Annuitant

Annuitant

An annuitant is an individual who is entitled to collect the regular payments of a pension or an annuity investment. For example, if the annuitant is 65 years old, but the annuity is transferrable to his 60-year-old wife if she survives him, the insurance company will calculate that it will make monthly payments for about 24 years, which is the life expectancy of a 60-year-old woman. A deferred annuity is usually a retirement investment similar to an IRA or 401(k). An annuity is a regular payment of a guaranteed income for life or for some specified number of years. An annuitant is an investor or a pension plan beneficiary who is entitled to receive the regular payments of a pension or an annuity investment. An annuitant may be a retired civil servant who receives a pension plan, or an investor who has paid a sum of money to an insurance company in return for a regular income supplement.

An annuitant is an investor or a pension plan beneficiary who is entitled to receive the regular payments of a pension or an annuity investment.

What Is an Annuitant?

An annuitant is an individual who is entitled to collect the regular payments of a pension or an annuity investment. The annuitant may be the contract holder or another person, such as a surviving spouse. Annuities are generally seen as retirement income supplements. They may be tied to an employee pension plan or a life insurance product. The size of the payments is usually determined by the life expectancy of the annuitant as well as the amount invested.

An annuitant is an investor or a pension plan beneficiary who is entitled to receive the regular payments of a pension or an annuity investment.
The annuitant may be eligible for a deferred annuity or an immediate annuity.
A deferred annuity is usually a retirement investment similar to an IRA or 401(k).

Understanding Annuitants

An annuity is a regular payment of a guaranteed income for life or for some specified number of years. An annuitant may be a retired civil servant who receives a pension plan, or an investor who has paid a sum of money to an insurance company in return for a regular income supplement.

Depending on the specifics of the contract, the owner of an annuity may name one or more annuitants, such as a spouse and an elderly parent, or may arrange a joint annuity. The annuitant can also arrange for the payments to be transferred to a surviving spouse if the need arises. In any case, the annuitant must be a person, not a company, or a trust.

The amount of the payments to an annuitant is based on the individual's age and life expectancy, and the age and life expectancy of any beneficiaries. For example, if the annuitant is 65 years old, but the annuity is transferrable to his 60-year-old wife if she survives him, the insurance company will calculate that it will make monthly payments for about 24 years, which is the life expectancy of a 60-year-old woman.

Most annuities are taxed as ordinary income.

In yet another variation, an annuity can be for a term of "life-plus" — that is, the payments will continue for the annuitant's lifetime and then be transferred to a surviving spouse for a specified period of time.

Types of Annuities

There are many variations of annuity, but they can be boiled down to two basic types:

  1. A deferred annuity is often used as a retirement savings vehicle. The annuitant invests money regularly over time in return for a stream of annuity payments at some point in the future. Many company pension plans are structured this way.
  2. An immediate annuity is just what it sounds like. The annuitant pays a lump sum of money in return for a series of payments that begin immediately and are paid for life or for a specific period of time. The latter option is called a life plus period certain annuity.

Taxes on Annuitants

Annuities are generally taxed as ordinary income. The portion of the annuity payments that represents the contract holder's basis is not taxed, only the gain portion. In the case of an employer pension, the entire payment is generally taxed as ordinary income.

Related terms:

Annuitization

Annuitization is the process of converting an annuity investment into a series of periodic income payments, and is often used in life insurance payouts. read more

Annuities: Insurance for Retirement

An annuity is a financial product that pays out a fixed stream of payments to an individual, primarily used as an income stream for retirees.  read more

Charitable Gift Annuity

A charitable gift annuity is an arrangement for a series of income payments for life, to be paid to an individual in return for a donation of assets. read more

Income Annuity

An income annuity is an annuity contract that is designed to start paying income as soon as the policy is initiated. Discover more about it here. read more

Investor

Any person who commits capital with the expectation of financial returns is an investor. A wide variety of investment vehicles exist including (but not limited to) stocks, bonds, commodities, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, options, futures, foreign exchange, gold, silver, and real estate. read more

Life Expectancy

Life expectancy is defined as the age to which a person is expected to live, or the remaining number of years a person is expected to live. read more

Pension Plan

A pension plan is an employee benefit that commits the employer to make regular payments to the employee in retirement. read more

Period Certain

Period certain is a life annuity option that allows the customer to choose when and how long to receive payments, which beneficiaries can later receive. read more

Single-Life Payout

Single-Life Payout in a pension means only the employee will receive the payments for the rest of his/her life. read more

Whole Life Annuity Due

A whole life annuity due requires annuity payments at the beginning of each monthly, quarterly, or annual period, as opposed to at the end of the period.  read more