Annuities are insurance products that can provide guaranteed income in retirement, but they come with trade-offs including fees, complexity, and limited liquidity. This guide helps you estimate payouts and compare different annuity types.
Annuity Types Comparison
| Feature | Fixed Annuity | Variable Annuity | Fixed Indexed Annuity | Immediate Annuity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Returns | Guaranteed rate (3-5%) | Market-based (varies) | Index-linked with caps | Guaranteed payments |
| Risk | Very low | Market risk | Low-moderate | Very low |
| Fees | Low (0-1%) | High (2-3%+) | Moderate (hidden) | Low |
| Liquidity | Limited (surrender period) | Limited | Limited | None (irrevocable) |
| Best for | Conservative savers | Growth-seekers | Index exposure with protection | Immediate income need |
| Complexity | Low | High | High | Low |
Immediate Annuity Payout Estimates
Monthly Income Per $100,000 Premium (2026 Rates)
| Age at Purchase | Male (Life Only) | Female (Life Only) | Joint Life (Both Same Age) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 55 | $475 | $450 | $395 |
| 60 | $530 | $500 | $440 |
| 65 | $600 | $565 | $500 |
| 70 | $690 | $645 | $575 |
| 75 | $810 | $750 | $665 |
| 80 | $975 | $890 | $785 |
Rates are approximate and vary by insurance company and current interest rate environment.
Payout Options and Trade-Offs
| Payout Option | Monthly Payment* | Pro | Con |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life only | $600 | Highest payment | Nothing left if you die early |
| Life with 10-year certain | $570 | Guarantees 10 years of payments to beneficiary | Slightly lower payment |
| Life with 20-year certain | $530 | Longer guarantee period | Lower payment |
| Joint and 100% survivor | $500 | Surviving spouse gets full payment | Lowest payment |
| Joint and 50% survivor | $545 | Higher initial payment | Survivor gets only half |
Based on $100,000 premium, age 65 male.
Deferred Annuity Growth Estimates
Fixed Annuity Growth ($100,000 Initial Premium)
| Year | 3% Rate | 4% Rate | 5% Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | $115,927 | $121,665 | $127,628 |
| 10 | $134,392 | $148,024 | $162,889 |
| 15 | $155,797 | $180,094 | $207,893 |
| 20 | $180,611 | $219,112 | $265,330 |
Variable Annuity Growth (With Fees)
| Year | 7% Market Return, 2.5% Fees (Net 4.5%) | 7% Market Return, 1.5% Fees (Net 5.5%) | Index Fund (No Annuity, 7%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | $155,297 | $170,814 | $196,715 |
| 20 | $241,171 | $291,776 | $386,968 |
| 30 | $374,532 | $498,395 | $761,226 |
Variable annuity fees significantly reduce long-term growth compared to investing directly.
Annuity Fee Breakdown
Common Fee Types
| Fee Type | Typical Range | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Mortality and expense (M&E) | 1.0-1.5% annually | Insurance company’s risk and profit |
| Administrative fees | 0.1-0.3% annually | Record keeping and administration |
| Investment management fees | 0.5-1.5% annually | Underlying fund management (variable annuities) |
| Rider fees (income guarantee) | 0.5-1.5% annually | Guaranteed income benefit, death benefit, etc. |
| Surrender charges | 5-10% (declining over 5-10 years) | Penalty for early withdrawal |
| Total annual cost (variable) | 2.0-4.0% | — |
Surrender Charge Schedule (Typical)
| Year | Surrender Charge |
|---|---|
| 1 | 8% |
| 2 | 7% |
| 3 | 6% |
| 4 | 5% |
| 5 | 4% |
| 6 | 3% |
| 7 | 2% |
| 8+ | 0% |
Fixed Indexed Annuity: Understanding Returns
How Cap Rates and Participation Rates Work
| Feature | Example | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Index tracked | S&P 500 | Your returns are linked to this index |
| Cap rate | 6% per year | Even if S&P returns 20%, you get 6% max |
| Participation rate | 80% | You get 80% of the index return (before cap) |
| Floor | 0% | If the index drops, you lose nothing |
| Spread/margin | 2% | Deducted from gross return before crediting |
Indexed Annuity Return Scenarios
| S&P 500 Return | With 6% Cap (100% Participation) | With 80% Participation (No Cap) | With 2% Spread |
|---|---|---|---|
| -15% | 0% (floor) | 0% (floor) | 0% (floor) |
| -5% | 0% (floor) | 0% (floor) | 0% (floor) |
| 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| 5% | 5% | 4% | 3% |
| 10% | 6% (capped) | 8% | 8% |
| 20% | 6% (capped) | 16% | 18% |
| 30% | 6% (capped) | 24% | 28% |
Annuity vs Other Retirement Income Strategies
$500,000 at Age 65: Income Comparison
| Strategy | Monthly Income | Guaranteed for Life? | Inflation Adjusted? | Leaves Inheritance? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immediate annuity | $3,000 | Yes | No (unless rider purchased) | No |
| 4% rule (stock/bond portfolio) | $1,667 | No | Yes (historically) | Yes (likely) |
| Bond ladder (5% yield) | $2,083 | No (ends when bonds mature) | No | Principal returned |
| Dividend portfolio (3% yield) | $1,250 | No | Partially (dividend growth) | Yes |
| Social Security delay strategy | Varies | Yes | Yes (COLAs) | No |
Tax Treatment of Annuities
Tax Rules by Annuity Funding Source
| Funding Source | Contributions | Earnings Growth | Withdrawals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-qualified (after-tax money) | Already taxed | Tax-deferred | Earnings taxed as ordinary income (LIFO) |
| Traditional IRA/401(k) rollover | Tax-deferred | Tax-deferred | Fully taxed as ordinary income |
| Roth IRA rollover | Already taxed | Tax-free | Tax-free (if qualified) |
Exclusion Ratio for Non-Qualified Annuities
When you annuitize, each payment is split between taxable earnings and tax-free return of principal:
| Total Premium | Expected Total Payments | Exclusion Ratio | Monthly Payment | Tax-Free Portion | Taxable Portion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $180,000 (anticipated) | 55.6% | $750 | $417 | $333 |
| $200,000 | $360,000 | 55.6% | $1,500 | $834 | $666 |
Annuity vs. 4% Rule: A Direct Comparison
Scenario: A 65-year-old retiree with $500,000 wants reliable monthly income.
| Strategy | Monthly Income | Flexibility | Longevity Protection | Death Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPIA (immediate annuity) | $2,950/month | Very low — no access to principal | Guaranteed for life | None (or reduced with period certain) |
| 4% Rule (self-manage) | $1,667/month | Full — access any time | Not guaranteed (sequence risk) | Full remaining balance to heirs |
| Hybrid: 50% annuity + 50% invested | $1,475 annuity + flexible portfolio | Moderate | Partial guarantee | $250K to heirs |
| Delay to 70 + smaller annuity | SS + $3,450/month at 70 | Low | Best longevity hedge | None |
The SPIA generates significantly more income per dollar than the 4% rule because the insurance company can cross-subsidize — people who die early effectively fund those who live long. This “mortality credit” is the core economic argument for annuities.
However, if you die at 70, five years after buying the annuity, your estate receives nothing (unless you bought a period certain or return-of-premium rider, which reduces monthly income).
The hybrid approach — annuitizing enough to cover fixed expenses (housing, food, healthcare) and keeping the rest invested — gives most retirees the best blend of security and flexibility. Social Security already provides a base annuity; adding a SPIA is only necessary if Social Security doesn’t fully cover essential expenses.
When Annuities Make Sense (and When They Don’t)
| Situation | Annuity Recommended? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Want guaranteed income floor in retirement | Yes | Covers essential expenses regardless of market |
| Already maxed 401(k) and IRA | Maybe | Tax deferral can help, but compare fees |
| Long life expectancy (family history) | Yes | Longevity protection is the core value |
| Need money in the next 5-10 years | No | Surrender charges and penalties |
| In your 20s-40s | No | Too early; use tax-advantaged accounts first |
| Want to leave maximum to heirs | No | Most annuities reduce or eliminate inheritance |
| Sold a high-fee variable annuity | Caution | Get a second opinion from a fee-only advisor |
| Want inflation-adjusted income | Maybe | Inflation riders exist but reduce initial income |
How to Shop for an Annuity
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Determine how much guaranteed income you need monthly |
| 2 | Get quotes from at least 3-5 insurance companies |
| 3 | Compare A.M. Best ratings (A or higher recommended) |
| 4 | Ask for total annual fees in writing |
| 5 | Review the surrender charge schedule |
| 6 | Understand the death benefit provisions |
| 7 | Consider SPIA (simple) before complex products |
| 8 | Consult a fee-only financial advisor (not an annuity salesperson) |
Questions to Ask Before Buying an Annuity
Most annuity buyers regret not asking these questions before signing:
About the insurer:
- What is your A.M. Best rating? (Look for A or better — this is your financial security)
- How long have you offered this product?
- What happens to my annuity if you become insolvent? (State guaranty funds cover up to $250,000 in most states)
About the product:
- What is the total annual cost, expressed as a percentage of account value?
- What is the surrender charge schedule, and when does it end completely?
- Can I access my principal for an emergency, and what does it cost?
- Is this an “exclusion ratio” product (non-qualified) or will all withdrawals be taxed as ordinary income (qualified)?
- Does the death benefit return my full premium or just the current account value?
About the agent:
- Are you a fiduciary? (Most annuity agents are not — they earn 4–8% commissions)
- Have you compared this to similar products from other insurers?
Red flags: Pressure to decide quickly, promises of “guaranteed” returns above current Treasury rates, complex riders with vague explanations, and agents who can’t clearly explain the total annual cost in writing.
The best approach: get quotes from an independent annuity comparison site (ImmediateAnnuities.com or Blueprint Income), then have a fee-only financial planner (not an annuity salesperson) review the contract before signing. NAPFA.org maintains a directory of fee-only planners; look for a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) who charges by the hour rather than earning commissions on products they recommend.
Related Calculators & Guides
- Retirement Income Calculator — Estimate your total retirement income from all sources
- Retirement Savings Calculator — See if you’re saving enough for retirement
- Social Security Calculator — Estimate your Social Security benefits
- 4 Percent Rule — Learn about safe withdrawal rates in retirement
- Average Retirement Savings — See how your savings compare by age
- Compound Interest Calculator — Project investment growth over time
For hands-on comparison, see annuities explained and immediate annuity guide (SPIA). Return to the Annuities Guide hub.
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