Publication 575
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226762This 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
(however, see
Insurance Premiums for Retired Public Safety Officers, earlier).
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226765If you receive a qualified distribution from a designated Roth
account, the distribution is not included in your gross income. This applies to
both your cost in the account and income earned on that account. A qualified
distribution is generally a distribution that is:
- Made after a 5-tax-year period of participation, and
- Made on or after the date you reach age 591/2, made to a beneficiary or your estate on or after your death,
or attributable to your being disabled.
If the distribution is not a qualified distribution, the rules
discussed in this section apply. The designated Roth account is treated as a
separate contract.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226766The 5-tax-year period of participation is the 5-tax-year period
beginning with the first tax year for which the participant made a designated
Roth contribution to the plan. Therefore, for designated Roth contributions made
in 2010, the first year for which a qualified distribution can be made is 2015.
However, if a direct rollover is made to the plan from a designated
Roth account under another plan, the 5-tax-year period for the recipient plan
begins with the first tax year for which the participant first had designated
Roth contributions made to the other plan.
After September 27, 2010, your 401(k) or 403(b) plan may permit
you to roll over amounts from those plans to a designated Roth account within
the same plan. This is known as an in-plan Roth rollover. For more details, see
In-plan Roth rollovers, later.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226767The pension or annuity payments that you receive are fully taxable
if you have no cost in the contract because any of the following situations
applies to you (however, see
Insurance Premiums for Retired Public Safety Officers, earlier).
- You did not pay anything or are not considered to have paid
anything for your pension or annuity. Amounts withheld from your pay on a
tax-deferred basis are not considered part of the cost of the pension or annuity
payment.
- Your employer did not withhold contributions from your salary.
- 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 Form 1040, line 16b; Form
1040A, line 12b; or on Form 1040NR, line 17b. You should make no entry on Form
1040, line 16a; Form 1040A, line 12a; or Form 1040NR, line 17a.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226770Distributions 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226771If 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 (however, see
Insurance Premiums for Retired Public Safety Officers, earlier).
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.
If you had more than one partly taxable pension or annuity, figure
the tax-free part and the taxable part of each separately.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226774If 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 generally now fully taxable.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226776Your annuity starting date determines the total amount of annuity
payments that you can exclude from income over the years. Once your annuity
starting date is determined, it does not change. If you calculate the taxable
portion of your annuity payments using the simplified method worksheet, the
annuity starting date determines the recovery period for your cost. That
recovery period begins on your annuity starting date and is not affected by the
date you first complete the worksheet.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226777If 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226778Your annuity starting date is after 1986, and you exclude $100
a month ($1,200 a year) 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 generally fully taxable.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226779The 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
– $9,600) can be taken on your final return.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226780If 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226781Under 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226782You 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226783Your 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226784If 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 under
Who must use the Simplified Method.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226785You 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226787
Complete Worksheet A in the back of this publication to figure your taxable
annuity for 2010. 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. |
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226789If 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226790If 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226791If your annuity does not depend in whole or in part 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000251093The amount on line 6 should include all amounts that could have
been recovered in prior years. If you did not recover an amount in a prior year,
you may be able to amend your returns for the affected years.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226792Bill Smith, age 65, began receiving retirement benefits in 2010
under a joint and survivor annuity. Bill's annuity starting date is January 1,
2010. 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 Worksheet A in completing
line 3 of the worksheet. His completed worksheet is shown below.
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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226793 |
Worksheet A. Simplified Method Worksheet for Bill Smith
| 1. | Enter the total pension or annuity payments received
this year. Also, add this amount to the total for Form 1040, line 16a; Form
1040A, line 12a; or Form 1040NR, line 17a
| 1. | $ 14,400 | | 2. | Enter your cost in the plan (contract) at the annuity
starting date plus any death benefit exclusion.* See
Cost (Investment in the Contract) earlier
| 2. | 31,000 | | | Note.
If your annuity starting date was before this year and
you completed this worksheet last year, skip line 3 and enter the amount from
line 4 of last year's worksheet on line 4 below (even if the amount of your
pension or annuity has changed). Otherwise, go to line 3.
| | | | 3. | Enter the appropriate number from Table 1 below. But
if your annuity starting date was after 1997 and the payments are for your life
and that of your beneficiary, enter the appropriate number from Table 2 below
| 3. | 310 | | 4. | Divide line 2 by the number on line 3 | 4. | 100 | | 5. | Multiply line 4 by the number of months for which this
year's payments were made. If your annuity starting date was before 1987, enter
this amount on line 8 below and skip lines 6, 7, 10, and 11. Otherwise, go to
line 6
| 5. | 1,200 | | 6. | Enter any amount previously recovered tax free in years
after 1986. This is the amount shown on line 10 of your worksheet for last year
| 6. | -0- | | 7. | Subtract line 6 from line 2 | 7. | 31,000 | | 8. | Enter the smaller of line 5 or line 7 | 8. | 1,200 | | 9. | Taxable amount for year.
Subtract line 8 from line 1. Enter the result, but not less than zero. Also, add
this amount to the total for Form 1040, line 16b; Form 1040A, line 12b; or Form
1040NR, line 17b.
Note:
If your Form 1099-R shows a larger taxable amount, use
the amount figured on this line instead. If you are a retired public safety
officer, see
Insurance Premiums for Retired Public Safety Officers earlier before entering an amount on your tax return
| 9. | $ 13,200 | | 10. | Was your annuity starting date before 1987? □ Yes.
STOP. Do not complete the rest of this worksheet. ☑ No. Add lines 6 and 8. This is the amount you
have recovered tax free through 2010. You will need this number if you need to
fill out this worksheet next year
| 10. | 1,200 | | 11. | Balance of cost to be recovered.
Subtract line 10 from line 2. If zero, you will not have to complete this
worksheet next year. The payments you receive next year will generally be fully
taxable
| 11. | $ 29,800 | | | | | | | * A death benefit exclusion (up to $5,000) applied to
certain benefits received by employees who died before August 21, 1996. | | | | | |
| | Table 1 for Line 3 Above | | | | | AND your annuity starting date was— | | | | IF the age at annuity starting date was... | BEFORE November 19, 1996, enter on line 3... | AFTER November 18, 1996, enter on line 3... | | | | 55 or under | 300 | 360 | | | | 56-60 | 260 | 310 | | | | 61-65 | 240 | 260 | | | | 66-70 | 170 | 210 | | | | 71 or older | 120 | 160 | | | | Table 2 for Line 3 Above | | | | IF the combined ages at
annuity starting date were... | THEN enter on line 3... | | | | 110 or under | | 410 | | | | 111-120 | | 360 | | | | 121-130 | | 310 | | | | 131-140 | | 260 | | | | 141 or older | | 210 | |
|
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226798If 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 by taking 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226802taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226803Under 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226804You 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226805If your annuity starting date is after July 1, 1986, and before
November 19, 1996, you had to use the General Rule for either circumstance just
described. 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226806You 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.
taxmap/pubs/p575-002.htm#en_us_publink1000226808For complete information on using the General Rule, including
the actuarial tables you need, see Publication 939.