[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: 26CFR1.72-6]

[Page 163-168]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.72-6  Investment in the contract.

    (a) General rule. (1) For the purpose of computing the ``investment 
in the contract'', it is first necessary to determine the ``aggregate 
amount of premiums or other consideration paid'' for such contract. See 
section 72(c)(1). This determination is made as of the later of the 
annuity starting date of the contract or the date on which an amount is 
first received thereunder as an annuity. The amount so found is then 
reduced by the sum of the following amounts in order to find the 
investment in the contract:
    (i) The total amount of any return of premiums or dividends received 
(including unrepaid loans or dividends applied against the principal or 
interest on such loans) on or before the date on which the foregoing 
determination is made, and
    (ii) The total of any other amounts received with respect to the 
contract on or before such date which were excludable from the gross 
income of the recipient under the income tax law applicable at the time 
of receipt.

Amounts to which subdivision (ii) of this subparagraph applies shall 
include, for example, amounts considered to be return of premiums or 
other consideration paid under section 22(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1939 and amounts considered to be an employer-provided death 
benefit under section 22(b)(1)(B) of such Code. For rules relating to 
the extent to which an employee or his beneficiary may include employer 
contributions in the aggregate amount of premiums or other consideration 
paid, see Sec. 1.72-8. If the aggregate amount of premiums or other 
consideration paid for the contract includes amounts for which 
deductions were allowed under section 404 as contributions on behalf of 
a self-employed individual, such amounts shall not be included in the 
investment in the contract.
    (2) For the purpose of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, amounts 
received subsequent to the receipt of an amount as an annuity or 
subsequent to the annuity starting date, whichever is the later, shall 
be disregarded. See, however, Sec. 1.72-11.
    (3) The application of this paragraph may be illustrated by the 
following examples:

    Example (1). In 1950, B purchased an annuity contract for $10,000 
which was to provide him with an annuity of $1,000 per year for life. He 
received $1,000 in each of the years 1950, 1951, 1952, and 1953, prior 
to the annuity starting date (January 1, 1954). Under the Internal 
Revenue Code of 1939, $300 of each of these payments (3 percent of 
$10,000) was includible in his gross income, and the remaining $700 was 
excludable therefrom during each of the taxable years mentioned. In 
computing B's investment in the contract as of January 1, 1954, the 
total amount excludable from his gross income during the years 1950 
through 1953 ($2,800) must be subtracted from the consideration paid 
($10,000). Accordingly, B's investment in the contract as of January 1, 
1954, is $7,200 ($10,000 less $2,800).
    Example (2). In 1945, C contracted for an annuity to be paid to him 
beginning December 31, 1960. In 1945 and in each successive year until 
1960, he paid a premium of $5,000. Assuming he receives no payments of 
any kind under the contract until the date on which he receives the 
first annual payment as an annuity (December 31, 1960), his investment 
in the contract as of the annuity starting date (December 31, 1959) will 
be $75,000 ($5,000 paid each year for the 15 years from 1945 to 1959, 
inclusive).
    Example (3). Assume the same facts as in example (2), except that 
prior to the annuity starting date C has already received from the 
insurer dividends of $1,000 each in 1949, 1954, and 1959, such dividends 
not being includible in his gross income in any of those years. C's 
investment in the contract, as of the annuity starting date, will then 
be $72,000 ($75,000-$3,000).

    (b) Allocation of the investment in the contract where two or more 
annuity elements are acquired for a single consideration. (1) In the 
case of a contract described in Sec. 1.72-2(a)(2) which provides for 
two or more annuity elements, the investment in the contract determined 
under paragraph (a) shall be allocated to each of the annuity elements 
in the ratio that the expected return under each annuity element bears 
to the aggregate of the expected returns under all the annuity elements. 
The exclusion ratio for the contract as a whole

[[Page 164]]

shall be determined by dividing the investment in the contract (after 
adjustment for the present value of any or all refund features) by the 
aggregate of the expected returns under all the annuity elements. This 
may be illustrated by the following examples:

    Example (1). If a contract provides for annuity payments of $1,000 
per year for life (with no refund feature) to both A and B, a male and 
female, respectively, each 70 years of age as of the annuity starting 
date, such contract is acquired for consideration of $19,575 (without 
regard to whether paid by A, B, or both), and there is no post-June 1986 
investment in the contract, the investment in the contract shall be 
allocated by determining the exclusion ratio for the contract as a whole 
in the following manner:

Expectancy of A under Table I and Sec.  1.72-5(a)(2), 11.6      $11,600
 (12.1-0.5), multiplied by $1,000.............................
Plus: Expectancy of B computed in a similar manner                14,500
 ($1,000x14.5 [15.0-0.5]).....................................
                                                               ---------
    Total expected return.....................................    26,100



The exclusion ratio for both A and B is then $19,575/$26,100, or 75 
percent. A and B shall each exclude from gross income three-fourths 
($750) of each $1,000 annual payment received and shall include the 
remaining one-fourth ($250) of each $1,000 annual payment received in 
gross income.
    Example (2). Assume the same facts as in example (1) except that of 
the total investment in the contract of $19,575, the pre-July 1986 
investment in the contract is $10,000. If the election described in 
Sec. 1.72-6(d)(6) is made with respect to the contract, the investment 
in the contract shall be allocated by determining an exclusion ratio for 
the contract as a whole based on separately computed exclusion ratios 
with respect to the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract and the 
post-June 1986 investment in the contract in the following manner:

Expectancy of A under Table I and Sec.  1.72-5(a)(2), 11.6      $11,600
 (12.1-0.5), multiplied by $1,000.............................
Plus: Expectancy of B under Table I and Sec.  1.72-5(a)(2),     $14,500
 14.5 (15.0-0.5), multiplied by $1,000........................
                                                               ---------
Pre-July 1986 expected return.................................   $26,100
Expectancy of A under Table V and Sec.  1.72-5(a)(2), 15.5      $15,500
 (16.0-0.5), multiplied by $1,000.............................
Plus: Expectancy of B under Table V and Sec.  1.72-5(a)(2),     $15,500
 15.5 (16.0-0.5), multiplied by $1,000........................
                                                               ---------
Post-June 1986 expected return................................   $31,000
                                                               =========
Pre-July 1986 exclusion ratio ($10,000/$26,100)...............      38.3
Post-June 1986 exclusion ratio ($9,575/31,000)................      30.9

A and B shall each exclude from gross income $692 (38.3
 percent of $1,000+30.9 percent of $1,000) of each $1,000
 payment and include the remaining $308 in gross income


    (2) In the case of a contract providing for specified annual annuity 
payments to be made to two persons during their joint lives and the 
payment of the aggregate of the two individual payments to the survivor 
for his life, the investment in the contract shall be allocated in 
accordance with the provisions of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph. 
For this purpose, the investment in the contract (without regard to the 
fact that differing amounts may have been contributed by the two 
annuitants) shall be divided by the expected return determined in 
accordance with paragraph (e)(4) of Sec. 1.72-5. The resulting 
exclusion ratio shall then be applied to any amounts received as an 
annuity by either annuitant.
    (3) In the case of a contract providing two or more annuity 
elements, one or more of which provides for payments to be made in a 
manner described in paragraph (b)(3) of Sec. 1.72-2, the investment in 
the contract shall be allocated to the various annuity elements in the 
following manner.
    (i) If all the annuity elements provide for payments to be made in 
the manner described in paragraph (b)(3) of Sec. 1.72-2, the investment 
in the contract shall be allocated on the basis of the amounts received 
by each recipient by apportioning the amount determined to be excludable 
under that section to each recipient in the same ratio as the total of 
the amounts received by him in the taxable year bears to the total of 
the amounts received by all recipients during the same period; and
    (ii) If one or more, but not all, of the annuity elements provide 
for payments to be made in a manner described in paragraph (b)(3) of 
Sec. 1.72-2:
    (a) With respect to all annuity elements to which that section does 
not apply, the investment in the contract for all such elements shall be 
the portion of the investment in the contract

[[Page 165]]

as a whole (found in accordance with the provisions of this section) 
which is properly allocable to all such elements; and
    (b) With respect to all annuity elements to which paragraph (b)(3) 
of Sec. 1.72-2 does apply, the investment in the contract for all such 
elements shall be the investment in the contract as a whole (found in 
accordance with the provisions of this section) as reduced by the 
portion thereof determined under (a) of this subdivision.

For the purpose of determining, pursuant to (a) of this subdivision, the 
portion of the investment in the contract as a whole properly allocable 
to a particular annuity element, reference shall be made to the present 
value of such annuity element determined in accordance with paragraph 
(e)(1)(iii) (b) of Sec. 1.101-2.
    (iii) In the case of a contract to which paragraph (d) of this 
section applies, this paragraph (b) is applied in the manner prescribed 
in paragraph (d) and, in particular, paragraph (d)(5)(v) of this 
section.
    (c) Special rules. (1) For the special rule for determining the 
investment in the contract for a surviving annuitant in cases where the 
prior annuitant of a joint and survivor annuity contract died in 1951, 
1952, or 1953, see paragraph (b)(3) of Sec. 1.72-5.
    (2) For special rules relating to the determination of the 
investment in the contract where employer contributions are involved, 
see Sec. 1.72-8. See also paragraph (b) of Sec. 1.72-16 for a special 
rule relating to the determination of the premiums or other 
consideration paid for a contract where an employee is taxable on the 
premiums paid for life insurance protection that is purchased by and 
considered to be a distribution from an exempt employees' trust.
    (3) For the determination of an adjustment in investment in the 
contract in cases where a contract contains a refund feature, see Sec. 
1.72-7.
    (4) In the case of ``face-amount certificates'' described in section 
72(1), the amount of consideration paid for purposes of computing the 
investment in the contract shall include any amount added to the 
holder's basis by reason of section 1232(a)(3)(E) (relating to basis 
adjustment for amount of original issue discount ratably included in 
gross income as interest under section 1232(a)(3)).
    (d) Pre-July 1986 and post-June 1986 investment in the contract. (1) 
This paragraph (d) applies to an annuity contract if:
    (i) The investment in the contract includes a pre-July 1986 
investment in the contract and a post-June 1986 investment in the 
contract (both as defined in Sec. 1.72-6(d)(3));
    (ii) The use of a multiple found in Tables I through VIII of Sec. 
1.72-9 is required to determine the expected return under the contract; 
and
    (iii) The election described in paragraph (d)(6) of this section is 
made with respect to the contract.
    (2) In the case of annuity contract to which this paragraph (d) 
applies--
    (i) All computations required to determine the amount excludable 
from gross income shall be performed separately with respect to the pre-
July 1986 investment in the contract and the post-June 1986 investment 
in the contract as if each such amount were the entire investment in the 
contract;
    (ii) The multiples in Tables I through IV shall be used for 
computations involving the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract and 
the multiples in Tables V through VIII shall be used for computations 
involving the post-June 1986 investment in the contract; and
    (iii) The amount excludable from gross income shall be the sum of 
the amounts determined under the separate computations required by 
paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section.
    (3) For purposes of the regulations under section 72, the pre-July 
1986 investment in the contract and post-June 1986 investment in the 
contract are determined in accordance with the following rules:
    (i)(A) Except as provided in Sec. 1.72-9, if the annuity starting 
date of the contract occurs before July 1, 1986, the pre-July 1986 
investment in the contract is the total investment in the contract as of 
the annuity starting date;
    (B) Except as provided in Sec. 1.72-9, if the annuity starting date 
of the contract occurs after June 30, 1986, and the

[[Page 166]]

contract does not provide for a disqualifying form of payment or 
settlement, the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract is the 
investment in the contract computed as of June 30, 1986, as if June 30, 
1986, had been the later of the annuity starting date of the contract or 
the date on which an amount is first received thereunder as an annuity;
    (C) If the annuity starting date of the contract occurs after June 
30, 1986, and the contract provides, at the option of the annuitant or 
of any other person (including, in the case of an employee's annuity, an 
option exercisable only by, or with the consent of, the employer), for a 
disqualifying form of payment or settlement, the pre-July 1986 
investment in the contract is zero (i.e., the total investment in the 
contract is post-June 1986 investment in the contract).
    (ii) The post-June 1986 investment in the contract is the amount by 
which the total investment in the contract as of the annuity starting 
date exceeds the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract.
    (iii) For purposes of paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section, a 
disqualifying form of payment or settlement is any form of payment or 
settlement (whether or not selected) that permits the receipt of amounts 
under the contract in a form other than a life annuity. For example, 
each of the following options provides for a disqualifying form of 
payment or settlement:
    (A) An option to receive a lump sum in full discharge of the 
obligation under the contract.
    (B) An option to receive an amount under the contract after June 30, 
1986, and before the annuity starting date.
    (C) An option to receive an annuity for a period certain.
    (D) An option to receive payments under a refund feature (within the 
meaning of paragraphs (b) and (c) of Sec. 1.72-7) that is substantially 
equivalent to an annuity for a period certain.
    (E) An option to receive a temporary life annuity (within the 
meaning of Sec. 1.72-5 (a)(3)) that is substantially equivalent to an 
annuity for a period certain.

An option to receive alternative forms of life annuity is not a 
disqualifying option for purposes of paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this 
section. Thus, if the sole options provided under a contract are a 
single life annuity and a joint and survivor life annuity, paragraph 
(d)(3)(i) (C) of this section does not apply to such contract.
    (iv) For purposes of paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of this section, a refund 
feature is substantially equivalent to an annuity for a period certain 
if its value determined under Table VII of Sec. 1.72-9 exceeds 50 
percent. Similarly, a temporary life annuity is substantially equivalent 
to an annuity for a period certain if the multiple determined under 
Table VIII of Sec. 1.72-9 exceeds 50 percent of the maximum duration of 
the annuity.
    (4) In any separate computation under this paragraph (d), only the 
applicable portion of other amounts (such as the total expected return 
under the contract, or the total amount guaranteed under the contract as 
of the annuity starting date) shall be taken into account if the use of 
the entire amount in such computation is inconsistent with the use in 
the computation of only a portion of the investment in the contract. For 
example, such use is generally inconsistent if the computation requires 
a comparison of the investment in the contract and such other amount for 
the purpose of using the greater (or lesser) amount or the difference 
between the two. For purposes of the first sentence of this paragraph 
(d)(4), the applicable portion is the amount that bears the same ratio 
to the entire amount as the pre-July 1986, investment in the contract or 
the post-June 1986 investment in the contract, whichever is applicable, 
bears to the total investment in the contract as of the annuity starting 
date.
    (5) Application to particular computations. (i) In the case of a 
contract to which this paragraph (d) applies, the exclusion ratio for 
purposes of Sec. 1.72-4 (a) is the sum of the exclusion ratios 
separately computed in accordance with this paragraph (d). The exclusion 
ratio with respect to the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract is 
determined by dividing the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract by 
the expected return as found under Sec. 1.72-5 by applying the 
appropriate multiples of

[[Page 167]]

Tables I through IV of Sec. 1.72-9. Similarly, the exclusion ratio with 
respect to the post-June 1986 investment in the contract is determined 
by dividing the post-June 1986 investment in the contract by the 
expected return as found under Sec. 1.72-5 by applying the appropriate 
multiples in Tables V through VIII of Sec. 1.72-9.
    (ii) The applicability of Sec. 1.72-4(d)(2) to a contract to which 
this paragraph (d) applies shall be determined separately with respect 
to the post-June 1986 investment in the contract and the pre-July 1986 
investment in the contract and in each such determination only the 
applicable portion of the total expected return under the contract shall 
be taken into account. If Sec. 1.72-4(d)(2) applies with respect to 
either such investment in the contract, the separately computed 
exclusion ratio shall be considered to be the applicable portion of 100 
percent.
    (iii) If Sec. 1.72-4(d)(3) applies to a contract to which this 
paragraph (d) applies--
    (A) The applicable portions (as defined in paragraph (d)(4) of this 
section) of payments received under the contract for a taxable year 
shall be separately computed;
    (B) The pre-July 1986 investment in the contract and the post-June 
1986 investment in the contract shall be separately allocated to the 
taxable year; and
    (C) The separate applicable portions of the payments received under 
the contract for the taxable year shall be considered to be amounts 
received as an annuity (for which the exclusion ratio is 100 percent) 
only to the extent they do not exceed the portions of the corresponding 
investments in the contract which are properly allocable to that year.

See the example in Sec. 1.72-4(d)(3)(v).
    (iv) If Sec. 1.72-4(e) applies to a contract to which this 
paragraph (d) applies, the exclusion ratio shall be separately computed 
with respect to the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract and the 
post-June 1986 investment in the contract. For purposes of the separate 
computations under Sec. 1.72-4(e)(2)(ii), only the applicable portion 
of payments received shall be taken into account and the exclusion ratio 
(100%) shall be applied to the separately computed portion allocated to 
each participant.
    (v) If paragraph (b)(3) of this section applies to a contract to 
which this paragraph (d) applies, separate allocations are required with 
respect to the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract and the post-
June 1986 investment in the contract.

For purposes of the separate computations required to determine the 
portion of the investment in the contract properly allocable to a 
particular annuity element, only the applicable portion of the present 
value of the annuity element determined in accordance with Sec. 1.101-
2(e)(1)(iii)(b) is taken into account.
    (vi) If Sec. 1.72-7 applies to a contract to which this paragraph 
(d) applies, separate computations are required to determine the 
adjustment to the pre-July 1986 investment in the contract and the post-
June 1986 investment in the contract. For purposes of such separate 
computations, only the applicable portions of the amounts described in 
Sec. 1.72-7 (b)(3)(ii), (c)(1)(ii)(B), (c)(2)(vii)(B), and (d)(1)(ii) 
are taken into account. Similarly, in the case of computations with 
respect to the guarantee of a specified amount under Sec. 1.72-7(d)(1), 
only the applicable portion of such amount is taken into account.
    (6) This paragraph (d) applies to a contract only if the first 
taxpayer to receive an amount as an annuity under the contract elects to 
perform separate computations with respect to the pre-July 1986 
investment in the contract and the post-June 1986 investment in the 
contract as if each such amount were the entire investment in contract. 
If two or more annuitants receive an amount as an annuity under the 
contract at the same time (such as under a joint-and-last-survivorship 
annuity contract), an election by one of the annuitants is treated as an 
election by each of the annuitants. The election is made by attaching a 
statement to the first return filed by the taxpayer for the first 
taxable year in which an amount is received as an annuity under the 
contract. The statement must indicate that the taxpayer is electing to 
apply the provisions of paragraph (d) of Sec. 1.72-6, and must also 
contain the

[[Page 168]]

name, address, and taxpayer identification number of each annuitant 
under the contract, and the amount of the pre-July 1986 investment in 
the contract.
    (7) If the investment in the contract includes a post-June 1986 
investment in the contract and the election described in paragraph 
(d)(6) of this section is not made--
    (i) The amount excludable from gross income shall be determined 
without regard to the separate computations described in this paragraph 
(d); and
    (ii) Only the multiples found in Tables V through VIII shall be used 
in determining the amount excludable from gross income.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11402, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6676, 28 FR 
10134, Sept. 17, 1963; T.D. 7311, 39 FR 11880, Apr. 1, 1974; T.D. 8115, 
51 FR 45700, Dec. 19, 1986; 52 FR 10223, Mar. 31, 1987]