taxable account, you'd pay taxes annually on dividends and capital gains. Inside an annuity, these grow tax-free until withdrawal.
Qualified vs. Non-Qualified Annuities
| Feature | Qualified Annuity | Non-Qualified Annuity |
|---|---|---|
| Funding | Pre-tax dollars (IRA, 401k) | After-tax dollars |
| Tax Deduction | Yes, when contributed | No |
| Taxation at Withdrawal | 100% taxable | Only earnings taxed |
| Cost Basis | Zero (all pre-tax) | Premiums paid |
| RMD Rules | Yes, after age 73 | No (no forced distributions) |
| Annual Contribution Limits | Yes (IRA/401k limits apply) | No limits |
Qualified Annuities
- Funded with pre-tax money (traditional IRA, 401(k), etc.)
- 100% of withdrawals are taxable as ordinary income
- Subject to Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) starting at age 73
- Same contribution limits as the underlying account
Non-Qualified Annuities
- Funded with after-tax money
- Only earnings portion is taxable
- No contribution limits
- No RMD requirements
- More common for Series 6 questions
LIFO Taxation: Earnings Come Out First
For non-qualified annuity withdrawals (not annuitized), the IRS uses Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) treatment:
LIFO Rule: Earnings are considered withdrawn FIRST, meaning withdrawals are 100% taxable until all gains are depleted.
LIFO Example
| Investment Details | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total premiums paid (cost basis) | $100,000 |
| Current account value | $150,000 |
| Earnings (growth) | $50,000 |
If the owner withdraws $20,000:
- Entire $20,000 is taxable as ordinary income
- It's considered earnings (LIFO)
- Cost basis remains $100,000
If they later withdraw another $40,000:
- $30,000 taxable (remaining earnings)
- $10,000 tax-free return of principal
Exam Tip: LIFO taxation for annuities is the OPPOSITE of life insurance withdrawals, which use FIFO.
Taxation During Annuitization (Exclusion Ratio)
Once a non-qualified annuity is annuitized, each payment is partially taxable and partially tax-free using the exclusion ratio:
Exclusion Ratio Formula
Exclusion Ratio = Cost Basis / Expected Return
- Cost Basis = Total premiums paid
- Expected Return = Annual payment × Expected years of payments
Exclusion Ratio Example
| Factor | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cost basis (premiums paid) | $100,000 |
| Annual annuity payment | $10,000 |
| Life expectancy (from IRS tables) | 20 years |
| Expected return | $200,000 ($10,000 × 20) |
| Exclusion ratio | 50% ($100,000 / $200,000) |
With a 50% exclusion ratio:
- Each $10,000 payment → $5,000 taxable, $5,000 tax-free
- This ratio remains fixed for life (even if annuitant outlives expectancy)
10% Early Withdrawal Penalty
Withdrawals before age 59½ are subject to a 10% penalty on the taxable portion, in addition to regular income tax:
Formula: Taxable amount + 10% penalty + surrender charges (if applicable)
Exceptions to 10% Penalty
The 10% penalty is waived for:
- Death (beneficiary withdrawals)
- Disability (unable to work)
- Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (SEPP/72(t))
- Immediate annuities (annuitized within 1 year of purchase)
Important: Surrender charges are imposed by the INSURANCE COMPANY. The 10% penalty is imposed by the IRS. Both may apply to the same withdrawal.
1035 Exchanges
Section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code allows tax-free exchanges between certain insurance products:
Permitted 1035 Exchanges
| From | To | Allowed? |
|---|---|---|
| Life insurance | Annuity | ✓ Yes |
| Annuity | Annuity | ✓ Yes |
| Annuity | Life insurance | ✗ NO |
| Life insurance | Life insurance | ✓ Yes |
Memory Tip: You can exchange "down" (life to annuity) or "across" (annuity to annuity), but not "up" (annuity to life).
Key 1035 Rules
- Same owner - Must maintain same contract owner
- Same annuitant/insured - Must be same person
- No cash received - Entire value must transfer
- Holding period tacks - Original holding period carries to new contract
- Basis carries over - Cost basis transfers to new contract
1035 Exchange Considerations
Benefits:
- Avoid current taxation on gains
- Move to better-performing product
- Access newer features or lower fees
Risks:
- New surrender charge period begins
- May lose existing guarantees
- Could be unsuitable exchange
Death Benefit Taxation
When the annuitant dies during the accumulation phase:
| Recipient | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Surviving spouse | Can continue contract or cash out |
| Non-spouse beneficiary | Must take distribution within 5 years (lump sum or systematic) |
| Non-spouse (annuity option) | Can elect life annuity based on beneficiary's life |
Tax on Death Benefit:
- Earnings portion taxable as ordinary income to beneficiary
- Cost basis passes tax-free
- No step-up in basis (unlike stocks or real estate)
Key Point: Annuities do NOT receive a step-up in cost basis at death. This is a significant disadvantage compared to other assets.
Summary of Key Tax Rules
| Situation | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Growth inside annuity | Tax-deferred |
| Non-qualified withdrawal (LIFO) | Earnings taxed first at ordinary income rates |
| Annuitized payments | Exclusion ratio - part taxable, part tax-free |
| Before age 59½ | 10% penalty on taxable portion (exceptions apply) |
| 1035 exchange | Tax-free if rules followed |
| Death benefit | Earnings taxable to beneficiary, no step-up |
| Qualified annuity withdrawal | 100% taxable |
A non-qualified annuity has a cost basis of $80,000 and a current value of $120,000. If the owner withdraws $30,000, how much is taxable?
Which of the following 1035 exchanges is NOT permitted?
A 52-year-old withdraws money from a non-qualified variable annuity. What penalties or taxes may apply?
3.6 Variable Life Insurance
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