A fair amount of people are sitting on old annuity contracts they haven’t thought about in years. These contracts typically carry values between $50,000 and $250,000 – and are often modest relative to a household’s broader balance sheet. Sometimes annuities were purchased years ago from a family friend entering the insurance business, or as a simple tax-deferral vehicle that never got revisited. Because they sit outside the primary managed portfolio, annuities tend to disappear from view.
What looks like administrative clutter can, with the right approach, be repurposed into a meaningful planning tool.
The Hidden Cost of Doing Nothing
The issue is rarely the dollar amount, but rather the inefficiency. Many legacy variable annuities carry Mortality & Expense (M&E) fees and administrative charges that quietly erode value at 2% to 3% per year. Compounding the problem: unlike stocks or real estate, annuities do not receive a step-up in basis at death. Heirs who inherit a non-qualified annuity owe ordinary income tax on the embedded gains – making it one of the least tax-efficient assets to pass down to the next generation. If you have a forgotten annuity statement in a drawer somewhere, here are four ways to put it to work.
1. The Tax-Free Long-Term Care Upgrade
Under Section 1035 of the tax code, an existing annuity can be exchanged tax-free into a hybrid Long-Term Care annuity or standalone LTC policy. The real advantage comes under the Pension Protection Act: funds used to pay for qualified LTC expenses, including gains that would otherwise be fully taxable, can be distributed 100% tax-free. This effectively eliminates the deferred tax liability while creating a meaningful leverage multiplier for future care needs.
2. Annuity Arbitrage: Funding a Legacy
By annuitizing the contract and converting it into a guaranteed income stream, those periodic payments can be redirected to fund premiums on a permanent life insurance policy held inside an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT). The result: capital moves from a tax-inefficient structure into a tax-free death benefit – often producing a significantly larger transfer of wealth to the next generation.
3. Modernizing Through a Low-Cost 1035 Exchange
If tax-deferred growth still serves your goals, but the current contract carries high fees or limited investment options, there is no need to surrender and trigger a tax event. A 1035 exchange into a lower-cost, more flexible contract can preserve the deferral while meaningfully improving the economics going forward.
4. The Charitable “Wash”
For those with philanthropic intent, a legacy annuity is often one of the better assets to direct toward charity. Naming a 501(c)(3) or donor-advised fund as a beneficiary allows the organization to receive the full value tax-free, while the estate captures a charitable deduction. The annuity’s value can then be effectively “replaced” for heirs using more tax-efficient assets from the core portfolio.
A $100,000 annuity sitting in an outdated, high-fee structure is a missed opportunity. If you have an old insurance statement that no longer fits your current strategy, bring it to your next review. We can help determine whether it’s time to surrender, exchange, or repurpose that dormant capital into something that actually serves your plan.
Each of these approaches requires a careful review of your existing contract terms and not every legacy contract is a candidate for these strategies. We would recommend working alongside a licensed insurance broker to evaluate your options.
Please reach out to your Wealth Manager with questions.
Weekly Commentary
Forgotten Annuities, Found Opportunities
Mallon FitzPatrick
A fair amount of people are sitting on old annuity contracts they haven’t thought about in years. These contracts typically carry values between $50,000 and $250,000 – and are often modest relative to a household’s broader balance sheet. Sometimes annuities were purchased years ago from a family friend entering the insurance business, or as a simple tax-deferral vehicle that never got revisited. Because they sit outside the primary managed portfolio, annuities tend to disappear from view.
What looks like administrative clutter can, with the right approach, be repurposed into a meaningful planning tool.
The Hidden Cost of Doing Nothing
The issue is rarely the dollar amount, but rather the inefficiency. Many legacy variable annuities carry Mortality & Expense (M&E) fees and administrative charges that quietly erode value at 2% to 3% per year. Compounding the problem: unlike stocks or real estate, annuities do not receive a step-up in basis at death. Heirs who inherit a non-qualified annuity owe ordinary income tax on the embedded gains – making it one of the least tax-efficient assets to pass down to the next generation. If you have a forgotten annuity statement in a drawer somewhere, here are four ways to put it to work.
1. The Tax-Free Long-Term Care Upgrade
Under Section 1035 of the tax code, an existing annuity can be exchanged tax-free into a hybrid Long-Term Care annuity or standalone LTC policy. The real advantage comes under the Pension Protection Act: funds used to pay for qualified LTC expenses, including gains that would otherwise be fully taxable, can be distributed 100% tax-free. This effectively eliminates the deferred tax liability while creating a meaningful leverage multiplier for future care needs.
2. Annuity Arbitrage: Funding a Legacy
By annuitizing the contract and converting it into a guaranteed income stream, those periodic payments can be redirected to fund premiums on a permanent life insurance policy held inside an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT). The result: capital moves from a tax-inefficient structure into a tax-free death benefit – often producing a significantly larger transfer of wealth to the next generation.
3. Modernizing Through a Low-Cost 1035 Exchange
If tax-deferred growth still serves your goals, but the current contract carries high fees or limited investment options, there is no need to surrender and trigger a tax event. A 1035 exchange into a lower-cost, more flexible contract can preserve the deferral while meaningfully improving the economics going forward.
4. The Charitable “Wash”
For those with philanthropic intent, a legacy annuity is often one of the better assets to direct toward charity. Naming a 501(c)(3) or donor-advised fund as a beneficiary allows the organization to receive the full value tax-free, while the estate captures a charitable deduction. The annuity’s value can then be effectively “replaced” for heirs using more tax-efficient assets from the core portfolio.
A $100,000 annuity sitting in an outdated, high-fee structure is a missed opportunity. If you have an old insurance statement that no longer fits your current strategy, bring it to your next review. We can help determine whether it’s time to surrender, exchange, or repurpose that dormant capital into something that actually serves your plan.
Each of these approaches requires a careful review of your existing contract terms and not every legacy contract is a candidate for these strategies. We would recommend working alongside a licensed insurance broker to evaluate your options.
Please reach out to your Wealth Manager with questions.
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