Annuity

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

Insurance contract providing periodic income payments, typically for retirement. Three main types: fixed annuities (guaranteed payments), variable annuities (payments fluctuate with market performance, regulated as securities), and indexed annuities (tied to market index with downside protection). Features accumulation phase (contributions grow tax-deferred) and annuitization phase (income distributions). Surrender charges apply for early withdrawals.

Example

A 55-year-old client invests $200,000 in a variable annuity. During the accumulation phase, funds grow tax-deferred in equity subaccounts. At age 65, the client annuitizes and receives $1,500 monthly for life. The tax-deferred growth allowed the portfolio to compound without annual tax drag, but surrender charges would have applied if withdrawn before the 7-year surrender period ended.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse fixed vs. variable vs. indexed annuities (fixed = guaranteed payment, variable = fluctuates with market and is a security, indexed = tied to index with floor). Another confusion: variable annuities are securities requiring registration; fixed annuities are insurance products only. Also commonly missed: tax treatment (growth is tax-deferred but withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income, not capital gains) and surrender charge penalties.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which type of annuity (fixed, variable, indexed) is suitable based on client risk tolerance and income needs
  • Determining whether an annuity is classified as a security (variable annuities are; fixed annuities are not)
  • Understanding tax treatment of annuity withdrawals (tax-deferred growth, ordinary income on gains, 10% penalty before 59½)
  • Calculating annuity payments or evaluating surrender charge impacts on early withdrawals
  • Evaluating suitability concerns when recommending annuities to elderly clients or those with limited liquidity needs

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Early withdrawal penalty 10% penalty IRS penalty on withdrawals before age 59½, in addition to ordinary income tax on gains
Typical surrender charge period 5-10 years Varies by contract; charges decrease over time (e.g., 7% year 1, declining to 0% by year 7)

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Robert, a 62-year-old engineer, has $500,000 in his 401(k) and is retiring next year. He wants guaranteed lifetime income but is also concerned about inflation eroding his purchasing power over 25+ years of retirement. He has moderate risk tolerance and existing emergency funds. Which annuity type would be most suitable?

Question 2

Which type of annuity is classified as a security and requires securities registration?

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Question 3

A client, age 58, invested $100,000 in a variable annuity 10 years ago. The current value is $175,000. She withdraws $50,000. Assuming a 24% tax bracket and the contract uses LIFO (last-in, first-out) accounting, what is her total tax liability including penalties on this withdrawal?

Question 4

All of the following statements about variable annuities are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser is evaluating whether to recommend a variable annuity to a 72-year-old client with $300,000 in liquid assets, moderate risk tolerance, and a need for portfolio income. The client is in the 22% tax bracket and has no other annuities. Which of the following are valid concerns about this recommendation?

1. The client is past the typical accumulation phase age
2. Surrender charges would reduce liquidity for a client who may need access to funds
3. The client would benefit from tax deferral given the 22% bracket
4. Variable annuities have higher fees than many other investment options

💡 Memory Aid

Remember the Three A's of Annuities: Accumulation (tax-deferred growth phase), Annuitization (payout phase), and A-ttention to taxes (ordinary income, not capital gains). Distinguish types: FIxed = FIxed payment, VARiable = VARies with market (and is a security), Indexed = Indexed to market with a floor.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: