Split Annuity Taxation
An investment’s return is what most people analyze each year. However, what really counts is how much you hold on to after taxes. After all, that’s what you get to spend. If you’re shopping around for CDs, you may want to look at an alternative idea that will let you keep more of what you earn. Suppose that you are considering a five-year jumbo CD. The certificate’s earnings may push your provisional income over the government’s threshold (provisional income is the income calculated by IRS to determine if and how much of your Social Security income becomes taxable). The result is that more of your Social Security check will become taxable when you add interest from CDs. The solution could be an immediate annuity that will pay you an income for five years (five-year certain). Part of that income will be taxable, while the rest considered a tax-free return of your investment. At the end of five years, the payments stop. To replace the funds you put into the immediate annuity, you would invest in a five-year fixed annuity. Interest earnings on the fixed annuity are tax-deferred, and not counted towards the government’s threshold of taxation of Social Security income. The [...]
Categories: retirement income Tags: annuity tax, annuity taxation, split annuity