What type of annuity has a cash value that is based upon the performance of his underlying investment funds?

Retirement income

Turn your super or other savings into a guaranteed income when you retire

3 minutes

An annuity, also known as a lifetime or fixed-term pension, gives you a guaranteed income for a number of years. Or the rest of your life.

An annuity is less flexible than an account-based pension, but you can be sure about your future income.

How an annuity works

You can use your super or savings to buy an annuity from a super fund or life insurance company.

When you buy an annuity, you choose whether you want the payments to last for:

  • a fixed number of years
  • your life expectancy, or
  • the rest of your life

Preservation age

If you are using super money to buy an annuity, you must have reached preservation age (between 55 and 60).

You must also meet a condition of release, such as permanently retiring.

Joint or individual annuity

You can use savings to buy an annuity in joint names. This allows income splitting for tax purposes. If you or your partner dies, the survivor has ownership and access to the funds.

If you use a super lump sum to buy an annuity, it can only be in the name of the person who 'owns' the super.

Income from an annuity

You decide the payment amount you receive when you buy the annuity. Your annuity income can increase each year by a fixed percentage, or indexed with inflation.

You can choose to be paid monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly.

An annuity bought with super money must pay you a certain percentage of the balance, based on your age. The Australian Taxation Office website has more information about minimum annual payments.

Your annuity if you die

When you buy an annuity you can either nominate a reversionary beneficiary or choose a guaranteed period option.

  • Reversionary beneficiary — Your nominated beneficiary (usually your partner or a dependant) will get your income payments for the rest of their life. This is usually at a reduced level, for example, 60% of your income stream.
  • Guaranteed period — A minimum payment period is set when you buy the annuity. If you die, your beneficiary will get your payments, either as a lump sum or income stream. The income payments will not reduce.

How an annuity affects the Age Pension

An annuity forms part of the income and assets tests to determine your eligibility for the Age Pension.

A Services Australia Financial Information Service (FIS) officer can help you work out how an annuity will affect your Age Pension entitlement.

The difference between an annuity and an account-based pension

Share market performance doesn't affect annuity returns. This makes an annuity one of the more stable retiree investment options.

With an account-based pension, your money is invested in a range of investments, including shares, property and bonds. This gives potential for better growth and investment performance. Share market performance does affect returns, making an account-based pension riskier than an annuity.

Pros and cons of an annuity

Consider the pros and cons to decide if an annuity is right for you. Get financial advice from your super fund or a licensed financial adviser if you need more information.

Pros

  • A regular guaranteed income regardless of how share markets perform.
  • Suitable for someone who doesn't want to bear investment risk.
  • An annuity bought with super money is tax-free from age 60.
  • An indexed annuity protects you from the rising cost of living.
  • Payments from a lifetime annuity will last as long as you do.
  • If you nominate a reversionary beneficiary, a spouse or dependent will receive some income if you die.
  • If you choose a fixed-term guarantee period, your estate gets some money if you die during that time.

Cons

  • You cannot choose how your money is invested.
  • Income payments will be low if the annuity starts in a period with low interest rates.
  • You can't change the amount you receive in income once payments start.
  • You lock your money away until the term of the annuity ends.
  • You cannot withdraw your money as a lump sum.

Using a mix of retirement income options

You don't have to take an all or nothing approach to your retirement income. You may benefit from a mix of options, such as an annuity, account-based pension or lump sum.

Consider your personal needs and circumstances before making a decision. Your super fund, a licensed financial adviser or a Financial Information Service (FIS) officer can help.

Annuities are financial products intended to enhance retirement security. An annuity is an agreement for one person or organization to pay another a series of payments. Usually the term “annuity” relates to a contract between an individual and a life insurance company.

There are many categories of annuities. They can be classified by:

  • Nature of the underlying investment – fixed or variable
  • Primary purpose – accumulation or pay-out (deferred or immediate)
  • Nature of payout commitment – fixed period, fixed amount or lifetime
  • Tax status – qualified or nonqualified
  • Premium payment arrangement – single premium or flexible premium

An annuity can be classified in several of these categories at once. For example, an individual might buy a nonqualified single premium deferred variable annuity.

In general, annuities have the following features:

1. Tax deferral on investment earnings

Many investments are taxed year by year, but the investment earnings—capital gains and investment income—in annuities aren’t taxable until the investor withdraws money. This tax deferral is also true of 401(k) s and IRAs; however, unlike these products, there are no limits on the amount one can put into an annuity. Moreover, the minimum withdrawal requirements for annuities are much more liberal than they are for 401(k)s and IRAs.

2. Protection from creditors

People who own an immediate annuity (that is, who are receiving money from an insurance company), are afforded some protection from creditors. Generally the most that creditors can access is the payments as they are made, since the money the annuity owner gave the insurance company now belongs to the company. Some state statutes and court decisions also protect some or all of the payments from those annuities.

3. An array of investment options

Many annuity companies offer a variety of investment options. For example, individuals can invest in a fixed annuity that credits a specified interest rate, similar to a bank Certificate of Deposit (CD). If they buy a variable annuity, their money can be invested in stocks, bonds or mutual funds. In recent years, annuity companies have created various types of “floors” that limit the extent of investment decline from an increasing reference point.

4. Taxfree transfers among investment options

In contrast to mutual funds and other investments made with aftertax money, with annuities there are no tax consequences if owners change how their funds are invested. This can be particularly valuable if they are using a strategy called “rebalancing,” which is recommended by many financial advisors. Under rebalancing, investors shift their investments periodically to return them to the proportions that represent the risk/return combination most appropriate for the investor’s situation.

5. Lifetime income

A lifetime immediate annuity converts an investment into a stream of payments that last until the annuity owner dies. In concept, the payments come from three “pockets”: The original investment, investment earnings and money from a pool of people in the investors group who do not live as long as actuarial tables forecast. The pooling is unique to annuities, and it’s what enables annuity companies to be able to guarantee a lifetime income.

6. Benefits to heirs

There is a common apprehension that if an individual starts an immediate lifetime annuity and dies soon after that, the insurance company keeps all of the investment in the annuity. To prevent this situation individuals can buy a “guaranteed period” with the immediate annuity. A guaranteed period commits the insurance company to continue payments after the owner dies to one or more designated beneficiaries; the payments continue to the end of the stated guaranteed period—usually 10 or 20 years (measured from when the owner started receiving the annuity payments). Moreover, annuity benefits that pass to beneficiaries don’t go through probate and aren’t governed by the annuity owner’s will.

Types of Annuities

Fixed annuities

In a fixed annuity, the insurance company guarantees the principal and a minimum rate of interest. In other words, the money in a fixed annuity will grow and will not drop in value. The growth of the annuity’s value and/or the benefits paid may be fixed at a dollar amount or by an interest rate, or may grow by a specified formula. The growth of the annuity’s value and/or the benefits paid does not depend directly or entirely on the performance of the investments the insurance company makes to support the annuity. Some fixed annuities credit a higher interest rate than the minimum, via a policy dividend that may be declared by the company’s board of directors, if the company’s actual investment, expense and mortality experience is more favorable than was expected. Fixed annuities are regulated by state insurance departments.

An equity indexed annuity is a type of fixed annuity, but looks like a hybrid. It credits a minimum rate of interest, just as a fixed annuity does, but its value is also based on the performance of a specified stock index—usually computed as a fraction of that index’s total return.

A market-value adjusted annuity is one that combines two desirable features— the ability to select and fix the time period and interest rate over which the annuity will grow, and the flexibility to withdraw money from the annuity before the end of the time period selected. This withdrawal flexibility is achieved by adjusting the annuity’s value, up or down, to reflect the change in the general level of interest rates from the start of the selected time period to the time of withdrawal.

Variable annuities

Money in a variable annuity is invested in a fund—like a mutual fund but one open only to investors in the insurance company’s variable life insurance and variable annuities. The fund has a particular investment objective, and the value of the money in a variable annuity—and the amount of money to be paid out—is determined by the investment performance (net of expenses) of that fund. Most variable annuities are structured to offer investors many different fund alternatives. Variable annuities are regulated by state insurance departments and the federal Securities and Exchange Commission.

The following annunities are available in fixed or variable form.

1. Deferred annuities

A deferred annuity is designed to collect premiums and accrue investment income over an extended period for payout at a later time—for example, when an individual retires. Deferred annuities, also referred to as investment annuities, are available in fixed or variable forms.

2. Immediate annuities

An immediate annuity is designed to start paying an income one time period after the immediate annuity is bought. The time period depends on how often the income is to be paid. For example, if the income is monthly, the first payment comes one month after the immediate annuity is bought. Immediate annuities are also available in fixed or variable forms

3. Fixed period annuities

A fixed period annuity pays an income for a specified period of time, such as ten years. The amount that is paid doesn’t depend on the age (or continued life) of the person who buys the annuity; the payments depend instead on the amount paid into the annuity, the length of the payout period, and (if it’s a fixed annuity) an interest rate that the insurance company believes it can support for the length of the payout period.

4. Lifetime annuities

A lifetime annuity provides income for the remaining life of a person (called the “annuitant”). A variation of lifetime annuities continues income until the second one of two annuitants dies. No other type of financial product can promise to do this. The amount that is paid depends on the age of the annuitant (or ages, if it’s a two-life annuity), the amount paid into the annuity, and (if it’s a fixed annuity) an interest rate that the insurance company believes it can support for the length of the expected payout period.

5. Qualified annuities

A qualified annuity is one used to invest and disburse money in a tax-favored retirement plan, such as an IRA or Keogh plan or plans governed by Internal Revenue Code sections 401(k), 403(b) or 457. Under the terms of the plan, money paid into the annuity is not included in taxable income for the year in which it is paid. All other tax provisions that apply to nonqualified annuities also apply to qualified annuities.

6. Nonqualified annuities

A nonqualified annuity is one purchased separately from, or “outside of,” a taxfavored retirement plan. Investment earnings of all annuities, qualified and nonqualified, are tax-deferred until they are withdrawn; at that point they are treated as taxable income (regardless of whether they came from selling capital at a gain or from dividends).

7. Single premium annuities

A single premium annuity is an annuity funded by a single payment. The payment might be invested for growth for a long period of time—a single premium deferred annuity—or invested for a short time, after which the payout begins—a single premium immediate annuity. Single premium annuities are often funded by rollovers or from the sale of an appreciated asset.

8. Flexible premium annuities

A flexible premium annuity is an annuity that is intended to be funded by a series of payments. Flexible premium annuities are only deferred annuities; that is, they are designed to have a significant period of payments into the annuity plus investment growth before any money is withdrawn from them.