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Annuities Explained
Guaranteed income products for retirement β are they right for you?
When you convert your super to retirement income, an account-based pension isn't your only option. Annuities offer something different: a guaranteed income stream, often for life, regardless of market performance or how long you live.
Annuities have fallen out of favour in recent decades, but they're making a comeback β partly due to new products like "innovative income stream" annuities that receive favourable Centrelink treatment. Understanding how they work helps you make an informed choice about your retirement income strategy.
π What Is an Annuity?
An annuity is a contract with a life insurance company where you pay a lump sum (usually from your super) in exchange for a guaranteed regular income for a set period or for life.
Unlike an account-based pension where your income depends on investment returns and your balance can run out, an annuity provides certainty β you know exactly what you'll receive, when you'll receive it, and (with lifetime annuities) that it won't stop until you die.
Types of Annuities
π Fixed-Term Annuity
Pays income for a set number of years (e.g., 5, 10, 15, or 20 years).
- Guaranteed payments for the term
- If you die early, remaining payments go to beneficiaries
- When term ends, payments stop (capital exhausted)
βΎοΈ Lifetime Annuity
Pays income for as long as you live β no matter how long that is.
- Eliminates longevity risk
- Payments stop at death (unless reversionary)
- May include guaranteed period
β³ Deferred Annuity
You pay now, but income starts later (e.g., at age 80 or 85).
- "Longevity insurance" for later life
- Lower upfront cost
- Protects against outliving savings
Variations and Features
Annuities can be customised with various features (which affect the price and income amount):
- Indexation: Payments increase over time (by CPI or a fixed %) to help with inflation β but starting income is lower
- Reversionary benefit: Payments continue to your spouse after you die
- Guaranteed period: Payments continue for a minimum period (e.g., 10 years) even if you die earlier
- Return of capital: Some or all of your capital returned to beneficiaries if you die early
- Market-linked: Income varies based on investment performance (hybrid between annuity and account-based pension)
Annuities vs Account-Based Pensions
| Feature | Annuity | Account-Based Pension |
|---|---|---|
| Income certainty | Guaranteed β you know exactly what you'll receive | Variable β depends on investment returns and drawdown |
| Longevity protection | Lifetime annuities pay until death, no matter how long | Balance can run out if you live longer than expected |
| Investment risk | Borne by the insurance company | Borne by you |
| Flexibility | Very limited β income amount is fixed, capital locked away | High β choose your drawdown, access lump sums anytime |
| Access to capital | Generally none (capital exchanged for income stream) | Full access to remaining balance |
| Death benefit | May be nil, or reduced depending on features chosen | Remaining balance passes to beneficiaries |
| Inflation protection | Only if you pay for indexation (reduces starting income) | Depends on investment returns; can increase drawdown |
| Complexity | Simple once set up β no investment decisions | Ongoing decisions about investments and drawdown |
Pros and Cons of Annuities
β Advantages
- Guaranteed income β no market risk
- Longevity protection β can't outlive the income
- Simplicity β no investment decisions
- Peace of mind β know exactly what you'll receive
- Centrelink benefits β some annuities receive favourable treatment
- Budgeting certainty β easier to plan expenses
β Disadvantages
- No flexibility β can't access capital for emergencies
- Inflation risk β fixed payments lose purchasing power
- No upside β don't benefit if markets perform well
- Provider risk β rely on insurer's solvency
- Reduced estate β less or nothing for beneficiaries
- Timing risk β rates depend on interest rates at purchase
β οΈ The Inflation Problem
A fixed $40,000/year annuity sounds great today. But in 20 years, with 3% annual inflation, it will only have the purchasing power of about $22,000 in today's dollars. Unless you pay for indexation (which reduces your starting income by 20-30%), your real income will erode over time.
Centrelink Treatment β The Big Advantage
π Favourable Treatment for "Innovative Income Streams"
Certain lifetime annuities that meet government requirements (called "asset-test exempt" or "innovative income streams") receive significant Centrelink advantages:
- Assets test: Only 60% of the purchase price counts as an asset (reducing over time)
- Income test: Actual income received minus deductible amount (not deeming)
The deductible amount represents the return of capital portion of each payment (purchase price Γ· life expectancy). This means only the "earnings" portion of your annuity income is assessed β often much less than what deeming would calculate on the same money in an account-based pension.
For retirees close to Age Pension thresholds, this can result in higher Age Pension payments compared to holding the same amount in an account-based pension (which is 100% asset-tested and fully deemed).
Example: Centrelink Impact
Margaret has $200,000 to invest. Let's compare:
Option A: Account-based pension
- Assets test: $200,000 counted
- Income test: Deemed at ~$4,400/year
Option B: Qualifying lifetime annuity
- Assets test: $120,000 counted (60% of purchase price)
- Income test: Actual income minus deductible amount (e.g., $8,000 income - $6,500 deductible = only $1,500 assessed)
The $80,000 reduction in assessed assets could increase Margaret's Age Pension by several thousand dollars per year β potentially more than offsetting any lower investment returns from the annuity.
Tax Treatment
Annuities purchased with super money have similar tax treatment to account-based pensions:
- Age 60+: Annuity income is tax-free (from a taxed fund)
- Under 60: Taxable component is assessable income (with possible tax offset)
Annuities count toward your Transfer Balance Cap β the "special value" of the annuity (calculated using life expectancy factors) uses up cap space.
When Might an Annuity Make Sense?
π§ Annuities May Suit You If:
You worry about market volatility and want certainty about your income, even if it means potentially lower returns.
If your parents lived into their 90s, a lifetime annuity protects against outliving your savings.
If you're near Age Pension thresholds, a qualifying annuity could significantly increase your entitlements.
If managing investments stresses you out, an annuity removes ongoing decision-making.
If maximising lifetime income matters more than leaving assets to beneficiaries.
Many retirees use a partial annuity to cover "must-have" costs, with other assets for discretionary spending.
The "Bucket" Approach: Combining Strategies
You don't have to choose one or the other. Many financial planners recommend a blended approach:
- Age Pension: Covers basic living expenses (if eligible)
- Lifetime annuity: Tops up guaranteed income to cover essential costs
- Account-based pension: Provides flexibility and growth potential for discretionary spending
This way, your essential expenses are guaranteed regardless of markets, while you retain flexibility and growth potential for the rest.
π‘ Consider a Deferred Annuity
One increasingly popular strategy: buy a deferred lifetime annuity that starts paying at age 85 or 90. This is relatively cheap (because many people won't reach that age), but provides powerful protection if you do live a long life. You then only need your other assets to last until the annuity kicks in.
Things to Check Before Buying
- Provider strength: Check the insurer's financial ratings β you're relying on them for decades
- Compare quotes: Rates vary significantly between providers
- Understand the features: Indexation, reversionary benefits, guaranteed periods all affect income
- Check Centrelink treatment: Not all annuities qualify for favourable asset-test treatment
- Consider timing: Annuity rates are influenced by interest rates β buying when rates are low locks in lower income
- Get advice: This is a significant, irreversible decision β professional advice is strongly recommended
β οΈ Annuities Are Generally Irreversible
Once you purchase an annuity, you typically cannot change your mind. The capital is gone β exchanged for the income stream. Make sure you understand this before committing, especially with large amounts.
Summary: Annuities at a Glance
| Aspect | Key Point |
|---|---|
| What it is | Exchange a lump sum for guaranteed regular income |
| Main benefit | Income certainty and longevity protection |
| Main drawback | No flexibility β capital locked away |
| Tax (60+) | Income is tax-free from taxed funds |
| Centrelink | Qualifying annuities get favourable treatment |
| Best for | Risk-averse retirees, longevity concerns, Centrelink optimisation |
| Caution | Irreversible decision β get professional advice |
Considering an Annuity?
This is one of the most significant and irreversible retirement decisions you can make. Get expert guidance before committing.
Last updated: January 2026
Disclaimer
NOT PERSONAL ADVICE β annuities are complex products with significant, irreversible consequences. The information here is general only. Seek professional advice before purchasing an annuity.
