Can You Transfer an Annuity to a Trust? Rules, Taxes, and Strategy

Updated March 28, 2026

Transferring an annuity to a trust is possible in some situations, but the tax consequences can be significant. Whether it makes sense depends on the type of trust, the type of annuity, and your estate planning goals. Done incorrectly, you could trigger immediate taxation on all the deferred gains in the contract.

Can You Transfer an Annuity to a Trust?

The short answer: it depends on the type of trust.

  • Revocable living trust: Generally yes, with no immediate tax consequences
  • Irrevocable trust: Possible, but may trigger a taxable event
  • Qualified trust (IRA/401k): No. Qualified annuities must be owned by an individual, not a trust

The critical IRS rule is IRC Section 72(u), which states that if a non-natural person (such as a trust or corporation) owns an annuity, the contract loses its tax-deferred status. There is an important exception: if the trust is acting as an agent for a natural person, tax deferral is preserved.

Revocable Living Trusts

A revocable living trust is the most common estate planning trust. You create it, control it, and can change or dissolve it at any time during your lifetime. For tax purposes, a revocable trust is treated as an extension of you (the grantor).

Can You Own an Annuity in a Revocable Trust?

Yes. Because the IRS treats a revocable trust as a “see-through” entity to the individual grantor, the annuity maintains its tax-deferred status. The trust is considered an agent of a natural person.

Most insurance companies will allow you to:

  • Name the trust as the owner of the annuity contract
  • Name yourself (the grantor) as the annuitant
  • Name the trust as the beneficiary (though naming individuals directly is often more tax-efficient)

Why Transfer an Annuity to a Revocable Trust?

  • Avoid probate: Assets in a revocable trust pass to beneficiaries without going through probate court
  • Privacy: Probate records are public; trust distributions are private
  • Incapacity planning: If you become incapacitated, your successor trustee can manage the annuity on your behalf

Irrevocable Trusts

An irrevocable trust cannot be changed or dissolved once created (with limited exceptions). It is a separate legal entity from you, which creates tax complications for annuity ownership.

The IRC Section 72(u) Problem

When an irrevocable trust owns an annuity, the trust is a non-natural person. Under Section 72(u), the annuity loses tax-deferred treatment. All gains inside the contract become taxable each year as they accrue, eliminating the primary tax advantage of the annuity.

There are exceptions:

  • Grantor irrevocable trusts: If the trust is structured so the grantor is still treated as the owner for income tax purposes (a “defective grantor trust”), the annuity may retain tax deferral because the IRS looks through the trust to the natural person.
  • Annuities purchased by the trust (not transferred in) may have different treatment under some interpretations, but this is a gray area. Consult a tax attorney.

When Transferring to an Irrevocable Trust Makes Sense

  • Estate tax reduction: If your estate exceeds the federal exemption ($13.99 million in 2026), transferring assets to an irrevocable trust removes them from your taxable estate
  • Asset protection: An irrevocable trust can shield assets from creditors and lawsuits
  • Special needs planning: A special needs trust can hold an annuity to provide income for a disabled beneficiary without disqualifying them from government benefits

In these cases, the trade-off between losing tax deferral and gaining estate/asset protection may be worthwhile. The math depends on the size of the gain, the trust’s tax bracket, and the estate planning benefit.

Tax Consequences of Transferring an Annuity to a Trust

Scenario Tax Result
Transfer to revocable living trust No immediate tax. Tax deferral preserved.
Transfer to grantor irrevocable trust May preserve deferral (consult tax advisor)
Transfer to non-grantor irrevocable trust May trigger immediate tax on all gains under 72(u)
Change of ownership to any non-natural person Potential loss of tax-deferred status
Naming trust as beneficiary (not owner) No current tax; inherited gains taxed at distribution

Trust as Beneficiary vs. Trust as Owner

An alternative to transferring ownership is simply naming the trust as the beneficiary of the annuity while keeping yourself as the owner. This approach:

  • Preserves tax deferral during your lifetime (you remain the natural person owner)
  • Passes the annuity through the trust at death for probate avoidance and controlled distribution
  • Avoids the Section 72(u) issue entirely

The drawback is that when an annuity is paid to a trust (as opposed to an individual beneficiary), the trust may not be able to use the “stretch” option. The trust must distribute the annuity proceeds, typically within 5 years or under the 10-year rule per the SECURE Act, and the trust’s compressed tax brackets mean higher taxes if income is not distributed to beneficiaries promptly.

Practical Steps for Transferring an Annuity to a Trust

  1. Consult your estate planning attorney and tax advisor first. The tax implications vary by trust type, state law, and contract terms.
  2. Contact the insurance company. Request their change of ownership form. Some carriers require specific trust documentation (certificate of trust, EIN, trustee information).
  3. Provide the trust’s tax ID number (EIN). Irrevocable trusts have their own EIN. Revocable trusts often use the grantor’s Social Security number.
  4. Confirm the annuitant designation. The annuitant (the person whose life the contract is measured on) typically remains the original individual, even when the trust becomes the owner.
  5. Update beneficiary designations. Ensure the trust’s successor beneficiaries are properly documented.
  6. Keep records. Document the cost basis at the time of transfer, as this carries over to the trust.

Alternatives to Transferring an Annuity to a Trust

  • Name the trust as beneficiary only (keeps you as owner, avoids 72(u))
  • Name individual beneficiaries directly (simplest, avoids trust tax brackets)
  • Purchase a new annuity inside the trust (some advisors prefer this to transferring existing contracts)
  • Use a 1035 exchange to move into a more trust-friendly product

Frequently Asked Questions

Does transferring an annuity to a trust trigger taxes?

It depends on the trust type. Transferring to a revocable living trust generally does not trigger taxes. Transferring to a non-grantor irrevocable trust may cause the annuity to lose tax-deferred status under IRC Section 72(u), triggering tax on all accumulated gains.

Can I transfer an IRA annuity to a trust?

No. IRA annuities (qualified annuities) must be owned by an individual. You cannot transfer IRA ownership to a trust. However, you can name a trust as the IRA beneficiary for after-death planning.

Should I name my trust or my spouse as annuity beneficiary?

In most cases, naming your spouse directly is more tax-efficient because a surviving spouse can continue the annuity contract or roll it into their own name. A trust adds complexity and may accelerate taxation. Use a trust as beneficiary primarily for control (minor children, special needs, blended families) rather than tax efficiency.

What is IRC Section 72(u)?

Section 72(u) of the Internal Revenue Code states that annuities owned by non-natural persons (corporations, trusts, etc.) are not treated as annuity contracts for tax purposes, meaning gains are taxed annually rather than being deferred. There is an exception when the trust is acting as agent for a natural person.

Can a trust purchase a new annuity?

Yes. A trust can buy a new annuity contract. However, the same Section 72(u) rules apply. If the trust is not acting as agent for a natural person, the annuity will not receive tax-deferred treatment. Structure and documentation matter. Work with an attorney experienced in annuity-trust planning.

Get Today's Best MYGA Rates
Compare A-rated carriers. Rates up to 6.50%. No obligation.
Editorial Disclosure: Our editorial team independently reviews and rates annuity products. We may earn commissions when you request a quote through our partner links. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Learn more.
Disclaimer: This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Annuity products vary by state and carrier. Always consult a licensed financial professional before making any financial decisions. My Annuity Store is an independent marketplace and does not provide investment advice.
Where to Go Next
Based on what you just read, here are your best next steps.

Pros and Cons of Fixed Annuities

Before you commit to a fixed annuity, weigh the advantages and drawbacks for your retirement situation.

✓  Pros

  • Guaranteed rate locked in for the full term — no surprises
  • Principal is 100% protected from market losses
  • Often pays significantly more than CDs or savings accounts
  • Tax-deferred growth — no annual tax bill until withdrawal
  • Up to 10% annual free withdrawal without surrender charge
  • State guaranty association coverage (typically up to $250,000)
  • Simple to understand — no moving parts or index tracking

✗  Cons

  • Surrender charges apply if you withdraw more than 10% early
  • Not FDIC insured — backed by the insurance company, not the government
  • Earnings taxed as ordinary income (not capital gains rates)
  • 10% IRS early-withdrawal penalty before age 59½
  • Rate is fixed — you won't benefit if market rates rise
  • Less liquidity than a savings account or money market

Learn more: Are annuities safe?

Compare Top MYGA Rates by Term

See today's highest guaranteed rate from an A-rated carrier for each term length.

See all rates →

Rates sourced from AnnuityRateWatch. A-rated carriers (AM Best) only. Not a solicitation. Rates vary by state. Verify before purchasing.

Types of Annuities

Insurance companies offer several types of annuities to fit different financial goals. Here's how they compare.

A MYGA (Multi-Year Guaranteed Annuity) is the simplest fixed annuity. Your rate is guaranteed for the entire term — 3, 5, or 7 years. No market exposure, no index tracking. What you see is what you earn.

Best for: Savers who want a predictable, guaranteed return and are comfortable locking funds for a set term. Often compared to CDs but frequently pays more.

Learn more about MYGAs →

A Fixed Indexed Annuity (FIA) links your interest credits to a market index (like the S&P 500) with a floor of 0% — so you can never lose principal. Upside is capped via participation rates or caps.

Best for: Investors who want some market participation with a safety net. More complex than MYGAs but potentially higher returns in strong market years.

Learn more about FIAs →

A SPIA (Single Premium Immediate Annuity) converts a lump sum into a guaranteed income stream — monthly checks that start within 30 days and continue for life or a set period.

Best for: Retirees who need guaranteed income immediately and want to eliminate the risk of outliving their money. The "pension replacement" product.

Learn more about SPIAs →

A Variable Annuity invests your premium in sub-accounts (similar to mutual funds). Returns fluctuate with the market — you can earn more but can also lose principal.

Best for: Long-term investors who want market exposure inside a tax-deferred wrapper and are comfortable with investment risk. Higher fees than fixed products.

Learn more about variable annuities →

A RILA (Registered Index-Linked Annuity) offers partial market participation with a defined buffer against losses (e.g., 10% or 20%). Unlike FIAs, RILAs can lose money — but losses are limited.

Best for: Investors willing to accept limited downside in exchange for higher upside potential than a traditional FIA. A middle ground between fixed and variable.

Learn more about RILAs →

Rate Methodology

My Annuity Store monitors MYGA rates from over 50 A-rated insurance carriers via AnnuityRateWatch. Our rate data refreshes every 6 hours.

To make our list, a carrier must be rated A− or better by AM Best — a financial strength rating that indicates the insurer's ability to meet obligations. Carriers with ratings of B++ or lower are excluded regardless of how attractive their rate appears.

Rates are sorted by highest guaranteed APY within each term group. Products using simple interest (SI) are labeled — the effective compound yield is lower than the stated rate. Minimum premiums shown are for non-qualified (after-tax) purchases.

Data: AnnuityRateWatch · A-rated carriers only · Updated daily
People Also Read
Related guides and resources our readers find most helpful.

Explore More

Command finished with code: 0 Command finished with code: 0 Command finished with code: 0 Command finished with code: 0 Command finished with code: 0