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Glossary Term

Refund Annuity

What is Refund Annuity?

What is a Refund Annuity?

A refund annuity guarantees that the total amount paid to the annuitant (and beneficiary, if any) will at least equal the original premium. If the annuitant dies before receiving payments equal to the premium, the unpaid balance is refunded to a designated beneficiary either as a lump sum (cash refund) or as continued installments (installment refund).

Cash Refund vs Installment Refund

A cash refund annuity pays the difference between the premium and total payments received as a lump sum to the beneficiary upon death. An installment refund annuity continues making the regular monthly payments to the beneficiary until the cumulative payout equals the premium. Cash refund is faster for the heir; installment refund is slightly cheaper for the annuitant in terms of starting income.

Refund vs Period Certain

A period certain guarantees a fixed number of years of payments. A refund annuity guarantees a minimum total payout amount equal to the premium. They address the same fear (early-death loss) differently. For a $100,000 premium, a 10-year period certain guarantees ~120 payments at the contracted amount, while a cash refund guarantees that total payouts reach $100,000 – the duration depends on the monthly payment size.

When Refund Annuities Make Sense

Refund structures are most useful when the annuitant’s primary concern is protecting the principal as a legacy rather than guaranteeing a specific payment duration. They reduce the starting monthly payment by 5-10% compared to a pure single life payout.

Key takeaway: A refund annuity guarantees that you (and your beneficiary) receive at least your original premium back. Cash refund pays a lump sum at death; installment refund continues payments until the principal is recovered.
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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