
Joint-Life Payout
Though joint-life payouts refer to pension plans, there is also a type of life insurance policy that goes by the name of joint life. A joint-life payout is a payment structure for pensions and other retirement plans that provides income to a second person, typically a spouse, after the account holder dies. With a joint-life payout, a pension or other retirement plan will first pay benefits to the account holder and then switch to their spouse if the spouse survives them. The term joint-life payout refers to a payment structure for pensions and retirement plans in which a surviving spouse will continue to receive income after the account holder dies.

What Is a Joint-Life Payout?
The term joint-life payout refers to a payment structure for pensions and retirement plans in which a surviving spouse will continue to receive income after the account holder dies. That contrasts with a single-life payout, for which payments end with the death of the account holder. These two payout options are also known as joint-and-survivor and single-life annuities.



How Joint-Life Payouts Work
With a joint-life payout, a pension or other retirement plan will first pay benefits to the account holder and then switch to their spouse if the spouse survives them. Because the pension is likely to have to pay benefits for a longer period of time, the benefits will be lower than the account holder would have received had they elected for a single-life payout.
However, the account holder has the assurance that their spouse will still have money coming in after they die. In some instances, the designated survivor can be someone other than a spouse.
In many cases, the joint-life option is the legally required default for married account holders, and they can elect the single-life option only if their spouse agrees to that in writing. A spouse might agree, for example, if they have sufficient retirement income of their own.
Account holders and their spouses will often have several joint-life options to choose from. For example, they may be able to elect a payout to the survivor that's the same amount as the account holder had been receiving or, more commonly, a payout that represents 50% or 75% of that amount. The option they choose will also affect the account holder's payout — the larger the spouse's future payout, the lower the account holder's payout will be.
Though joint-life payouts refer to pension plans, there is also a type of life insurance policy that goes by the name of joint life.
What Is Joint Life Insurance?
Joint-life payouts on retirement plans shouldn't be confused with joint life insurance. A relatively uncommon type of insurance policy, joint life insurance covers two people, typically a married couple, rather than one.
These policies can be structured in several ways. A first-to-die policy pays off when either person dies. That might be useful in the case of a young family, in which one person works outside the home and the other is a stay-at-home parent. If one or the other of them dies, the family could face financial hardship, either because it no longer has money coming in from the working spouse or because the survivor must now pay someone to do the work previously done by the stay-at-home partner. However, two separate, individual policies could serve the same purpose as a joint policy.
The other type of joint life insurance is second-to-die, which pays a death benefit to the policy's beneficiaries when both policyholders are dead.
Though joint life policies may be less expensive than two individual policies, they also come with additional risks, including what happens if the couple decides to divorce.
Related terms:
Benefit Offset
Benefit offset is a reduction in the amount of payments received by a member of a retirement plan when the member owes money to the plan. read more
Joint and Survivor Annuity
A joint and survivor annuity is an insurance product for couples that continues to make regular payments for as long as either spouse lives. 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
Life Insurance Guide to Policies and Companies
Life insurance is a contract in which an insurer, in exchange for a premium, guarantees payment to an insured’s beneficiaries when the insured dies. read more
Life Option
Life option refers to an annuity payout scheme which guarantees payouts to the annuitant until their death, regardless of when that occurs. read more
Pension Maximization
Pension maximization is a retirement strategy for couples who secure the highest possible annuity payout while offsetting the risk with life insurance. 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
Second-To-Die Insurance
Second-to-die insurance is a type of life insurance on two people providing benefits to the beneficiaries only after the last surviving person dies. 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