Sunday, 22 November 2009

Fixed Annuity Insurance - Things to Consider When Choosing the Best Annuity

By John C. Ryan

Fixed annuities work like a CD, but with additional benefits. If you use a fixed annuity as method of savings, you get some additional features you won't get with any CD. Some of the features of the fixed annuity are attractive but you need to understand the drawbacks too before you make a financial decision.

There are two different ways to used fixed annuities. The first is an immediate annuity. In this case, you take smaller equal payments over a set period. The time may be your lifetime, the lifetime of your spouse and yourself, a specific number of years or you can request a specific payment amount and let the company tell you how many payments it lasts. A deferred annuity does just as the name implies, defers the payment to a later date.

The tax-deferred interest is a real plus for those saving for retirement, but as with any benefit has negatives also. If you put the money into a deferred fixed annuity and suddenly realize that you need funds, you have a ten percent penalty to pay on the growth you remove if you're not yet 59 . The tax laws do allow you to take substantial periodic payments penalty-free. The payments must last until you're 59 or at least for 5 years.

Just like a CD, you have a penalty if you remove the money before a specified time. Like most CD's, fixed annuities allow you to take interest at any time but there's a percentage penalty if you take the initial deposit. The penalty is normally on a sliding scale that reduces as the contract gets older. It varies, but normally averages between four and or five percent. While the length of the surrender period varies, again the average is around seven years. Watch out for contracts that have a lifetime surrender charge unless you annuitize.

Today many companies offer exemptions from the surrender charge if you only want interest, just like a bank CD, but also allow you to invade the principal for amounts up to ten percent each year. This makes it superior to a CD. If you find yourself in an emergency, you'll have access to funds without any penalty. It allows you to keep less money in a passbook savings for emergency use.

Annuity taxation occurs in two ways. If you remove the money from a fixed annuity in a lump sum as a withdrawal, the government taxes it with LIFO rules. This means, last in, first out. Since the last in is always interest, you pay taxes on the interest you withdraw. Unlike a CD, where even if you reinvest the money, you still pay taxes, you only have taxation of annuity interest once you remove it.

Immediate annuities use a different, favorable set of rules. The good news is that if you decide to annuitize a deferred annuity, you get the favorable tax treatment. The tax law indicates that part of the payment on systematic payment for fixed annuities is principal and part of it is interest. This allows you to spread the taxable growth out over several tax years.

To calculate the amount you pay in taxes each year you use an exclusion ratio. The exclusion ration is how much you exclude from that contract's income. To find it, you need to know three things; your life expectancy, your payment and the amount you invested. You simply multiply your payment times the number of years for life expectancy. If you receive $800 a month and have a life expectancy of 22 years, you'll get approximately $211,200 over the lifetime of payments if you collect in full. If your initial investment was $100,000, you divide that number by 211,200 and get an exclusion rate of 47 percent. In this case, you'd only pay taxes on 53 percent of your annual income from the fixed annuity.

Because of the favorable tax treatment, high interest rates and secure feeling of never running out of money, many people choose to take payments from the fixed annuity. Some, divide their funds into several different vehicles but use fixed annuities as their base monthly income in addition to social security. They request the insurance company deposit the funds directly into their account just like their social security. By doing this and keeping other investments for appreciation value and emergencies, they always know they'll have money for monthly needs such as food, shelter and utilities.

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