Publication 575 |
2001 Tax Year |
Taxation of Periodic Payments
This section explains how the periodic payments you receive from a
pension or annuity plan are taxed. Periodic payments are amounts paid
at regular intervals (such as weekly, monthly, or yearly) for a period
of time greater than one year (such as for 15 years or for life).
These payments are also known as amounts received as an annuity.
If you receive an amount from your plan that is not a
periodic payment, see Taxation of Nonperiodic Payments,
later.
In general, you can recover the cost of your pension or annuity tax
free over the period you are to receive the payments. The amount of
each payment that is more than the part that represents your cost is
taxable.
Fully Taxable Payments
The pension or annuity payments that you receive are fully taxable
if you have no cost in the contract because:
- You did not pay anything or are not considered to have paid
anything for your pension or annuity,
- Your employer did not withhold contributions from your
salary, or
- You got back all of your contributions tax free in prior
years (however, see Exclusion not limited to cost under
Partly Taxable Payments, later).
Report the total amount you got on line 16b, Form 1040, or line
12b, Form 1040A. You should make no entry on line 16a, Form 1040, or
line 12a, Form 1040A.
Deductible voluntary employee contributions.
Distributions you receive that are based on your accumulated
deductible voluntary employee contributions are generally fully
taxable in the year distributed to you. Accumulated deductible
voluntary employee contributions include net earnings on the
contributions. If distributed as part of a lump sum, they do not
qualify for the 10-year tax option or capital gain treatment.
Partly Taxable Payments
If you have a cost to recover from your pension or annuity plan
(see Cost (Investment in the Contract), earlier), you can
exclude part of each annuity payment from income as a recovery of your
cost. This tax-free part of the payment is figured when your annuity
starts and remains the same each year, even if the amount of the
payment changes. The rest of each payment is taxable.
You figure the tax-free part of the payment using one of the
following methods.
- Simplified Method. You generally must use this
method if your annuity is paid under a qualified plan (a qualified
employee plan, a qualified employee annuity, or a tax-sheltered
annuity plan or contract). You cannot use this method if your annuity
is paid under a nonqualified plan.
- General Rule. You must use this method if your
annuity is paid under a nonqualified plan. You generally cannot use
this method if your annuity is paid under a qualified plan.
You determine which method to use when you first begin receiving
your annuity, and you continue using it each year that you recover
part of your cost.
Qualified plan annuity starting before November 19, 1996.
If your annuity is paid under a qualified plan and your annuity
starting date (defined earlier under Cost (Investment in the
Contract)) is after July 1, 1986, and before November 19, 1996,
you could have chosen to use either the Simplified Method or the
General Rule. If your annuity starting date is before July 2, 1986,
you use the General Rule unless your annuity qualified for the
Three-Year Rule. If you used the Three-Year Rule (which was repealed
for annuities starting after July 1, 1986), your annuity payments are
now fully taxable.
Exclusion limit.
Your annuity starting date determines the total amount of annuity
payments that you can exclude from income over the years.
Exclusion limited to cost.
If your annuity starting date is after 1986, the total amount of
annuity income that you can exclude over the years as a recovery of
the cost cannot exceed your total cost. Any unrecovered cost at your
(or the last annuitant's) death is allowed as a miscellaneous itemized
deduction on the final return of the decedent. This deduction is not
subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.
Example 1.
Your annuity starting date is after 1986, and you exclude $100 a
month under the Simplified Method. The total cost of your annuity is
$12,000. Your exclusion ends when you have recovered your cost tax
free, that is, after 10 years (120 months). After that, your annuity
payments are fully taxable.
Example 2.
The facts are the same as in Example 1, except you die
(with no surviving annuitant) after the eighth year of retirement. You
have recovered tax free only $9,600 (8 × $1,200) of your cost.
An itemized deduction for your unrecovered cost of $2,400 ($12,000
minus $9,600) can be taken on your final return.
Exclusion not limited to cost.
If your annuity starting date is before 1987, you can continue to
take your monthly exclusion for as long as you receive your annuity.
If you chose a joint and survivor annuity, your survivor can continue
to take the survivor's exclusion figured as of the annuity starting
date. The total exclusion may be more than your cost.
Simplified Method
Under the Simplified Method, you figure the tax-free part of each
annuity payment by dividing your cost by the total number of
anticipated monthly payments. For an annuity that is payable for the
lives of the annuitants, this number is based on the annuitants' ages
on the annuity starting date and is determined from a table. For any
other annuity, this number is the number of monthly annuity payments
under the contract.
Who must use the Simplified Method.
You must use the Simplified Method if your annuity starting date is
after November 18, 1996, and you meet both of the following
conditions.
- You receive your pension or annuity payments from any of the
following plans.
- A qualified employee plan.
- A qualified employee annuity.
- A tax-sheltered annuity plan (403(b) plan).
- On your annuity starting date, at least one of the following
conditions applies to you.
- You are under age 75.
- You are entitled to less than 5 years of guaranteed
payments.
Guaranteed payments.
Your annuity contract provides guaranteed payments if a minimum
number of payments or a minimum amount (for example, the amount of
your investment) is payable even if you and any survivor annuitant do
not live to receive the minimum. If the minimum amount is less than
the total amount of the payments you are to receive, barring death,
during the first 5 years after payments begin (figured by ignoring any
payment increases), you are entitled to less than 5 years of
guaranteed payments.
Annuity starting before November 19, 1996.
If your annuity starting date is after July 1, 1986, and before
November 19, 1996, and you chose to use the Simplified Method, you
must continue to use it each year that you recover part of your cost.
You could have chosen to use the Simplified Method if your annuity is
payable for your life (or the lives of you and your survivor
annuitant) and you met both of the conditions listed earlier for
annuities starting after November 18, 1996.
Who cannot use the Simplified Method.
You cannot use the Simplified Method if you receive your pension or
annuity from a nonqualified plan or otherwise do not meet the
conditions described in the preceding discussion. See General
Rule, later.
How to use it.
Complete the worksheet in the back of this publication to figure
your taxable annuity for 2001. Be sure to keep the completed
worksheet; it will help you figure your taxable annuity next year.
To complete line 3 of the worksheet, you must determine the total
number of expected monthly payments for your annuity. How you do this
depends on whether the annuity is for a single life, multiple lives,
or a fixed period. For this purpose, treat an annuity that is payable
over the life of an annuitant as payable for that annuitant's life
even if the annuity has a fixed-period feature or also provides a
temporary annuity payable to the annuitant's child under age 25.
You do not need to complete line 3 of the worksheet or make the
computation on line 4 if you received annuity payments last year and
used last year's worksheet to figure your taxable annuity. Instead,
enter the amount from line 4 of last year's worksheet on line 4 of
this year's worksheet.
Single-life annuity.
If your annuity is payable for your life alone, use Table 1 at the
bottom of the worksheet to determine the total number of expected
monthly payments. Enter on line 3 the number shown for your age on
your annuity starting date. This number will differ depending on
whether your annuity starting date is before November 19, 1996, or
after November 18, 1996.
Multiple-lives annuity.
If your annuity is payable for the lives of more than one
annuitant, use Table 2 at the bottom of the worksheet to determine the
total number of expected monthly payments. Enter on line 3 the number
shown for the annuitants' combined ages on the annuity starting date.
For an annuity payable to you as the primary annuitant and to more
than one survivor annuitant, combine your age and the age of the
youngest survivor annuitant. For an annuity that has no primary
annuitant and is payable to you and others as survivor annuitants,
combine the ages of the oldest and youngest annuitants. Do not treat
as a survivor annuitant anyone whose entitlement to payments depends
on an event other than the primary annuitant's death.
However, if your annuity starting date is before 1998,
do not use Table 2 and do not combine the annuitants' ages. Instead,
you must use Table 1 at the bottom of the worksheet and enter on line
3 the number shown for the primary annuitant's age on the annuity
starting date. This number will differ depending on whether your
annuity starting date is before November 19, 1996, or after November
18, 1996.
Fixed-period annuity.
If your annuity does not depend on anyone's life expectancy, the
total number of expected monthly payments to enter on line 3 of the
worksheet is the number of monthly annuity payments under the
contract.
Example.
Bill Kirkland, age 65, began receiving retirement benefits in 2001
under a joint and survivor annuity. Bill's annuity starting date is
January 1, 2001. The benefits are to be paid for the joint lives of
Bill and his wife, Kathy, age 65. Bill had contributed $31,000 to a
qualified plan and had received no distributions before the annuity
starting date. Bill is to receive a retirement benefit of $1,200 a
month, and Kathy is to receive a monthly survivor benefit of $600 upon
Bill's death.
Bill must use the Simplified Method to figure his taxable annuity
because his payments are from a qualified plan and he is under age 75.
Because his annuity is payable over the lives of more than one
annuitant, he uses his and Kathy's combined ages and Table 2 at the
bottom of the worksheet in completing line 3 of the worksheet. His
completed worksheet is shown on the right.
Bill's tax-free monthly amount is $100 ($31,000 × 310 as
shown on line 4 of the worksheet). Upon Bill's death, if Bill has not
recovered the full $31,000 investment, Kathy will also exclude $100
from her $600 monthly payment. The full amount of any annuity payments
received after 310 payments are paid must be included in gross income.
If Bill and Kathy die before 310 payments are made, a miscellaneous
itemized deduction will be allowed for the unrecovered cost on the
final income tax return of the last to die. This deduction is not
subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.
Illustrated Simplified Method Worksheet for Bill Kirkland
Multiple annuitants.
If you and one or more other annuitants receive payments at the
same time, you exclude from each annuity payment a pro-rata share of
the monthly tax-free amount. Figure your share in the following steps.
- Complete your worksheet through line 4 to figure the monthly
tax-free amount.
- Divide the amount of your monthly payment by the total
amount of the monthly payments to all annuitants.
- Multiply the amount on line 4 of your worksheet by the
amount figured in (2) above. The result is your share of the monthly
tax-free amount.
Replace the amount on line 4 of the worksheet with the result in
(3) above. Enter that amount on line 4 of your worksheet each year.
General Rule
Under the General Rule, you determine the tax-free part of each
annuity payment based on the ratio of the cost of the contract to the
total expected return. Expected return is the total amount you and
other eligible annuitants can expect to receive under the contract. To
figure it, you must use life expectancy (actuarial) tables prescribed
by the IRS.
Who must use the General Rule.
You must use the General Rule if you receive pension or annuity
payments from:
- A nonqualified plan (such as a private annuity, a purchased
commercial annuity, or a nonqualified employee plan), or
- A qualified plan if you are age 75 or older on your annuity
starting date and your annuity payments are guaranteed for at least 5
years.
Annuity starting before November 19, 1996.
If your annuity starting date is after July 1, 1986, and before
November 19, 1996, you had to use the General Rule for either
circumstance described above. You also had to use it for any
fixed-period annuity. If you did not have to use the General Rule, you
could have chosen to use it. If your annuity starting date is before
July 2, 1986, you had to use the General Rule unless you could use the
Three-Year Rule.
If you had to use the General Rule (or chose to use it), you must
continue to use it each year that you recover your cost.
Who cannot use the General Rule.
You cannot use the General Rule if you receive your pension or
annuity from a qualified plan and none of the circumstances described
in the preceding discussions apply to you. See Simplified
Method, earlier.
More information.
For complete information on using the General Rule, including the
actuarial tables you need, see Publication 939.
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