Immediate Annuity Calculator

Free immediate annuity calculator. Estimate monthly income from a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA). Compare payouts by age, gender, and joint-life options.

$
%
Monthly Income
$1,925.16
Life Only (~21 years)
Annual Income
$23,102.00
Expected Total Income
$485,139.00
161.7% of premium
Life Expectancy
21 years
To age 86

Payout Option Comparison

TypeMonthlyAnnualTermTotal
Life Only โ†$1,925.00$23,102.0021 yrs$485,139.00
20-Yr Certain$1,980.00$23,758.0020 yrs$475,168.00
Life+20yr Cert.$1,925.00$23,102.0021 yrs$485,139.00
Joint Life$1,831.00$21,975.0023 yrs$505,416.00

Payout by Purchase Age (Life Only)

AgeLEMonthlyAnnualPayout Rate
6025 yr$1,754.00$21,045.007.02%
6223 yr$1,831.00$21,975.007.32%
65 โ†21 yr$1,925.00$23,102.007.7%
6720 yr$1,980.00$23,758.007.92%
7017 yr$2,186.00$26,232.008.74%
7216 yr$2,273.00$27,277.009.09%
7514 yr$2,487.00$29,839.009.95%
8011 yr$2,959.00$35,512.0011.84%

Estimates use simplified actuarial life expectancy. Actual insurance company quotes vary based on precise underwriting, gender, health status, and market conditions. Always get multiple quotes before purchasing.

Planning notes, formulas, and examples

About the Immediate Annuity Calculator

The Immediate Annuity Calculator estimates how much guaranteed monthly income you can receive from a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA). Unlike fixed-term annuities, immediate annuities pay for life โ€” the amount depends on your age, the premium paid, and the interest rate environment.

Immediate annuities are insurance products that convert a lump sum into guaranteed lifetime income starting within 30 days of purchase. They solve the biggest retirement risk: outliving your money. This calculator models the payout using actuarial life expectancy.

Compare life-only payouts (highest income), period-certain options, and joint-life options for couples. A 65-year-old investing $300,000 in a life-only SPIA might receive roughly $1,800 to $2,000 per month depending on interest rates โ€” significantly more than most systematic withdrawal strategies would produce. The trade-off is that a life-only annuity stops at death with no residual value, while period-certain and joint-life options reduce the payout in exchange for estate or survivor protection.

When This Page Helps

An immediate annuity provides certainty that you'll never run out of money. This calculator helps you estimate payouts before contacting insurance companies, so you can shop smart and know what to expect. Understanding the income difference between life-only and joint-life options โ€” which can be 15 to 25 percent โ€” is critical for couples planning together.

How to Use the Inputs

  1. Enter the lump sum (premium) you want to annuitize.
  2. Enter your current age.
  3. Choose the annuity type: life only, period certain, or joint life.
  4. Set the assumed interest rate (reflects current annuity market).
  5. For joint life, enter your spouse's age.
  6. Review estimated monthly and annual income.
Formula used
Life Annuity PMT โ‰ˆ Premium ร— r / (1 โˆ’ (1 + r)^โˆ’LE) where LE = life expectancy from actuarial tables, r = periodic rate Joint Life uses combined life expectancy (longer of two lives) Period Certain uses the guaranteed period for payment count

Example Calculation

Result: $1,873/month ($22,474/year) life-only

A 65-year-old purchasing a $300,000 immediate annuity at 5% receives approximately $1,873/month for life. If they live to 87 (22 years), total income would be $494,419 โ€” 65% more than the premium paid.

Tips & Best Practices

  • Life-only annuities pay the most per month because the insurer keeps the balance at death.
  • Adding a period certain (e.g., 10 or 20 years) guarantees payments to heirs but reduces monthly income.
  • Joint-life annuities pay less per month because they cover two lives (longer expected payout).
  • Shop multiple insurance companies โ€” payout rates can vary 10-15% for the same premium and age.
  • Consider laddering: buy smaller annuities over several years to capture changing interest rates.
  • Only annuitize enough to cover the gap between essential expenses and Social Security/pension income.

Life Expectancy and Payouts

Insurance companies use actuarial tables to price annuities. A 65-year-old has roughly 22 years of life expectancy, but some will live to 100+. The insurer pools this risk: those who die earlier effectively subsidize payments to those who live longer. This "mortality credit" is why life annuities pay more than systematic withdrawals at the same rate.

Annuity Laddering Strategy

Rather than buying one large annuity, consider purchasing smaller annuities over several years. This spreads interest rate risk (capturing different rate environments) and lets you adjust your strategy as needs change. A typical ladder might buy annuities at ages 65, 68, and 71.

Comparing to Portfolio Withdrawals

A 4% withdrawal from a $300,000 portfolio gives $12,000/year โ€” but that income isn't guaranteed and the portfolio may run out. The same amount in a SPIA might give $22,000+/year guaranteed for life โ€” nearly twice as much โ€” though you lose access to the principal and legacy value.

Sources & Methodology

Last updated:

Methodology

This page estimates immediate-annuity income by pairing the userโ€™s premium with a simplified age-based life-expectancy table and then applying a standard amortizing-payment formula at the entered rate. Life-only, period-certain, life-with-period-certain, and joint-life options are all translated into an estimated payout term, and the worksheet then shows the implied monthly and annual income under each option.

It is intentionally a planning estimator rather than an insurer quote. The page does not use carrier-specific underwriting, sex-specific pricing, mortality credits, commissions, or cash-refund and rider pricing, so actual SPIA quotes can differ materially from the worksheet output.

Sources

  • Actuarial Life Table (Social Security Administration) โ€” SSA period life-table reference used to anchor the simplified age-based life-expectancy assumptions in the worksheet.
  • Annuities (Investor.gov / U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) โ€” SEC investor education overview describing immediate versus deferred annuities and lifetime-income contracts.
  • Annuities (FINRA) โ€” FINRA investor guide covering immediate and deferred annuity structures, payout options, and product tradeoffs.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • A SPIA is an insurance product where you make one lump-sum payment and receive guaranteed monthly income starting almost immediately. "Single premium" means one payment in; "immediate" means payouts begin within 30 days. The income is guaranteed for life or a set period.