Surrender Period

Surrender Period

The surrender period is the amount of time an investor must wait until they can withdraw funds from an annuity without facing a penalty. If you withdrew the entire $10,000 in 2014, you would be in year 2 of the surrender period on your first $5,000 investment, so your fee would be 5%, or $250, but you would only be in year 1 of the surrender period on your second $5,000 investment, so your surrender fee would be 6%, or $300, for a total surrender fee of $550 to withdraw your $10,000. The surrender period is the time frame in which an investor cannot withdraw funds from an annuity without paying a surrender fee. As a hypothetical example, assume you purchased a $10,000 annuity in 2010 with a surrender period that has a 6% surrender fee in the first year, declining by 1% every year after. A typical annuity might have a surrender period of six years, and a surrender fee that starts at 6% and decreases by 1% each year.

The surrender period is the time frame in which an investor cannot withdraw funds from an annuity without paying a surrender fee.

What Is a Surrender Period?

The surrender period is the amount of time an investor must wait until they can withdraw funds from an annuity without facing a penalty. Surrender periods can be many years long, and withdrawing money before the end of the surrender period can result in a surrender charge, which is essentially a deferred sales fee. Generally, but not always, the longer the surrender period, the better the annuity’s other terms.

The surrender period is the time frame in which an investor cannot withdraw funds from an annuity without paying a surrender fee.
The surrender period can run several years, and annuitants can incur significant penalties if invested funds are withdrawn before that period has expired.
Other financial products also contain a surrender period, such as B-share mutual funds and whole life insurance policies.

Understanding Surrender Periods

Surrender periods are meant to discourage investors from canceling, typically long-term contracts. Though this might stop an investor from making an emotional, hasty decision in a cyclical market, it may also limit the investor's flexibility to move money out if assets aren't performing well. Conversely, surrender periods are generally not a problem for investors who don't need cash quickly or liquidity or those who are receiving above-market returns.

After the surrender period has passed, the investor is free to withdraw the funds without being subject to a fee. Typically, surrender fees are a percentage of the withdrawal amount. In many cases, the surrender fee declines over time. Some annuities have no surrender period and therefore no surrender fees. A typical annuity might have a surrender period of six years, and a surrender fee that starts at 6% and decreases by 1% each year.

Example of Surrender Periods

As a hypothetical example, assume you purchased a $10,000 annuity in 2010 with a surrender period that has a 6% surrender fee in the first year, declining by 1% every year after. If you closed your annuity in 2013, which is during the third year of the surrender period, you would pay a fee of 4% of the $10,000, or $400. The surrender period would end in 2017, at which point you could withdraw your $10,000 without paying a surrender fee. To avoid possible surrender fees, you should not put money into an annuity that you might need to withdraw during the surrender period.

If you make additional investments or premium payments to the annuity, there could be a separate surrender period for each investment. Suppose you paid $5,000 into an annuity in 2012 and another $5,000 in 2013. Again, assume a six-year surrender period with a 6% fee that declines by 1% each year. If you withdrew the entire $10,000 in 2014, you would be in year 2 of the surrender period on your first $5,000 investment, so your fee would be 5%, or $250, but you would only be in year 1 of the surrender period on your second $5,000 investment, so your surrender fee would be 6%, or $300, for a total surrender fee of $550 to withdraw your $10,000.

Related terms:

Accumulation Period

An accumulation period is the phase in an investor's life when they build up their savings and investment portfolio to save for retirement.  read more

Annuity Ladder

An annuity ladder is an investment strategy that entails the purchase of immediate annuities over a period of years to provide guaranteed income.  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

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

Liquidity

Liquidity refers to the ease with which an asset, or security, can be converted into ready cash without affecting its market price. read more

Split-Funded Annuity

A split-funded annuity uses a portion of the principal to fund immediate monthly payments and the remaining portion to fund a deferred annuity. read more

Substandard Health Annuity

A substandard health annuity is an insurance product designed for a person with a serious illness which is likely to shorten life expectancy. read more

Surrender Charge Explained

A surrender charge is a fee levied on a life insurance policyholder upon cancellation of their life insurance policy. read more

Surrender Fee

A surrender fee is a penalty charged an investor for the early cancellation or withdrawal of funds from an insurance or annuity contract. 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