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Glossary Term

Discount Rate

Discount rate

What is Discount Rate?

A discount rate is the interest rate used to translate future dollars into today’s dollars. It is the engine behind present value: the higher the discount rate, the less a future payment is worth right now.

How the Discount Rate Works

Think of the discount rate as the return you could earn if you had the money today. If you can earn 5% a year, then $1,050 a year from now is worth only $1,000 to you today, because $1,000 invested at 5% would grow to $1,050. That 5% is the discount rate.

A larger discount rate pushes the present value of future payments down. A smaller one pulls it up. Time amplifies the effect: the further out a payment is, the more the discount rate erodes its value today.

What Affects the Discount Rate?

Discount rates track prevailing interest rates and bond yields, so they rise and fall with the broader rate environment. This is why a lottery lump sum shrinks as a share of the jackpot when rates are high: the same cash funds a larger advertised annuity. Insurers apply the same logic when they price the future value of the income they guarantee, which shapes the fixed annuity rates you can compare today.

Key takeaway: The discount rate converts future money into today’s money. It moves with interest rates, and it is the single biggest driver of how much a future payment, or a lump-sum offer, is worth right now.
Disclaimer: This glossary entry 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 financial decisions.
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