[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.72-11]

[Page 258-264]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.72-11  Amounts not received as annuity payments.

    (a) Introductory. (1) This section applies to amounts received under 
a contract to which section 72 applies if either:
    (i) Paragraph (b) of Sec. 1.72-2 is inapplicable to such amounts.
    (ii) Paragraph (b) of Sec. 1.72-2 is applicable but the annuity 
payments received differ either in amount, duration, or both, from those 
originally provided under the contract, or
    (iii) Paragraph (b) of Sec. 1.72 is applicable, but such annuity 
payments are received by a beneficiary after the death of an annuitant 
(or annuitants) in full discharge of the obligation under the contract 
and solely because of a guarantee.

The payments referred to in subdivision (i) of this subparagraph include 
all amounts other than ``amounts received as an annuity'' as that term 
is defined in paragraphs (b) (2) and (3) of Sec. 1.72-2. If such 
amounts are received as dividends or payments in the nature of 
dividends, or as a return of premiums, see paragraph (b) of this 
section. If such amounts are paid in full discharge of the obligation 
under the contract and are in the nature of a refund of the 
consideration, see paragraph (c) of this section. If such amounts are 
paid upon the surrender, redemption, or maturity of the contract, see 
paragraph (d) of this section. The payments referred to in subdivision 
(ii) of this subparagraph include all annuity payments which are paid as 
the result of a modification or an exchange of the annuity obligations 
originally provided under a contract for different annuity obligations 
(whether or not such modification or exchange is accompanied by the 
payment of an amount to which subdivision (i) of this subparagraph 
applies). If the duration of the new annuity obligations differs from 
the duration of the old annuity obligations, paragraph (e) of this 
section applies to the new annuity obligations and paragraph (d) of this 
section applies to any lump sum payment received. If, however, the 
duration of the new annuity obligations is the same as the duration of 
the old obligations, paragraph (f) of this section applies to the new 
obligations and to any lump sum received in connection therewith. The 
annuity payments referred to in subdivision (iii) of this subparagraph 
are annuity payments which are made to a beneficiary after

[[Page 259]]

the death of annuitant (or annuitants) in full discharge of the 
obligations under a contract because of a provision in the contract 
requiring the payment of a guaranteed amount or minimum number of 
payments for a fixed period; see paragraph (c) of this section.
    (2) The principles of this section apply, to the extent appropriate 
thereto, to amounts paid which are taxable under section 72 (except, for 
taxable years beginning before January 1, 1964, section 72(e)(3)) in 
accordance with sections 402 and 403 and the regulations thereunder. 
However, if contributions used to purchase the contract include amounts 
for which a deduction was allowed under section 404 as contributions on 
behalf of an owner-employee, the rules of this section are modified by 
the rules of paragraph (b) of Sec. 1.72-17. Further, in applying the 
provisions of this section, the aggregate premiums or other 
consideration paid shall not include contributions on behalf of self-
employed individuals to the extent that deductions were allowed under 
section 404 for such contributions. Nor, shall the aggregate of premiums 
or other consideration paid include amounts used to purchase life, 
accident, health, or other insurance protection for an owner-employee. 
See paragraph (b)(4) of Sec. 1.72-16 and paragraph (c) of Sec. 1.72-
17. The principles of this section also apply to payments made in the 
manner described in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Sec. 1.72-2.
    (b) Amounts received in the nature of dividends or similar 
distributions. (1) If dividends (or payments in the nature of dividends 
or a return of premiums or other consideration) are received under a 
contract to which section 72 applies and such payments are received 
before the annuity starting date or before the date on which an amount 
is first received as an annuity, whichever is the later, such payments 
are includible in the gross income of the recipient only to the extent 
that they, taken together with all previous payments received under the 
contract which were excludable from the gross income of the recipient 
under the applicable income tax law, exceed the aggregate of premiums or 
other consideration paid or deemed to have been paid by the recipient. 
Such payments shall also be subtracted from the consideration paid (or 
deemed paid) both for the purpose of determining an exclusion ratio to 
be applied to subsequent amounts paid as an annuity and for the purpose 
of determining the applicability of section 72(d) and Sec. 1.72-13, 
relating to employee contributions recoverable in three years.
    (2) If dividends or payments in the nature of dividends are paid 
under a contract to which section 72 applies and such payments are 
received on or after the annuity starting date or the date on which an 
amount is first received as an annuity, whichever is later, such 
payments shall be fully includible in the gross income of the recipient. 
The receipt of such payments shall not affect the aggregate of premiums 
or other consideration paid nor the amounts contributed or deemed to 
have been contributed by an employee as otherwise calculated for 
purposes of section 72. Since the investment in the contract and the 
expected return are not affected by a payment which is fully includible 
in the gross income of the recipient under this rule, the exclusion 
ratio will not be affected by such payment and will continue to be 
applied to amounts received as annuity payments in the future as though 
such payment had not been made. This subparagraph shall apply to amounts 
received under a contract described in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Sec. 
1.72-2 to the extent that the amounts received exceed the portion of the 
investment in the contract allocable to each taxable year in accordance 
with paragraph (d)(3) of Sec. 1.72-4. Hence, such excess is fully 
includible in the gross income of the recipient.
    (c) Amounts received in the nature of a refund of the consideration 
under a contract and in full discharge of the obligation thereof. (1) 
Any amount received under a contract to which section 72 applies, if it 
is at least in part a refund of the consideration paid, including 
amounts payable to a beneficiary after the death of an annuitant by 
reason of a provision in the contract for a life annuity with minimum 
period of payments certain or with a minimum amount which must be paid 
in any event, shall be considered an amount received in the nature of a 
refund of

[[Page 260]]

the consideration paid for such contract. If such an amount is in full 
discharge of an obligation to pay a fixed amount (whether in a lump sum 
or otherwise) or to pay amounts for a fixed number of years (including 
amounts described in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Sec. 1.72-2), it shall be 
included in the gross income of the recipient only to the extent that 
it, when added to amounts previously received under the contract which 
were excludable from gross income under the law applicable at the time 
of receipt, exceeds the aggregate of premiums or other consideration 
paid. See section 73(e)(2)(A). This paragraph shall not apply if the 
total of the amounts to be paid in discharge of the obligation can in 
any event exceed the total of the annuity payments which would otherwise 
fully discharge the obligation. For rules to be applied in such a case, 
see paragraph (e) of this section.
    (2) The principles of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example (1). A, a male employee, retired on December 31, 1954, at 
the age of 60. A life annuity of $75 per month was payable to him 
beginning January 31, 1955. The annuity contract guaranteed that if A 
did not live for at least ten years after his retirement his 
beneficiary, B, would receive the monthly payments for any balance of 
such ten-year period which remained at the date of A's death. Under 
section 72, A was deemed to have paid $3,600 toward the cost of the 
annuity. A lived for five years after his retirement receiving a total 
of $4,500 in annuity payments. After A's death, B began receiving the 
monthly payments of $75 beginning with the January 31, 1960 payment. B 
will exclude such payments from his gross income throughout 1960, 1961, 
and 1962, and will exclude only $18 of the first payment in 1963 from 
his gross income for that year. Thereafter, B will include the entire 
amount of all such payments in his gross income for the taxable year of 
receipt. This result is determined as follows:

A's investment in the contract (unadjusted)....................   $3,600
Multiple from Table III of Sec.  1.72-9 for male, age       11  .......
 60, where duration of guaranteed amount is 10 years
 (percent)............................................
Subtract value of the refund feature to the nearest dollar (11       396
 percent of $3,600)............................................
                                                                --------
Investment in the contract adjusted for the present value of       3,204
 the refund feature without discount for interest..............
                                                                --------
Aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid..............    3,600
A's exclusion ratio ($3,204/$16,380 [$900x18.2])           19.6
 (percent)............................................
Subtract amount excludable during five years A received              882
 payments (19.6 percent of $4,500 [$900x5])....................
Remainder of aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid     2,718
 excludable from gross income of B under section 72(e).........



As a result of the above computation, the number of payments to B which 
will exhaust the remainder of consideration paid which is excludable 
from gross income of the recipient is 36\6/25\ ($2,718/$75) and B will 
exclude the payments from his gross income for three years, then exclude 
only $18 of the first payment for the fourth year from his gross income, 
and thereafter include the entire amount of all payments he receives in 
his gross income.
    Example (2). The facts are the same as in example (1), except that 
B, the beneficiary, elects to receive $50 per month for his life in lieu 
of the payments guaranteed under the original contractual obligation. 
Since such amounts will be received as an annuity and may, because of 
the length of time B may live, exceed the amount guaranteed, they are 
not amounts to which this paragraph applies. See paragraph (e) of this 
section.
    Example (3). The facts are the same as in example (1), except that 
B, the beneficiary, elects to receive the remaining guaranteed amount in 
installments which are larger or smaller than the $75 per month provided 
until, under the terms of the contract, the guaranteed amount is 
exhausted. The rule of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph and the 
computation illustrated in example (1) apply to such installments since 
the total of such installments will not exceed the original amount 
guaranteed to be paid at A's death in any event.
    Example (4). C pays $12,000 for a contract providing that he is to 
be paid an annuity of $1,000 per year for 15 years. His exclusion ratio 
is therefore 80 percent ($12,000/$15,000). He directs that the annuity 
is to be paid to D, his beneficiary, if he should die before the full 
15-year period has expired. C dies after 5 years and D is paid $1,000 in 
1960. D will include $200 ($1,000-$800 [80 percent of $1,000]) in his 
gross income for the taxable year in which he receives the $1,000 since 
section 72(e) and this section do not apply to the annuity payments made 
in accordance with the

[[Page 261]]

provisions and during the term of the contract. D will continue with the 
same exclusion ratio used by C (80 percent).
    Example (5). In 1954, E paid $50,000 into a fund and was promised an 
annual income for life the amount of which would depend in part upon the 
earnings realized from the investment of the fund in accordance with an 
agreed formula. The contract also specified that if E should die before 
ten years had elapsed, his beneficiary, F, would be paid the amounts 
determined annually under the formula until ten payments had been 
received by E and F together. E died in 1960, having received five 
payments totaling $30,000. Assuming that $22,000 of this amount was 
properly excludable from E's gross income prior to his death, F will 
exclude from his gross income the payments he receives until the taxable 
year in which his total receipts from the fund exceed $28,000 ($50,000-
$22,000). F will include any excess over the $28,000 in his gross income 
for that taxable year. Thereafter, F will include in his gross income 
the entire amount of any payments made to him from the fund.
    Example (6). Assume the facts are the same as in example (1), except 
that the total investment in the contract is made after June 30, 1986, 
that A is to receive payments under the life annuity contract beginning 
on January 31, 1987, and that B will begin to receive the monthly 
payments on January 31, 1992. B will exclude the $75 monthly payments 
from gross income throughout 1992, 1993, and 1994. B will exclude only 
the first two monthly payments and $21 of the third monthly payment in 
1995. This is determined as follows:

A's investment in the contract (unadjusted).................      $3,600
Multiple from Table VII, age 60, 10 years (percent).........           4
      Subtract value of the refund feature (4 percent of            $144
       $3,600...............................................
                                                             -----------
Investment in the contract adjusted for the present value of      $3,456
 the refund feature without discount for interest...........
Aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid...........   $3,600.00
  A's exclusion ratio ($3,456/$21,780 [$900x24.2]) (percent)        15.9
  Subtract amount excludable during five years A received        $715.50
   payments (15.9 percent of $4,500 [$900x5])...............
                                                             -----------
  Remainder of aggregate of premiums or other consideration    $2,884.50
   paid excludable from gross income of B under section
   72(e)....................................................



As a result of the above computation, the number of payments to B which 
will exhaust the remainder of consideration paid which is excludable 
from gross income of the recipient is 38 23/50 ($2,884.50/75) and B will 
exclude the payments from gross income for three years, then exclude 
only the first two monthly payments and $34.50 of the third. Thereafter 
B shall include the entire amount of all payments received in gross 
income.

    (3) For the purpose of applying the rule contained in subparagraph 
(1) of this paragraph, it is immaterial whether the recipient of the 
amount received in full discharge of the obligation is the same person 
as the recipient of amounts previously received under the contract which 
were excludable from gross income, except in the case of a contract 
transferred for a valuable consideration, with respect to which see 
paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.72-10. For the limit on the tax, for taxable 
years beginning before January 1, 1964, attributable to the receipt of a 
lump sum to which this paragraph applies, see paragraph (g) of this 
section.
    (d) Amounts received upon the surrender, redemption, or maturity of 
a contract. (1) Any amount received upon the surrender, redemption, or 
maturity of a contract to which section 72 applies, which is not 
received as an annuity under the regulations of paragraph (b) of Sec. 
1.72-2, shall be included in the gross income of the recipient to the 
extent that it, when added to amounts previously received under the 
contract and which were excludable from the gross income of the 
recipient under the law applicable at the time of receipt, exceeds the 
aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid. See section 
72(e)(2)(B). If amounts are to be received as an annuity, whether in 
lieu of or in addition to amounts described in the preceding sentence, 
such amounts shall be included in the gross income of the recipient in 
accordance with the provisions of paragraph (e) or (f) of this section, 
whichever is applicable. The rule stated in the first sentence of this 
paragraph shall not apply to payments received as an annuity or 
otherwise after the date of the first receipt of an amount as an annuity 
subsequent to the maturity, redemption, or surrender of the original 
contract. If amounts are so received and are other than amounts received 
as an annuity, they are includible in the gross income of the recipient. 
See section 72(e)(1)(A) and paragraph (b)(2) of this section.

[[Page 262]]

    (2) For the purpose of applying the rule contained in subparagraph 
(1) of this paragraph, it is immaterial whether the recipient of the 
amount received upon the surrender, redemption, or maturity of the 
contract is the same as the recipient of amounts previously received 
under the contract which were excludable from gross income, except in 
the case of a contract transferred for a valuable consideration, with 
respect to which see paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.72-10. For the limit on 
the amount of tax, for taxable years beginning before January 1, 1964, 
attributable to the receipt of certain lump sums to which this paragraph 
applies, see paragraph (g) of this section.
    (e) Periodic payments received for a different term. If, after the 
date on which an amount is first received as an annuity under a contract 
to which section 72 applies, the terms of the contract are modified or 
the annuity obligations are exchanged so that periodic payments are to 
be received for a different term than originally provided under the 
contract (whether or not accompanied by the receipt of a lump sum to 
which paragraph (d) of this section applies), the rules of this 
paragraph shall apply to such payments. Hence, the provisions of section 
72(e) and paragraphs (b), (c), (d), and (f) of this section are 
inapplicable for the purpose of determining the includibility of such 
payments in gross income and the general principles of section 72 with 
respect to the use of an exclusion ratio shall be applied to such 
payments as if they were provided under a new contract received in 
exchange for the contract providing the original annuity payments. If 
such payments are received as the result of the surrender, redemption, 
or discharge of a contract to which section 72 applies, they shall be 
considered to be received as an annuity under a contract exchanged for 
the contract whose redemption, surrender, or discharge was involved. For 
the purpose of determining the extent to which the payments so received 
are to be included in the gross income of the recipient, an exclusion 
ratio shall be determined for such contract as of the later of January 
1, 1954, or the first day of the first period for which an amount is 
received as an annuity thereunder, whichever is the later. See paragraph 
(b) of Sec. 1.72-4. In determining the investment in the contract for 
this purpose, any lump sum amount received at the time of the exchange 
shall not be considered an amount to which paragraph (a)(2) of Sec. 
1.72-6 applies. However, such lump sum shall be subtracted from the 
aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid to the extent it is 
excludable as an amount not received as an annuity under this section as 
if it were an amount received before the annuity starting date of the 
contract obtained in exchange.
    (f) Periodic payments received for the same term after a lump sum 
withdrawal. (1) If, after the date of the first receipt of a payment as 
an annuity, the annuitant receives a lump sum and is thereafter to 
receive annuity payments in a reduced amount under the contract for the 
same term, life, or lives as originally specified in the contract, a 
portion of the contract shall be considered to have been surrendered or 
redeemed in consideration of the payment of such lump sum and the 
exclusion ratio originally determined for the contract shall continue to 
apply to the amounts received as an annuity without regard to the fact 
that such amounts are less than the original amounts which were to be 
paid periodically. The lump sum shall be includible in the gross income 
of the recipient in accordance with the provisions of subparagraph (2) 
of this paragraph. However, except in the case of amounts to which 
sections 402 and 403 apply, the tax, for taxable years beginning before 
January 1, 1964, attributable to the inclusion of all or part of the 
lump sum in gross income shall not exceed the amount determined under 
section 72(e)(3) and paragraph (g) of this section. For taxable years 
beginning after December 31, 1963, such amounts may be taken into 
account in computations under sections 1301 through 1305 (relating to 
income averaging).
    (2) There shall be excluded from gross income that portion of the 
lump sum which bears the same ratio to the aggregate premiums or other 
consideration paid for the contract, as reduced by all amounts 
previously received under the contract and excludable from

[[Page 263]]

the gross income of the recipient under the applicable income tax law, 
as:
    (i) In the case of payments to be made in the manner described in 
paragraph (b)(2) of Sec. 1.72-2, the amount of the reduction in the 
annuity payments to be made thereafter bears to the annuity payments 
originally provided under the contract, or
    (ii) In the case of a contract providing for payments to be made in 
the manner described in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Sec. 1.72-2, the amount 
of the reduction in the number of units per period to be paid thereafter 
bears to the number of units per period payable under the contract 
immediately before the lump sum withdrawal.
    (3) This paragraph may be illustrated by the following examples:

    Example (1). Taxpayer A pays $20,000 for an annuity contract 
providing for payments to him of $100 per month for his life. At the 
annuity starting date he has a life expectancy of 20 years. His expected 
return is therefore $24,000 and the exclusion ratio is five-sixths. He 
continues to receive the original annuity payments for 5 years, 
receiving a total of $6,000, and properly excludes a total of $5,000 
from his gross income in his income tax returns for those years. At the 
beginning of the next year, A agrees with the insurer to take a reduced 
annuity of $75 per month and a lump sum payment of $4,000 in cash. Of 
the lump sum he receives, he will include $250 and exclude $3,750 from 
his gross income for his taxable year of receipt, determined as follows:

Aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid..........      $20,000
Less amounts received as an annuity to the extent they were       $5,000
 excludable from A's income................................
                                                            ------------
Remainder of the consideration.............................      $15,000
                                                            ============
Ratio of the reduction in the amount of the annuity           25/$100 or
 payments to the original annuity payments.................        \1/4\
Lump sum received..........................................       $4,000
Less one-fourth of the remainder of the consideration (\1/        $3,750
 4\ of $15,000)............................................
                                                            ------------
Portion of the lump sum includible in gross income.........         $250



For taxable years beginning before January 1, 1964, the limit on tax of 
section 72(e)(3), as in effect before such date, applies to the portion 
of the lump sum includible in gross income. For taxable years beginning 
after December 31, 1963, such portion may be taken into account in 
computations under sections 1301 through 1305 (relating to income 
averaging). If, in this example, the annuity were a pension payable to A 
as a retired employee, but the facts were otherwise the same (assuming 
that, for instance, the $20,000 aggregate of premiums or other 
consideration paid were A's contributions as determined under section 
72(f) and Sec. 1.72-8) the result would be the same except that the tax 
attributable to the inclusion of the $250 in A's gross income, for 
taxable years beginning before January 1, 1964, would not be limited by 
section 72(e)(3), as in effect before such date. If such a lump sum is 
received in a taxable year beginning after December 31, 1963, the 
portion of such sum includible in gross income may be taken into account 
in computations under sections 1301 through 1305 (relating to income 
averaging).
    Example (2). Taxpayer B pays $30,000 for a contract providing for 
monthly payments to be made to him for 15 years with respect to the 
principal and earnings of 10 units of an investment fund. B receives 
$12,000 during the first 5 years of participation and of this amount he 
has properly excluded a total of $10,000 from his gross income in his 
income returns for the taxable years, since $2,000 of $2,400 he received 
in each such year represented his investment divided by the term of the 
annuity ($30,000/15). At the beginning of the 6th year, B agrees to take 
$11,000 in a lump sum and thereafter to accept the payments arising with 
respect to five units for the remaining 10 years of payments in full 
discharge of the original obligations of the contract. B shall include 
$1,000 in his gross income for the 6th year as the result of the lump 
sum he receives and allocates $1,000 of his original investment in the 
contract to each of the remaining 10 years with respect to the payments 
which will continue, determined as follows:

Aggregate of premiums or other consideration paid.............   $30,000
Total amount received and excludable from gross income........   $10,000
                                                               ---------
Remainder of the consideration................................   $20,000
                                                               =========
Ratio of units discontinued to the total units originally         \5/10\
 provided.....................................................  or \1/2\
Lump sum received at the time of reduction in the number of      $11,000
 units to be paid.............................................
Less one-half of the remainder of the consideration (\1/2\ of    $10,000
 $20,000).....................................................
                                                               ---------
Portion of the lump sum received and includible in gross          $1,000
 income.......................................................
                                                               =========
Remainder of the consideration less the portion of such          $10,000
 remainder attributable to the excludable portion of the lump
 sum ($20,000-$10,000)........................................
Remainder of the consideration properly allocable to each         $1,000
 taxable year for the remaining 10 years ($10,000/10).........



For the taxable years beginning before January 1, 1964, the limit on tax 
of section 72(e)(3), as in effect before such date, applies to the 
portion of the lump sum received and includible in gross income. For 
taxable years

[[Page 264]]

beginning after December 31, 1963, such portion may be taken into 
account in computations under sections 1301 through 1305 (relating to 
income averaging).

    (g) Limit on tax attributable to the receipt of a lump sum. (1) For 
taxable years beginning before January 1, 1964, if the entire amount of 
the proceeds received upon the redemption, maturity, surrender, or 
discharge of a contract to which section 72 applies is received in a 
lump sum and paragraph (c), (d), or (f) of this section is applicable in 
determining the portion of such amount which is includible in gross 
income, the tax attributable to such portion shall not exceed the tax 
which would have been attributable thereto had such portion been 
received ratably in the taxable year in which received and the 2 
preceding taxable years. The amount of tax attributable to the 
includible portion of the lump sum received shall be the lesser of:
    (i) The difference between the amount of tax for the taxable year of 
receipt computed by including such portion in gross income and the 
amount of tax for such taxable year computed by excluding such portion 
from gross income; or
    (ii) The difference between the total amount of tax for the taxable 
year of receipt and the 2 preceding taxable years computed by including 
one-third of such portion in gross income for each of the 3 taxable 
years, and the total amount of the tax for the taxable year of receipt 
and the 2 preceding taxable years computed by entirely excluding such 
portion from the gross income of all 3 taxable years.

For the definition of ``taxable year'', see section 441(b). This 
subparagraph shall not apply, for taxable years beginning before January 
1, 1964, to payments excepted from the application of section 72(e)(3), 
as in effect before such date, under the provisions of section 402 or 
403. See paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.72-2 and paragraph (d) of Sec. 1.72-
14.
    (2) For taxable years beginning after December 31, 1963, any amount 
includible in gross income to which this section relates may be taken 
into account in computations under sections 1301 through 1305 (relating 
to income averaging).
    (h) Amounts deemed to be paid or received by a transferee. Amounts 
deemed to have been paid or received by a transferee for the purposes of 
Sec. 1.72-10 shall also be deemed to have been so paid or received by 
such transferee for the purposes of this section. Thus, if a donee is 
deemed to have paid the premiums or other consideration actually paid by 
his transferor for the purposes of section 72(g) and paragraph (b) of 
Sec. 1.72-10, such consideration shall be deemed premiums or other 
consideration paid by the donee for the purposes of this section.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11402, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6885, 31 FR 
7798, June 2, 1966; T.D. 8115, 51 FR 45734, Dec. 19, 1986]