| Pub. 939, General Rule for Pensions and Annuities |
2005 Tax Year |
Publication 939 - Main Contents
Some of the terms used in this publication are defined in the following paragraphs.
-
A pension is generally a series of payments made to you after you retire from work. Pension payments are made regularly and are
for past services with an employer.
-
An annuity is a series of payments under a contract. You can buy the contract alone or you can buy it with the help of your
employer. Annuity payments are made regularly for more than one full year.
Types of pensions and annuities.
Particular types of pensions and annuities include:
-
Fixed period annuities.
You receive definite amounts at regular intervals for a definite length of time.
-
Annuities for a single life. You receive definite amounts at regular intervals for life. The payments end at death.
-
Joint and survivor annuities.
The first annuitant receives a definite amount at regular intervals for life. After he or she dies,
a second annuitant receives a definite amount at regular intervals for life. The amount paid to the second annuitant may or
may not differ from the
amount paid to the first annuitant.
-
Variable annuities.
You receive payments that may vary in amount for a definite length of time or for life. The amounts you
receive may depend upon such variables as profits earned by the pension or annuity funds or cost-of-living indexes.
-
Disability pensions. You are under minimum retirement age and receive payments because you retired on disability. If, at the time
of your retirement, you were permanently and totally disabled, you may be eligible for the credit for the elderly or the disabled
discussed in
Publication 524.
If your annuity starting date is after November 18, 1996, the General Rule cannot be used for the following qualified plans.
-
A qualified employee plan is an employer's stock bonus, pension, or profit-sharing plan that is for the exclusive benefit of
employees or their beneficiaries. This plan must meet Internal Revenue Code requirements. It qualifies for special tax benefits,
including tax
deferral for employer contributions and rollover distributions.
-
A qualified employee annuity is a retirement annuity purchased by an employer for an employee under a plan that meets Internal
Revenue Code requirements.
-
A tax-sheltered annuity is a special annuity plan or contract purchased for an employee of a public school or tax-exempt
organization.
The General Rule is used to figure the tax treatment of various types of pensions and annuities, including nonqualified employee plans.
A nonqualified employee plan
is an employer's plan that does not meet Internal Revenue Code requirements. It does not qualify for
most of the tax benefits of a qualified plan.
Annuity worksheets.
The worksheets found near the end of the text of this publication may be useful to you in figuring the taxable part
of your annuity.
Request for a ruling.
If you are unable to determine the income tax treatment of your pension or annuity, you may ask the Internal Revenue
Service to figure the taxable
part of your annuity payments. This is treated as a request for a ruling. See Requesting a Ruling on Taxation of Annuity near the end of
this publication.
Withholding tax and estimated tax.
Your pension or annuity is subject to federal income tax withholding unless you choose not to have tax withheld. If
you choose not to have tax
withheld from your pension or annuity, or if you do not have enough income tax withheld, you may have to make estimated tax
payments.
Taxation of Periodic Payments
This section explains how the periodic payments you receive under a pension or annuity plan are taxed under the General Rule.
Periodic payments are
amounts paid at regular intervals (such as weekly, monthly, or yearly) for a period of time greater than one year (such as
for 15 years or for life).
These payments are also known as amounts received as an annuity.
If you receive an amount from your plan that is a nonperiodic payment (amount not received as an annuity), see Taxation of
Nonperiodic Payments in Publication 575.
In general, you can recover your net cost of the pension or annuity tax free over the period you are to receive the payments.
The amount of each
payment that is more than the part that represents your net cost is taxable. Under the General Rule, the part of each annuity
payment that represents
your net cost is in the same proportion that your investment in the contract is to your expected return. These terms are explained
in the following
discussions.
Investment in the Contract
In figuring how much of your pension or annuity is taxable under the General Rule, you must figure your investment in the
contract.
First, find your net cost of the contract as of the annuity starting date (defined later). To find this amount, you must first figure
the total premiums, contributions, or other amounts paid. This includes the amounts your employer contributed if you were
required to include these
amounts in income. It also includes amounts you actually contributed (except amounts for health and accident benefits and
deductible voluntary
employee contributions).
From this total cost you subtract:
-
Any refunded premiums, rebates, dividends, or unrepaid loans (any of which were not included in your income) that you received
by the later
of the annuity starting date or the date on which you received your first payment.
-
Any additional premiums paid for double indemnity or disability benefits.
-
Any other tax-free amounts you received under the contract or plan before the later of the dates in (1).
The annuity starting date
is the later of the first day of the first period for which you receive payment under the contract or the date on
which the obligation under the
contract becomes fixed.
Example.
On January 1 you completed all your payments required under an annuity contract providing for monthly payments starting on
August 1, for the period
beginning July 1. The annuity starting date is July 1. This is the date you use in figuring your investment in the contract
and your expected return
(discussed later).
If any of the following items apply, adjust (add or subtract) your total cost to find your net cost.
Foreign employment.
If you worked abroad, your cost includes amounts contributed by your employer that were not includible in your gross
income. The contributions that
apply were made either:
-
Before 1963 by your employer for that work, or
-
After 1962 by your employer for that work if you performed the services under a plan that existed on March 12, 1962.
Death benefit exclusion.
If you are the beneficiary of a deceased employee (or former employee), who died before August 21, 1996, you may qualify for
a death benefit exclusion of up to $5,000. The beneficiary of a deceased employee who died after August 20, 1996, will not
qualify for the death
benefit exclusion.
How to adjust your total cost.
If you are eligible, treat the amount of any allowable death benefit exclusion as additional cost paid by the employee.
Add it to the cost or
unrecovered cost of the annuity at the annuity starting date. See Example 3 under Computation Under General Rule for an
illustration of the adjustment to the cost of the contract.
Free IRS help.
If you are eligible for this exclusion and need help computing the amount of the death benefit exclusion, see Requesting a Ruling on Taxation
of Annuity, near the end of this publication.
Net cost.
Your total cost plus certain adjustments and minus other amounts already recovered before the annuity starting date
is your net cost. This is the
unrecovered investment in the contract as of the annuity starting date. If your annuity starting date is after 1986, this
is the maximum amount that
you may recover tax free under the contract.
Refund feature.
Adjustment for the value of the refund feature is only applicable when you report your pension or annuity under the
General Rule. Your annuity
contract has a refund feature if:
-
The expected return ( discussed later) of an annuity depends entirely or partly on the life of one or more individuals,
-
The contract provides that payments will be made to a beneficiary or the estate of an annuitant on or after the death of the
annuitant if a
stated amount or a stated number of payments has not been paid to the annuitant or annuitants before death, and
-
The payments are a refund of the amount you paid for the annuity contract.
If your annuity has a refund feature, you must reduce your net cost of the contract by the value of the refund feature
(figured using Table III or
VII at the end of this publication, also see How To Use Actuarial Tables, later) to find the investment in the contract.
Zero value of refund feature.
For a joint and survivor annuity, the value of the refund feature is zero if:
-
Both annuitants are age 74 or younger,
-
The payments are guaranteed for less than 2½ years, and
-
The survivor's annuity is at least 50% of the first annuitant's annuity.
For a single-life annuity without survivor benefit, the value of the refund feature is zero if:
-
The payments are guaranteed for less than 2½ years, and
-
The annuitant is:
-
Age 57 or younger (if using the new (unisex) annuity tables),
-
Age 42 or younger (if male and using the old annuity tables), or
-
Age 47 or younger (if female and using the old annuity tables).
If you do not meet these requirements, you will have to figure the value of the refund feature, as explained in the
following discussion.
Examples.
The first example shows how to figure the value of the refund feature when there is only one beneficiary. Example 2 shows
how to figure the value
of the refund feature when the contract provides, in addition to a whole life annuity, one or more temporary life annuities
for the lives of children.
In both examples, the taxpayer elects to use Tables V through VIII. If you need the value of the refund feature for a joint
and survivor annuity,
write to the Internal Revenue Service as explained under Requesting a Ruling on Taxation of Annuity, near the end of this publication.
Example 1.
At age 65, Barbara bought for $21,053 an annuity with a refund feature. She will get $100 a month for life. Barbara's contract
provides that if she
does not live long enough to recover the full $21,053, similar payments will be made to her surviving beneficiary until a
total of $21,053 has been
paid under the contract. In this case, the contract cost and the total guaranteed return are the same ($21,053). Barbara's
investment in the contract
is figured as follows:
| Net cost |
$21,053 |
| Amount to be received annually |
$1,200 |
|
| Number of years for which payment is guaranteed ($21,053 divided by $1,200) |
17.54 |
|
| Rounded to nearest whole number of years |
18 |
|
| Percentage from Actuarial Table VII for age 65 with 18 years of guaranteed payments |
15% |
|
| Value of the refund feature (rounded to the nearest dollar)—15% of $21,053 |
3,158 |
| Investment in the contract, adjusted for value of refund feature |
$17,895 |
| |
|
|
If the total guaranteed return were less than the $21,053 net cost of the contract, Barbara would apply the appropriate percentage
from the tables
to the lesser amount. For example, if the contract guaranteed the $100 monthly payments for 17 years to Barbara's estate or
beneficiary if she were to
die before receiving all the payments for that period, the total guaranteed return would be $20,400 ($100 × 12 × 17 years).
In this case,
the value of the refund feature would be $2,856 (14% of $20,400) and Barbara's investment in the contract would be $18,197
($21,053 minus $2,856)
instead of $17,895.
Example 2.
John died while still employed. His widow, Eleanor, age 48, receives $171 a month for the rest of her life. John's son, Elmer,
age 9, receives $50
a month until he reaches age 18. John's contributions to the retirement fund totaled $7,559.45, with interest on those contributions
of $1,602.53. The
guarantee or total refund feature of the contract is $9,161.98 ($7,559.45 plus $1,602.53).
The adjustment in the investment in the contract is figured as follows:
| A) |
Expected return:* |
|
|
| |
1) |
Widow's expected return: |
|
|
| |
|
Annual annuity ($171 × 12) |
$2,052 |
|
| |
|
Multiplied by factor from Table V |
|
|
| |
|
(nearest age 48) |
34.9 |
$71,614.80 |
| |
2) |
Child's expected return: |
|
|
| |
|
Annual annuity ($50 × 12) |
$600 |
|
| |
|
Multiplied by factor from |
|
|
| |
|
Table VIII (nearest age 9 |
|
|
| |
|
for term of 9 years) |
9.0 |
5,400.00 |
| |
3) |
Total expected return |
|
$77,014.80 |
| B) |
Adjustment for refund feature: |
|
|
| |
1) |
Contributions (net cost) |
$7,559.45 |
| |
2) |
Guaranteed amount (contributions of $7,559.45 plus interest of $1,602.53) |
$9,161.98 |
| |
3) |
Minus: Expected return under child's (temporary life) annuity (A(2)) |
5,400.00 |
| |
4) |
Net guaranteed amount |
$3,761.98 |
| |
5) |
Multiple from Table VII (nearest age 48 for 2 years duration (recovery of $3,761.98 at $171 a month to
nearest whole year))
|
0% |
| |
6) |
Adjustment required for value of refund feature rounded to the nearest whole dollar
(0% × $3,761.98, the smaller of B(3) or B(6))
|
0 |
| *Expected return is the total amount you and other eligible annuitants can expect to receive under
the contract. See the discussion of expected return, later in this publication.
|
Free IRS help.
If you need to request assistance to figure the value of the refund feature, see Requesting a Ruling on Taxation of Annuity, near the
end of this publication.
Your expected return is the total amount you and other eligible annuitants can expect to receive under the contract. The following
discussions
explain how to figure the expected return with each type of annuity.
A person's age, for purposes of figuring the expected return, is the age at the birthday nearest to the annuity starting date.
Fixed period annuity.
If you will get annuity payments for a fixed number of years, without regard to your life expectancy, you must figure
your expected return based on
that fixed number of years. It is the total amount you will get beginning at the annuity starting date. You will receive specific
periodic payments
for a definite period of time, such as a fixed number of months (but not less than 13). To figure your expected return, multiply
the fixed number of
months for which payments are to be made by the amount of the payment specified for each period.
Single life annuity.
If you are to get annuity payments for the rest of your life, find your expected return as follows. You must multiply
the amount of the annual
payment by a multiple based on your life expectancy as of the annuity starting date. These multiples are set out in actuarial
Tables I and V near the
end of this publication (see How To Use Actuarial Tables, later).
You may need to adjust these multiples if the payments are made quarterly, semiannually, or annually. See Adjustments to Tables I, II, V, VI,
and VIA following Table I.
Example.
Henry bought an annuity contract that will give him an annuity of $500 a month for his life. If at the annuity starting date
Henry's nearest
birthday is 66, the expected return is figured as follows:
| Annual payment ($500 × 12 months) |
$6,000 |
| Multiple shown in Table V, age 66 |
× 19.2 |
| Expected return |
$115,200 |
If the payments were to be made to Henry quarterly and the first payment was made one full month after the annuity starting
date, Henry would
adjust the 19.2 multiple by +.1. His expected return would then be $115,800 ($6,000 × 19.3).
Annuity for shorter of life or specified period.
With this type of annuity, you are to get annuity payments either for the rest of your life or until the end of a specified period,
whichever period is shorter. To figure your expected return, multiply the amount of your annual payment by a multiple in Table
IV or VIII for
temporary life annuities. Find the proper multiple based on your sex (if using Table IV), your age at the annuity starting
date, and the nearest whole
number of years in the specified period.
Example.
Harriet purchased an annuity this year that will pay her $200 each month for five years or until she dies, whichever period
is shorter. She was age
65 at her birthday nearest the annuity starting date. She figures the expected return as follows:
| Annual payment ($200 × 12 months) |
$2,400 |
| Multiple shown in Table VIII, age 65, 5-year term |
× 4.9 |
| Expected return |
$11,760 |
She uses Table VIII (not Table IV) because all her contributions were made after June 30, 1986. See Special Elections, later.
Joint and survivor annuities.
If you have an annuity that pays you a periodic income for life and after your death provides an identical lifetime periodic income to
your spouse (or some other person), you figure the expected return based on your combined life expectancies. To figure the
expected return, multiply
the annual payment by a multiple in Table II or VI based on your joint life expectancies. If your payments are made quarterly,
semiannually, or
annually, you may need to adjust these multiples. See Adjustments to Tables I, II, V, VI, and VIA following Table I near the end of this
publication.
Example.
John bought a joint and survivor annuity providing payments of $500 a month for his life, and, after his death, $500 a month
for the remainder of
his wife's life. At John's annuity starting date, his age at his nearest birthday is 70 and his wife's at her nearest birthday
is 67. The expected
return is figured as follows:
| Annual payment ($500 × 12 months) |
$6,000 |
| Multiple shown in Table VI, ages 67 and 70 |
× 22.0 |
| Expected return |
$132,000 |
Different payments to survivor.
If your contract provides that payments to a survivor annuitant will be different from the amount you receive, you must use a
computation which accounts for both the joint lives of the annuitants and the life of the survivor.
Example 1.
Gerald bought a contract providing for payments to him of $500 a month for life and, after his death, payments to his wife,
Mary, of $350 a month
for life. If, at the annuity starting date, Gerald's nearest birthday is 70 and Mary's is 67, the expected return under the
contract is figured as
follows:
| Combined multiple for Gerald and Mary, ages 70 and 67 (from Table VI) |
|
22.0 |
| Multiple for Gerald, age 70 (from Table V) |
|
16.0 |
| Difference: Multiple applicable to Mary |
|
6.0 |
| Gerald's annual payment ($500 × 12) |
$6,000 |
|
| Gerald's multiple |
16.0 |
|
| Gerald's expected return |
|
$96,000 |
| Mary's annual payment ($350 × 12) |
$4,200 |
|
| Mary's multiple |
6.0 |
|
| Mary's expected return |
|
25,200 |
| Total expected return under the contract |
|
$121,200 |
Example 2.
Your husband died while still employed. Under the terms of his employer's retirement plan, you are entitled to get an immediate
annuity of $400 a
month for the rest of your life or until you remarry. Your daughters, Marie and Jean, are each entitled to immediate temporary
life annuities of $150
a month until they reach age 18.
You were 50 years old at the annuity starting date. Marie was 16 and Jean was 14. Using the multiples shown in Tables V and
VIII at the end of this
publication, the total expected return on the annuity starting date is $169,680, figured as follows:
| Widow, age 50 (multiple from Table V—33.1 × $4,800 annual payment) |
$158,880 |
| Marie, age 16 for 2 years duration (multiple from Table VIII—2.0 × $1,800 annual payment) |
3,600 |
| Jean, age 14 for 4 years duration (multiple from Table VIII—4.0 × $1,800 annual payment) |
7,200 |
| Total expected return |
$169,680 |
No computation of expected return is made based on your husband's age at the date of death because he died before the annuity
starting date.
Computation Under
the General Rule
Under the General Rule, you figure the taxable part of your annuity by using the following steps:
Step 1.
Figure the amount of your investment in the contract, including any adjustments for the refund feature and the death
benefit exclusion, if
applicable. See Death benefit exclusion, earlier.
Step 2.
Figure your expected return.
Step 3.
Divide Step 1 by Step 2 and round to three decimal places. This will give you the exclusion percentage.
Step 4.
Multiply the exclusion percentage by the first regular periodic payment. The result is the tax-free part of each pension or annuity
payment.
The tax-free part remains the same even if the total payment increases or you outlive the life expectancy factor used.
If your annuity starting
date is after 1986, the total amount of annuity income that is tax free over the years cannot exceed your net cost.
Each annuitant applies the same exclusion percentage to his or her initial payment called for in the contract.
Step 5.
Multiply the tax-free part of each payment (step 4) by the number of payments received during the year. This will
give you the tax-free part of the
total payment for the year.
In the first year of your annuity, your first payment or part of your first payment may be for a fraction of the payment
period. This fractional
amount is multiplied by your exclusion percentage to get the tax-free part.
Step 6.
Subtract the tax-free part from the total payment you received. The rest is the taxable part of your pension or annuity.
Example 1.
You purchased an annuity with an investment in the contract of $10,800. Under its terms, the annuity will pay you $100 a month
for life. The
multiple for your age (age 65) is 20.0 as shown in Table V. Your expected return is $24,000 (20 × 12 × $100). Your cost of
$10,800,
divided by your expected return of $24,000, equals 45.0%. This is the percentage you will not have to include in income.
Each year, until your net cost is recovered, $540 (45% of $1,200) will be tax free and you will include $660 ($1,200 - $540)
in your income.
If you had received only six payments of $100 ($600) during the year, your exclusion would have been $270 (45% of $100 × 6
payments).
Example 2.
Gerald bought a joint and survivor annuity. Gerald's investment in the contract is $62,712 and the expected return is $121,200.
The exclusion
percentage is 51.7% ($62,712 ÷ $121,200). Gerald will receive $500 a month ($6,000 a year). Each year, until his net cost
is recovered, $3,102
(51.7% of his total payments received of $6,000) will be tax free and $2,898 ($6,000 - $3,102) will be included in his income.
If Gerald dies,
his wife will receive $350 a month ($4,200 a year). If Gerald had not recovered all of his net cost before his death, his
wife will use the same
exclusion percentage (51.7%). Each year, until the entire net cost is recovered, his wife will receive $2,171.40 (51.7% of
her payments received of
$4,200) tax free. She will include $2,028.60 ($4,200 - $2,171.40) in her income tax return.
Example 3.
Using the same facts as Example 2 under Different payments to survivor, you are to receive an annual annuity of $4,800 until you die or
remarry. Your two daughters each receive annual annuities of $1,800 until they reach age 18. Your husband contributed $25,576
to the plan. You are
eligible for the $5,000 death benefit exclusion because your husband died before August 21, 1996.
Adjusted Investment in the Contract
| Contributions |
$25,576 |
| Plus: Death benefit exclusion |
5,000 |
| Adjusted investment in the contract |
$30,576 |
The total expected return, as previously figured (in Example 2 under Different payments to survivor), is $169,680. The exclusion
percentage of 18.0% ($30,576 ÷ $169,680) applies to the annuity payments you and each of your daughters receive. Each full
year $864 (18.0%
× $4,800) will be tax free to you, and you must include $3,936 in your income tax return. Each year, until age 18, $324 (18.0%
× $1,800)
of each of your daughters' payments will be tax free and each must include the balance, $1,476, as income on her own income
tax return.
Part-year payments.
If you receive payments for only part of a year, apply the exclusion percentage to the first regular periodic payment,
and multiply the result by
the number of payments received during the year. If you received a fractional payment, follow Step 5, discussed earlier. This
gives you the tax-free
part of your total payment.
Example.
On September 28, Mary bought an annuity contract for $22,050 that will give her $125 a month for life, beginning October 30.
The applicable
multiple from Table V is 23.3 (age 61). Her expected return is $34,950 ($125 × 12 × 23.3). Mary's investment in the contract
of $22,050,
divided by her expected return of $34,950, equals 63.1%. Each payment received will consist of 63.1% return of cost and 36.9%
taxable income, until
her net cost of the contract is fully recovered. During the first year, Mary received three payments of $125, or $375, of
which $236.63 (63.1% ×
$375) is a return of cost. The remaining $138.37 is included in income.
Increase in annuity payments.
The tax-free amount remains the same as the amount figured at the annuity starting date, even if the payment increases.
All increases in the
installment payments are fully taxable.
Example.
Joe's wife died while she was still employed and, as her beneficiary, he began receiving an annuity of $147 per month. In
figuring the taxable
part, Joe elects to use Tables V through VIII. The cost of the contract was $7,938, consisting of the sum of his wife's net
contributions, adjusted
for any refund feature. His expected return as of the annuity starting date is $35,280 (age 65, multiple of 20.0 × $1,764
annual payment). The
exclusion percentage is $7,938 ÷ $35,280, or 22.5%. During the year he received 11 monthly payments of $147, or $1,617. Of
this amount, 22.5%
× $147 × 11 ($363.83) is tax free as a return of cost and the balance of $1,253.17 is taxable.
Later, because of a cost-of-living increase, his annuity payment was increased to $166 per month, or $1,992 a year (12 × $166).
The tax-free
part is still only 22.5% of the annuity payments as of the annuity starting date (22.5% × $147 × 12 = $396.90 for a full year).
The
increase of $228 ($1,992 - $1,764 (12 × $147)) is fully taxable.
Variable annuities.
For variable annuity payments, figure the amount of each payment that is tax free by dividing your investment in the
contract (adjusted for any
refund feature) by the total number of periodic payments you expect to get under the contract.
If the annuity is for a definite period, you determine the total number of payments by multiplying the number of payments
to be made each year by
the number of years you will receive payments. If the annuity is for life, you determine the total number of payments by using
a multiple from the
appropriate actuarial table.
Example.
Frank purchased a variable annuity at age 65. The total cost of the contract was $12,000. The annuity starting date is January
1 of the year of
purchase. His annuity will be paid, starting July 1, in variable annual installments for his life. The tax-free amount of
each payment, until he has
recovered his cost of his contract, is:
| Investment in the contract |
$12,000 |
| Number of expected annual payments (multiple for age 65 from Table V) |
20 |
| Tax-free amount of each payment ($12,000 ÷ 20) |
$600 |
If Frank's first payment is $920, he includes only $320 ($920 - $600) in his gross income.
If the tax-free amount for a year is more than the payments you receive in that year, you may choose, when you receive the next payment,
to refigure the tax-free part. Divide the amount of the periodic tax-free part that is more than the payment you received
by the remaining number of
payments you expect. The result is added to the previously figured periodic tax-free part. The sum is the amount of each future
payment that will be
tax free.
Example.
Using the facts of the previous example about Frank, assume that after Frank's $920 payment, he received $500 in the following
year, and $1,200 in
the year after that. Frank does not pay tax on the $500 (second year) payment because $600 of each annual pension payment
is tax free. Since the $500
payment is less than the $600 annual tax-free amount, he may choose to refigure his tax-free part when he receives his $1,200
(third year) payment, as
follows:
| Amount tax free in second year |
$600.00 |
| Amount received in second year |
500.00 |
| Difference |
$100.00 |
| Number of remaining payments after the first 2 payments (age 67, from Table V) |
18.4 |
| Amount to be added to previously determined annual tax-free part ($100 ÷ 18.4) |
$5.43 |
| Revised annual tax-free part for third and later years ($600 + $5.43) |
$605.43 |
| Amount taxable in third year ($1,200 - $605.43)
|
$594.57 |
If you choose to refigure your tax-free amount,
you must file a statement with your income tax return stating that you are refiguring the tax-free amount in accordance
with the rules of section
1.72–4(d)(3) of the Income Tax Regulations. The statement must also show the following information:
-
The annuity starting date and your age on that date.
-
The first day of the first period for which you received an annuity payment in the current year.
-
Your investment in the contract as originally figured.
-
The total of all amounts received tax free under the annuity from the annuity starting date through the first day of the first
period for
which you received an annuity payment in the current tax year.
Your annuity starting date determines the total amount of annuity income that you can exclude from income over the years.
Exclusion limited to net cost.
If your annuity starting date is after 1986, the total amount of annuity income that you can exclude over the years
as a return of your cost cannot
exceed your net cost (figured without any reduction for a refund feature). This is the unrecovered investment in the contract as of the
annuity starting date.
If your annuity starting date is after July 1, 1986, any unrecovered net cost at your (or last annuitant's) death
is allowed as a miscellaneous
itemized deduction on the final return of the decedent. This deduction is not subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.
Example 1.
Your annuity starting date is after 1986. Your total cost is $12,500, and your net cost is $10,000, taking into account certain
adjustments. There
is no refund feature. Your monthly annuity payment is $833.33. Your exclusion ratio is 12% and you exclude $100 a month. Your
exclusion ends after 100
months, when you have excluded your net cost of $10,000. Thereafter, your annuity payments are fully taxable.
Example 2.
The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that there is a refund feature, and you die after 5 years with no surviving
annuitant. The
adjustment for the refund feature is $1,000, so the investment in the contract is $9,000. The exclusion ratio is 10.8%, and
your monthly exclusion is
$90. After 5 years (60 months), you have recovered tax free only $5,400 ($90 x 60). An itemized deduction for the unrecovered
net cost of $4,600
($10,000 net cost minus $5,400) may be taken on your final income tax return. Your unrecovered investment is determined without
regard to the refund
feature adjustment, discussed earlier, under Adjustments.
Exclusion not limited to net cost.
If your annuity starting date was before 1987, you could continue to take your monthly exclusion for as long as you
receive your annuity. If you
choose a joint and survivor annuity, your survivor continues to take the survivor's exclusion figured as of the annuity starting
date. The total
exclusion may be more than your investment in the contract.
How To Use Actuarial Tables
In figuring, under the General Rule, the taxable part of your annuity payments that you are to get for the rest of your life
(rather than for a
fixed number of years), you must use one or more of the actuarial tables in this publication.
Effective July 1, 1986, the Internal Revenue Service adopted new annuity Tables V through VIII, in which your sex is not considered
when
determining the applicable factor. These tables correspond to the old Tables I through IV. In general, Tables V through VIII
must be used if you made
contributions to the retirement plan after June 30, 1986. If you made no contributions to the plan after June 30, 1986, generally
you must use only
Tables I through IV. However, if you received an annuity payment after June 30, 1986, you may elect to use Tables V through
VIII (see Annuity
received after June 30, 1986, later).
Although you generally must use Tables V through VIII if you made contributions to the retirement plan after June 30, 1986,
and Tables I through IV
if you made no contributions after June 30, 1986, you can make the following special elections to select which tables to use.
Contributions made both before July 1986 and after June 1986.
If you made contributions to the retirement plan both before July 1986 and after June 1986, you may elect to use Tables
I through IV for the
pre-July 1986 cost of the contract, and Tables V through VIII for the post-June 1986 cost. (See the examples below.)
Making the election. Attach this statement to your income tax return for the first year in which you receive an annuity:
“ I elect to apply the provisions of paragraph (d) of section 1.72–6 of the Income Tax Regulations.”
The statement must also include your name, address, social security number, and the amount of the pre-July 1986 investment
in the contract.
If your investment in the contract includes post-June 1986 contributions to the plan, and you do not make the election
to use Tables I through IV
and Tables V through VIII, then you can only use Tables V through VIII in figuring the taxable part of your annuity. You must
also use Tables V
through VIII if you are unable or do not wish to determine the portions of your contributions which were made before July
1, 1986, and after June 30,
1986.
Advantages of election. In general, a lesser amount of each annual annuity payment is taxable if you separately figure your exclusion
ratio for pre-July 1986 and post-June 1986 contributions.
If you intend to make this election, save your records that substantiate your pre-July 1986 and post-June 1986 contributions.
If the death benefit
exclusion applies (see discussion, earlier), you do not have to apportion it between the pre-July 1986 and the post-June 1986
investment in the
contract.
The following examples illustrate the separate computations required if you elect to use Tables I through IV for your
pre-July 1986 investment in
the contract and Tables V through VIII for your post-June 1986 investment in the contract.
Example 1.
Bill, who is single, contributed $42,000 to the retirement plan and will receive an annual annuity of $24,000 for life. Payment
of the $42,000
contribution is guaranteed under a refund feature. Bill is 55 years old as of the annuity starting date. For figuring the
taxable part of Bill's
annuity, he chose to make separate computations for his pre-July 1986 investment in the contract of $41,300, and for his post-June
1986 investment in
the contract of $700.
| |
|
|
Pre-
July 1986
|
|
Post-
June 1986
|
| A. |
Adjustment for refund feature |
|
|
|
| |
1) Net cost |
$41,300 |
|
$700 |
| |
2) Annual annuity—$24,000
($41,300/$42,000 × $24,000)
|
$23,600 |
|
|
| |
($700/$42,000 × $24,000) |
|
|
$400 |
| |
3) Guarantee under contract |
$41,300 |
|
$700 |
| |
4) No. of years payments
guaranteed (rounded), A(3) ÷ A(2)
|
2 |
|
2 |
| |
5) Applicable percentage from
Tables III and VII
|
1% |
|
0% |
| |
6) Adjustment for value of refund
feature, A(5) × smaller of A(1)
or A(3)
|
$413 |
|
$0 |
| B. |
Investment in the contract |
|
|
|
| |
1) Net cost |
$41,300 |
|
$700 |
| |
2) Minus: Amount in A(6) |
413 |
|
0 |
| |
3) Investment in the contract |
$40,887 |
|
$700 |
| C. |
Expected return |
|
|
|
| |
1) Annual annuity receivable |
$24,000 |
|
$24,000 |
| |
2) Multiples from Tables I and V |
21.7 |
|
28.6 |
| |
3) Expected return, C(1) × C(2) |
$520,800 |
|
$686,400 |
| D. |
Tax-free part of annuity |
|
|
|
| |
1) Exclusion ratio as decimal,
B(3) ÷ C(3)
|
.079 |
|
.001 |
| |
2) Tax-free part, C(1) × D(1) |
$1,896 |
|
$24 |
|
|