🇺🇸 Pension Payout Calculator:
Lump Sum vs. Annuity (US Rules)
The most comprehensive free defined benefit pension calculator for US retirees. Model lump sum vs. annuity NPV, federal and state tax impact, IRA rollover strategies, and joint-and-survivor benefit costs. Includes COLA purchasing power analysis, actuarial break-even probability, and executive PBGC limit testing—all in one institutional-grade tool.
Compare your employer’s lump sum offer against the defined monthly benefit. Calculates NPV, break-even age, hurdle rate, and year-by-year cumulative value chart.
| Age | Annuity Cumulative | Lump Sum Growth | Advantage |
|---|
Models 3 paths: cash out (pay tax now), Traditional IRA rollover (defer), or Roth IRA conversion (pay tax once, grow tax-free forever). Flags Form 4972 eligibility.
Calculates the exact dollar cost of each survivor benefit tier (0%, 50%, 75%, 100%) and the net present value of each option based on joint life expectancy.
Most private pensions have zero COLA — a $3,000/month pension today has the buying power of ~$1,650 in 20 years at 3% inflation. Compare COLA vs. non-COLA vs. invested lump sum in real dollars.
The lump sum wins if you die early; the annuity wins if you live long. Enter your personal health factors to calculate the statistical probability you will outlive the break-even age.
| Age | Survival Probability | Annuity Winning? |
|---|
21 states fully exempt pension income from state tax. Compare your current state vs. a potential relocation state to reveal lifetime tax savings.
For executives with NQDC, SERP, or excess benefit plans. Analyzes non-qualified tax treatment, PBGC guarantee limits (2025: $7,362.50/month), creditor protection risk, and installment strategy.
Complete Guide: Evaluating Your Pension Payout Options
This free 7-module tool models every dimension of the pension payout decision — from raw NPV comparison to tax optimization, survivor benefit cost, COLA erosion, state relocation savings, and executive PBGC limits. Here is exactly what each module calculates and why it matters.
⚙ Step-by-Step: Modeling Your Pension Rollover & Taxes
You do not need to complete all 7 modules. Start with Module 1 to get your core numbers, then drill into the modules most relevant to your situation. Here is the recommended flow.
Input your employer’s lump sum offer, monthly annuity benefit, your retirement age, estimated life expectancy, and the investment return you believe you can earn on the lump sum. The calculator outputs NPV, break-even age, and the hurdle rate — the minimum annual return your lump sum must achieve to beat the annuity. This is your baseline number.
Paste your lump sum amount, enter your other annual income, filing status, and state tax rate. The calculator models 3 paths: cash it out now, roll it into a Traditional IRA, or convert to a Roth IRA. Each path shows the net after-tax value at your chosen withdrawal age. This single step often reveals $80,000–$200,000+ in lifetime difference between paths.
Enter both ages and life expectancies for you and your spouse. The calculator computes the exact monthly cost and lifetime NPV for all four survivor tiers: Single Life (0%), 50% Joint & Survivor, 75% J&S, and 100% J&S. It ranks them by total lifetime value and tells you the annual cost of each upgrade in plain dollars — not as a vague percentage.
Most private pensions have zero cost-of-living adjustment. A $3,000/month benefit today will buy the same goods as $1,650/month in 20 years at 3% inflation. Enter your COLA rate, inflation rate, and lump sum investment return to compare the real purchasing power of all three paths year by year on a chart. This is the module most people skip — and the one that changes the most minds.
Enter your personal health factors: gender, health status, smoking history, family longevity. The calculator estimates your personalized life expectancy and derives the statistical probability you will outlive the annuity’s break-even age. A 72% probability means the annuity is statistically the better bet for you. Below 50% means the lump sum is statistically favored. This module auto-populates the break-even age from Module 1.
Select your current state and any potential relocation state. The calculator uses actual pension-income exemption rules and marginal rates for all 50 states. It shows annual tax, lifetime tax total, and the net savings from relocating. States like Florida, Texas, Nevada, and Illinois have zero state income tax — in some cases worth $40,000–$100,000+ over a 20-year retirement on a $36,000/year pension.
For executives with Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation, SERP, or excess benefit plans. Enter your plan type, total benefit, marginal tax rates, and installment period. The calculator flags PBGC coverage limits (2025: $7,362.50/month), identifies uninsured benefit amounts, models the 3 payout strategies, and generates specific alert boxes when creditor protection, bracket exposure, or the 60-day rollover rule require attention.
Every module has a PDF Export button that generates a formatted one-page report showing all KPIs for that module, along with a timestamp and the tool URL. Use the WhatsApp Share button to instantly send results to a spouse, financial advisor, or benefits coordinator. All data stays in your browser — nothing is sent to any server.
📋 Calculation Methodology: NPV, Hurdle Rates, and PBGC Limits
Each of the 7 modules uses a specific mathematical model. Understanding the underlying logic helps you interpret the outputs correctly and enter the most accurate inputs.
- Annuity NPV: Discounts all future monthly payments back to today using your discount rate. A $2,200/month annuity over 22 years discounted at 5% ≈ $326,000 present value.
- Break-Even Age: The exact age at which cumulative annuity payments surpass the compounded lump sum. Calculated year by year — annuity cumulative vs. lump sum × (1 + return)n.
- Hurdle Rate: Solved by binary search — the exact investment return rate at which the lump sum’s NPV equals the annuity’s NPV. If hurdle rate is 8.4% and you expect 6%, the annuity wins.
- The chart plots both curves. Where they cross is your break-even age, visually confirmed.
- Path A (Cash Out): Uses 2026 marginal federal tax brackets stacked on top of your other income. Adds state tax. The net after-tax amount compounds at your investment return to the withdrawal age.
- Path B (Traditional IRA): Full lump sum grows tax-deferred. At withdrawal, applies your future marginal rate plus state tax to the entire portfolio balance.
- Path C (Roth IRA): Pay tax now (same as Path A), but the after-tax amount grows completely tax-free with no RMDs. Often the best path for people under 60 with 15+ year time horizons.
- Form 4972: Born before Jan 1, 1936? You may qualify for 10-year forward averaging — a special IRS rule that can cut effective tax rate dramatically. The module flags this automatically.
- Single Life (0%): Highest monthly income. Payments stop at your death — spouse gets nothing. High monthly income, zero protection.
- 50% / 75% / 100% J&S: Each tier reduces your monthly benefit by the plan’s reduction factor (typically 6–15%). After you die, the survivor receives the elected percentage of the original benefit.
- NPV Calculation: Separately discounts your payment years and the survivor’s additional years post-death, using your individual and joint life expectancies to determine total lifetime value.
- Cost of Protection: The annual cost of upgrading from Single Life to 100% J&S is displayed in dollars — not as a vague “reduction” — so you can compare it to buying term life insurance.
- Non-COLA Real Value: Divides nominal annual income by (1 + inflation)n each year. Shows the purchasing power erosion in today’s dollars.
- COLA Real Value: Applies the COLA rate to grow nominal income, then deflates by inflation to get the true real-dollar trajectory. When COLA < inflation, real purchasing power still erodes.
- Lump Sum Portfolio: Projects the invested lump sum at your expected return rate — this is the “self-managed annuity” alternative benchmark.
- The critical insight: Most private-sector pensions have 0% COLA. A $3,000/month pension loses 45% of its real purchasing power in 20 years at 3% inflation — the chart makes this visceral.
- Base life expectancy: SSA 2023 period life table baselines — 83.4 for males, 85.8 for females — adjusted for health, smoking, and family longevity history.
- Probability calculation: Uses a normal distribution (with σ = 8 years) centered on your personalized life expectancy. Computes the probability the break-even age falls below your actual death age.
- The survival table: Shows probability of being alive at each 5-year interval from your current age to 105, with a “Annuity Winning?” indicator at and beyond the break-even age.
- Key rule of thumb: If your personalized life expectancy exceeds the break-even age, the annuity is statistically favored. If it falls short, the lump sum wins on pure probability.
- State database: Hardcoded pension exemption data for all 50 states + DC — including partial exemptions (e.g., Colorado exempts 50%, California has no exemption).
- 21 fully exempt states include Florida, Texas, Nevada, Wyoming, Illinois, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Washington, and others.
- Lifetime tax savings: Annual tax difference multiplied by retirement years. On a $36,000/year pension moving from California (9.3%) to Florida (0%), the 20-year saving is approximately $66,960.
- Important: State tax savings must be weighed against the actual cost of living differential between states, not evaluated in isolation.
- PBGC insurance check: Compares your annual pension to the 2025 PBGC single-employer maximum of $88,350/year ($7,362.50/month). Amounts above this are not insured — a critical risk for high-income pension recipients.
- Non-qualified plan risk: NQDC and SERP plans are unsecured employer promises — not ERISA-protected. In bankruptcy, these benefits rank with general creditors, not PBGC guarantees.
- Installment strategy: For NQDC plans, spreading distributions over 5–20 years avoids pushing total income into the 37% bracket, potentially saving hundreds of thousands in taxes.
- 60-Day rollover rule: IRS requires rollover completion within 60 days of distribution. The module warns you and recommends direct trustee-to-trustee transfer to avoid mandatory 20% withholding.
🏫 Defined Benefit Pension Plans: Lump Sum vs. Monthly Annuity
The pension payout decision is one of the most consequential and irreversible financial choices most Americans ever make. Once you sign the election form, it cannot be undone. This guide explains every dimension you must understand before choosing.
What is a Defined Benefit (DB) Pension Plan?
A defined benefit (DB) pension is a retirement plan where your employer promises to pay you a specific monthly income for life, based on a formula — typically your years of service multiplied by a benefit multiplier (often 1.5–2.5%) multiplied by your final average salary. The employer bears 100% of the investment risk. If the plan is underfunded, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) insures payments up to the annual guarantee limit. DB plans are increasingly rare in the private sector — only 15% of private-sector workers have access to one today, versus 35% in 1990.
How the IRS Calculates Your Lump Sum Offer (Segment Rates)
When you reach retirement age, your employer (or plan administrator) may offer you a lump sum instead of the monthly annuity. This is the present value of your estimated lifetime annuity payments, calculated using an IRS-mandated segment interest rate (published monthly) and IRS mortality tables. When interest rates rise, lump sum values fall — because the same future payment stream is discounted more heavily. In 2022–2023, rising rates caused some lump sums to drop 20–30% versus 2021 values, making timing a major factor in the decision.
The IRS Segment Rate Effect: The IRS uses three “segment rates” tied to high-quality corporate bond yields to calculate lump sum present values. When the 25-year segment rate rises from 2.5% to 5.0%, a $300,000 lump sum offer might drop to approximately $220,000 — even though the annuity benefit itself has not changed at all. This is why some workers chose to retire early in 2021 to lock in the lower-rate (higher) lump sum values before rate hikes hit.
Net Present Value (NPV) and the Annuity Hurdle Rate
NPV is the core calculation in Module 1. It answers this question: what is a stream of future payments worth in today’s dollars? A dollar received in 10 years is worth less than a dollar today because of inflation, investment opportunity cost, and uncertainty. The discount rate reflects this time preference. At a 5% discount rate, $1 received in 10 years is worth only $0.614 today. By discounting all 22 years of monthly annuity payments back to today and summing them, Module 1 produces a single comparable number — the annuity’s NPV.
What is the Hurdle Rate?
The hurdle rate is the minimum annual investment return you must consistently earn on the lump sum to match the total lifetime value of the annuity. If the hurdle rate is 7.2%, you need a portfolio that returns 7.2% every year — net of fees, taxes, and withdrawals — for 20+ years. Many financial planners consider a sustained 7%+ real return after fees unrealistic for retirees with conservative portfolios. The hurdle rate benchmark is one of the most honest ways to evaluate whether taking the lump sum is realistic for your investment discipline and risk tolerance.
Lump Sum IRA Rollover vs. Annuity: Pros, Cons, and Risk Factors
| Factor | Monthly Annuity | Lump Sum |
|---|---|---|
| Income Security | Guaranteed for life — income cannot run out regardless of market conditions PRO | Depends entirely on investment performance and withdrawal discipline RISK |
| Longevity Protection | The longer you live, the more valuable it becomes — annuity wins if you outlive break-even PRO | If you die early, residual balance passes to heirs — annuity payments cease RISK |
| Inflation Protection | Most private pensions have zero COLA — purchasing power erodes every year with no adjustment RISK | Invested lump sum can grow faster than inflation with equity exposure PRO |
| Tax Treatment | Taxed as ordinary income each year — spreads the tax burden over time PRO | Entire lump sum is potentially taxable in one year — can trigger highest brackets unless rolled over RISK |
| Spousal Protection | Built-in survivor benefit options (50–100% J&S) — though they reduce monthly income PRO | Portfolio automatically passes to spouse and heirs without reduction PRO |
| Flexibility | Zero flexibility — irrevocable election, fixed payment, no access to principal RISK | Full access to capital for emergencies, major expenses, estate gifts PRO |
| Creditor Protection | ERISA-qualified pensions are generally protected from creditors and bankruptcy PRO | IRA rollovers have strong but not absolute creditor protection — varies by state PRO |
| Investment Risk | Employer and PBGC bear all investment risk — you bear no market exposure PRO | You bear 100% of market risk — sequence-of-returns risk is especially dangerous in early retirement RISK |
| Estate Value | Payments stop at death (or surviving spouse’s death) — zero residual to heirs RISK | Remaining portfolio balance passes to heirs — may be tens or hundreds of thousands PRO |
Decision Framework: When to Take the Cash vs. Guaranteed Income
- You are in good to excellent health and have family longevity history suggesting life beyond age 85
- Your hurdle rate from Module 1 exceeds 7% — unrealistic for conservative retirees to sustain
- You lack a pension from another source (Social Security alone is insufficient for your lifestyle)
- You have limited investment discipline or fear outliving your savings
- You have a younger spouse who needs income continuity for decades after your death
- The PBGC break-even is below age 80 — a strong statistical case for the annuity
- Your employer’s financial strength is solid and PBGC coverage is within limits
- You have a serious health condition reducing life expectancy significantly below break-even age
- You have investment expertise and discipline and realistically expect to beat the hurdle rate
- Your employer’s financial health is uncertain and your pension exceeds PBGC guarantee limits
- You have a high-earning spouse whose income or pension alone covers living expenses
- You want to leave a large legacy to children or charitable causes
- You need capital flexibility for a business, real estate, or major near-term expenses
- The pension has zero COLA and inflation is expected to be elevated over your retirement
📊 3 US Pension Payout Scenarios & Tax Examples
These three example scenarios show how the calculator outputs change depending on health, employer risk profile, and investment return assumptions. Inputs and results are illustrative.
📚 Essential US Pension & Retirement Glossary
Every term used in this calculator is explained below. Understanding these definitions helps you enter accurate inputs and interpret results correctly.
- Defined Benefit (DB) Plan
- A retirement plan where the employer promises a specific monthly benefit for life, typically based on years of service and salary. The employer funds and invests the plan assets.
- Lump Sum Distribution
- A one-time payment of the entire pension benefit, equal to the present value of the estimated lifetime annuity stream, calculated using IRS segment interest rates.
- Net Present Value (NPV)
- The current value of a series of future payments, discounted back to today using a chosen discount rate. Used to compare the annuity’s lifetime value to the lump sum offer on equal footing.
- Break-Even Age
- The age at which cumulative annuity payments surpass the compounded value of the invested lump sum. If you live past this age, the annuity has paid more in total.
- Hurdle Rate
- The minimum annual investment return required for the lump sum to match the annuity’s total lifetime value. If this rate exceeds realistic returns, the annuity is likely the better choice.
- Joint & Survivor (J&S) Benefit
- A survivor benefit option where, after the pension holder’s death, a percentage (50%, 75%, or 100%) of the monthly payment continues to the surviving spouse for life.
- Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA)
- An annual increase to the pension benefit designed to offset inflation. Most private-sector pensions have zero COLA; federal and some state pensions offer 2–3% COLA.
- PBGC (Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation)
- A federal agency that insures private-sector DB pension plans. In 2025, the maximum guarantee is $88,350/year ($7,362.50/month) for a single-employer plan at age 65.
- Traditional IRA Rollover
- Transferring the lump sum directly into a Traditional IRA to defer taxes. The full amount grows tax-deferred; taxes are paid on withdrawals at ordinary income rates, starting at required minimum distribution age 73.
- Roth IRA Conversion
- Paying taxes on the lump sum now and moving it to a Roth IRA. All future growth and qualified withdrawals are tax-free, with no required minimum distributions — ideal for estate planning.
- NQDC / SERP
- Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation and Supplemental Executive Retirement Plans — employer promises not covered by ERISA or PBGC. Treated as unsecured employer obligations; at risk in employer bankruptcy.
- IRS Segment Rates
- Three interest rates published monthly by the IRS, based on high-quality corporate bond yields, used to calculate the present value of pension lump sums. Higher rates = lower lump sum offers.
- Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs)
- IRS-mandated annual withdrawals from Traditional IRAs and 401(k) plans, starting at age 73 under SECURE 2.0. Failure to take RMDs results in a 25% excise tax on the amount not withdrawn.
- Form 4972
- IRS tax form that allows qualifying individuals (born before January 1, 1936) to use 10-year forward averaging — a special method that significantly reduces the effective tax rate on lump sum distributions.
- Discount Rate
- The interest rate used to calculate present value. Higher discount rates produce lower NPVs. A common choice is the expected investment return or a safe withdrawal rate (4–5%).
- Sequence-of-Returns Risk
- The risk that poor investment returns in the early years of retirement permanently deplete a portfolio, even if long-term average returns are acceptable. Lump sum recipients face this risk; annuity holders do not.
Expert Strategies for Maximizing Your Pension Payout
These are the insights financial planners charge $300/hour to share. From timing your election to avoid IRS segment rate traps, to structuring NQDC distributions to save six figures in tax — here is what experts actually do with this decision.
Lump sum values move inversely with IRS segment rates. The IRS publishes three segment rates monthly — when they rise, your lump sum offer shrinks, even though the annuity stays identical. In 2022, workers who retired 6 months early locked in lump sums $40,000–$80,000 higher than colleagues who waited as the Fed raised rates.
Most pension plans use a segment rate lookback period — often the August or November rates from the prior year — to calculate your lump sum. This means the rates that determine your offer are already locked before you retire. Ask HR or your plan administrator: “Which month’s segment rates are used for my lump sum calculation?”
Most DB plans set their normal retirement age at 65. Starting benefits before this date often triggers an early commencement reduction — typically 5–6% per year before 65. On a $3,000/month benefit, retiring at 62 instead of 65 can permanently reduce your annuity by $450–$540/month for life — a cumulative cost of $108,000+ over 20 years.
If the plan cuts a check directly to you, they are legally required to withhold 20% for federal taxes on the spot. On a $400,000 lump sum, you receive only $320,000 — but if you want to do a full rollover and avoid tax, you must deposit the entire $400,000 within 60 days. That means you need to find $80,000 from other sources as a bridge loan to yourself.
Instead of converting the entire lump sum to Roth (triggering a massive tax bill), consider rolling over to a Traditional IRA first, then doing a partial Roth conversion each year — filling only up to the top of your 22% or 24% bracket. This spreads the tax hit across 5–10 years, maximizes tax-free growth, and avoids IRMAA Medicare surcharge triggers.
If you were born before January 1, 1936, you may qualify for IRS Form 4972 — a special rule that lets you calculate tax using 10-year forward averaging at 1986 tax rates. This can dramatically reduce your effective rate on the lump sum, sometimes bringing a $300,000 distribution from 35%+ effective rate down to 16–18%.
Medicare IRMAA surcharges are triggered when your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) exceeds $106,000 (single) or $212,000 (MFJ) in 2026. A $300,000 lump sum cash-out in one year could push you into the highest IRMAA tier — adding $4,000–$6,000/year in Medicare Part B and Part D premiums for 2 years after the distribution year.
Most people compare lump sum to annuity NPV and stop there. The far more useful question is: “What investment return do I need to sustain for 20–25 years for the lump sum to match the annuity?” That is the hurdle rate from Module 1. If it is 8.5% and you are a 65-year-old with a conservative-to-moderate risk tolerance, ask yourself honestly whether that is realistic after fees, taxes, and the inevitable behavioral mistakes in a down market. A 2022-style 25% portfolio drawdown in year 2 of retirement can permanently cripple a lump sum strategy that looked solid on paper.
Financial planners make a critical distinction most retirees never consider: the annuity is not just an investment — it is longevity insurance. Its primary value is not financial return; it is protection against the cost of living to 95 or 100. A retiree who lives to 98 has collected 33 years of payments from a pension that broke even at 78. That same retiree, if they had taken the lump sum, would need their portfolio to last 33 years through multiple market cycles. The annuity’s true competitor is not a mutual fund — it is a private life annuity purchased from an insurance company at market rates. When you run Module 1, also check what a commercial annuity quotes for the same monthly income — in some rate environments, your pension annuity rate is significantly more favorable than anything you can buy in the open market.
Electing the 100% Joint & Survivor option costs a permanent monthly reduction in your income — for example, $450/month on a $3,000 base benefit. That is $5,400/year paid as a “premium” for the survivor protection. The annual cost of a 20-year level term life insurance policy for a healthy 65-year-old male providing $540,000 in coverage (equivalent to 100 monthly payments of $5,400) is often $4,800–$6,000/year — comparable to or less than the J&S cost. The key difference: if the life insurance is no longer needed (your spouse predeceases you), you cancel the policy and reclaim the cash flow. The J&S reduction is permanent and irrevocable — you never recover it even if your spouse dies the day after you retire. Always model both options before defaulting to maximum J&S coverage.
The 2025 PBGC maximum of $88,350/year ($7,362.50/month) for a 65-year-old is the exact line between full federal insurance and unprotected exposure. If your pension is $6,000/month, you are fully covered — employer insolvency risk is largely mitigated by PBGC. If your pension is $9,500/month, $2,137.50/month ($25,650/year) is not insured and at risk of partial loss in a bankruptcy scenario. This changes the entire calculus: the uninsured portion behaves more like an unsecured bond obligation to your employer than a government-guaranteed retirement benefit. For executives whose pensions exceed the PBGC cap — especially at companies with below-investment-grade credit ratings or pension funding ratios under 90% — the lump sum argument is substantially stronger regardless of the NPV comparison.
At 3% inflation — the Fed’s historical average — a fixed $3,000/month pension loses exactly 50% of its real purchasing power in 24 years. At 4% inflation, it happens in 18 years. This is not a footnote; it is the central flaw of most private-sector pensions. A 62-year-old who retires today on a $3,000 no-COLA pension and lives to 88 will end their life on the equivalent of $1,320/month in today’s dollars. The lump sum, properly invested, grows to offset this. The Module 4 COLA chart makes this visible in a way that a single number cannot — run it on every client who says they “prefer the guaranteed income” before they commit to the annuity without understanding what that guarantee actually buys over time.
ERISA requires plan sponsors to file Form 5500 annually, disclosing the plan’s funding status. A funding ratio below 80% means the plan is underfunded — which may restrict lump sum payouts and signal long-term risk. Search your employer’s Form 5500 at the DOL’s EFAST2 portal: efts.dol.gov/FTWFILING. Compare the plan’s asset value to its projected benefit obligation.
If you have a Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC), SERP, or excess benefit plan, you are an unsecured general creditor. In a chapter 11 bankruptcy, these benefits are subject to negotiation and can be reduced to cents on the dollar — as happened to executives at Enron, Circuit City, and Sears. There is no PBGC. There is no ERISA protection.
If you take the lump sum and invest it, a severe market decline in the first 1–3 years of retirement is catastrophically expensive. A 30% portfolio loss in year 1 combined with 5% annual withdrawals means you are drawing down a depleted base — the portfolio may never fully recover even if markets return 10% annually afterward. This sequence-of-returns risk is the primary reason many financial planners favor the annuity for retirees without large alternative assets.
For executives with NQDC or SERP plans, taking the full distribution in a single year at the 37% federal rate + state tax can cost you $400,000+ on a $1,000,000 balance. Electing installments over 5–10 years under Section 409A keeps each annual distribution at the 24%–32% bracket — potentially saving $80,000–$150,000+ in federal tax alone. This election must be made at least 12 months before distributions begin.
Think of PBGC coverage in three zones. Zone 1 (under $7,362/mo): fully insured — employer insolvency risk is minimal for this portion. Zone 2 ($7,362–$12,000/mo): partially insured — weigh employer credit quality. Zone 3 (over $12,000/mo): primarily uninsured — lump sum or diversification is the professional standard recommendation here, especially at cyclical employers.
Many NQDC plans use a rabbi trust — a grantor trust that holds plan assets. A rabbi trust provides some protection against the employer’s arbitrary cancellation of benefits but does not protect against employer bankruptcy. Assets in a rabbi trust are still subject to claims of general creditors. The only structure that actually removes assets from employer credit risk is a secular trust — but this triggers immediate taxation. Know which structure your plan uses before assessing your real risk exposure.
Some pension plans include a “pop-up” or “death contingency” provision — if you elect a J&S option and your spouse predeceases you, your benefit automatically reverts to the higher single-life amount. This is enormously valuable. Not all plans offer it, and many retirees never think to ask. If your plan has a pop-up provision, the cost-benefit of electing J&S coverage improves dramatically — you get full survivor protection with an escape clause if circumstances change.
FERS (Federal Employees Retirement System) and CSRS pensions receive automatic CPI-based COLA adjustments — typically 2–3% per year under FERS (tied to actual CPI). Military pensions also receive COLA. Private corporate pensions almost universally have zero COLA. This is not a minor difference — it is a fundamental difference in the value of each dollar of monthly benefit. A $2,000/month FERS pension in 20 years will be worth roughly $2,900–$3,600/month nominal. A $2,000/month private pension in 20 years is still $2,000 — but worth only $1,110 in today’s purchasing power at 3% inflation.
If you are considering relocating to a tax-favorable state, timing matters. Most states tax pension income based on your state of residence when you receive the payments — not where you worked or where the plan is based. This means relocating from California to Nevada before your first pension check arrives can save your entire retirement from state income tax. Waiting until after you start payments complicates things — some states (like California) have “source income” rules that can follow you for a period after departure.
Most people accept the annuity because it “feels safe” without ever quantifying what investment return the lump sum would need to match it. A hurdle rate under 5% means the lump sum is competitive. Many retirees leave significant wealth to heirs unrealized because they never asked this question.
Receiving the lump sum directly as a check means mandatory 20% federal withholding. If you don’t complete the rollover within 60 days with the full gross amount — including the withheld 20% from other funds — the shortfall is treated as a distribution and taxed immediately plus 10% penalty under age 59½.
Automatically electing 100% Joint & Survivor coverage without checking whether a term life policy provides equivalent protection at lower cost — and with the cancellation flexibility J&S does not offer. The permanent monthly reduction is irrevocable even if the spouse dies first.
Accepting a $3,000/month no-COLA pension without modeling what $3,000 buys in 20 years. At 3% inflation, that income is worth $1,650 in today’s purchasing power at year 20 — a 45% real cut in living standards that compounds silently over decades.
Assuming the entire pension is government-insured regardless of amount. Above the 2025 PBGC maximum of $88,350/year, any excess is uninsured. For executives with pensions of $120,000+/year at a cyclically-vulnerable employer, this is a critical and often overlooked risk factor.
Taking a $300,000 lump sum as taxable income in the same year you receive a severance package, selling a business, or earning a large bonus can push your total income into the 37% federal bracket — making an effective tax rate of 35–40% on the distribution. This is entirely avoidable with planning.
Retiring to California, New York, or another high-tax state without knowing that 21 states have zero or very low pension income tax. On a $42,000/year pension, the difference between California (9.3%) and Florida (0%) is $3,906/year — $78,120 over 20 years of retirement.
Using an assumed life expectancy of “85” without accounting for personal health, smoking history, family longevity, and gender. A 63-year-old male in poor health who smokes has a very different break-even probability than a 63-year-old female in excellent health with parents who lived to 95. The same annuity NPV calculation produces diametrically opposite decisions for these two individuals.
✅ Pre-Retirement Pension Election Checklist
Use this checklist before submitting your pension election. The election is irrevocable — these are the steps financial planners complete before advising any client on the final decision. Click each item as you complete it.
This calculator provides educational estimates to help you understand your options. The pension election form you sign is permanent — no changes are permitted after the deadline, typically 30–60 days before your retirement date. Before submitting, we strongly recommend reviewing your complete Module outputs with a fee-only Certified Financial Planner (CFP) who specializes in pension and retirement income planning, and a CPA or tax attorney for the rollover and tax strategy components.
US Pension Payout FAQs: Taxes, Survivor Benefits, and Rollovers
Short, plain-English answers to the most common questions workers ask when they receive a pension payout packet. Use these FAQs together with the calculator modules, not as a substitute for professional advice.
This tool compares your employer’s lump sum offer to your monthly pension annuity across seven modules: core NPV vs lump sum, tax & rollover paths, survivor benefit optimization, COLA vs non-COLA, break-even probability, state tax relocation savings, and executive/NQDC risk analysis. It does not tell you what to do — it shows the math behind each choice so you and your advisor can make an informed decision.
Module 1 · Core ComparisonThe annuity NPV is the present value of all future monthly payments discounted back to your retirement age at your chosen discount rate. The lump sum NPV is simply the lump sum itself (plus growth if you delay retirement). If annuity NPV is higher, the pension payments are mathematically more valuable at that discount rate; if lower, the lump sum looks better. However, tax treatment, survivor needs, COLA, and longevity risk can all justify choosing the option with the lower raw NPV in some situations.
Module 1 · Core ComparisonThe hurdle rate is the investment return you must earn on the lump sum to equal the value of the annuity over your lifetime. If the hurdle rate is 8.5%, you would need to sustain that net annual return for decades to match the annuity. Many retirees are not comfortable targeting such an aggressive return after fees and volatility. A lower hurdle rate (for example 4–5%) usually strengthens the case for taking the lump sum, while a high hurdle rate (7–8%+) often favors the annuity for risk-averse retirees.
Module 1 · Core ComparisonThe higher the return you assume on the lump sum, the more attractive the lump sum looks in the NPV comparison. But assuming an unrealistically high return can mislead you into choosing a strategy that fails in real-world markets. We recommend testing at least three scenarios: conservative (4%), moderate (6%), and optimistic (8%). If the lump sum only wins at very optimistic returns, the annuity may be safer for most retirees.
Module 1 · Core ComparisonIf you take the lump sum as a direct cash distribution, it is typically added to your income in that year and taxed at your marginal rate — which can be very high if the amount is large. If you instead roll it over directly to a Traditional IRA, there is no current-year tax. When you later draw from the IRA, you will pay ordinary income tax on withdrawals, similar to how pension payments are taxed. So the lump sum is only “taxed more” if you choose to cash it out in a single year rather than rolling it over and managing withdrawals.
Module 2 · Tax & RolloverThe safest method is a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer from your pension plan to your IRA custodian. In that case, no check is made payable to you personally, there is no mandatory 20% withholding, and the 60-day rollover deadline does not apply. You simply give your plan administrator the account details for your IRA, and they send the money directly. Indirect rollovers (where you receive a check) create avoidable tax and penalty risks.
Module 2 · Tax & RolloverIf you roll the lump sum into a Traditional IRA, you can later convert portions to a Roth IRA. Each conversion triggers tax today but creates tax-free growth later and no RMDs. This can make a lump sum strategy more attractive if you expect higher tax rates in retirement, want tax-free legacy assets for heirs, or have several low-income years where you can convert at modest brackets. The calculator lets you model cash-out vs. Traditional IRA vs. Roth path, but the pacing of conversions is a separate tax planning decision.
Module 2 · Tax & RolloverEach higher survivor percentage reduces your monthly benefit while your spouse is alive in exchange for income that continues to them after your death. The key is to calculate the annual cost of each tier in dollars and compare it to what your spouse would actually need if you passed away first. In some cases, buying separate term life insurance for the spouse can provide the same protection at similar or lower cost with more flexibility, especially if the plan lacks a “pop-up” feature when the spouse dies first.
Module 3 · Survivor BenefitA pop-up provision (sometimes called a “reversion” feature) means that if you elect a joint-and-survivor option and your spouse dies before you, your benefit pops back up to the higher single-life amount. This dramatically improves the value of survivor coverage because you are not permanently locked into the reduced amount if your spouse predeceases you. Not all plans offer this, so you must confirm it directly with your plan administrator before assuming it exists.
Module 3 · Survivor BenefitA zero-COLA pension loses purchasing power every year inflation is above 0%. At a 3% inflation rate, a fixed $3,000/month pension has the buying power of about $1,650/month after 20 years. If you expect a long retirement (25–30 years), the real value of your payments will be cut roughly in half over that span. This is one of the strongest arguments in favor of a lump sum that is invested in assets with some inflation protection, or in favor of combining the pension with other inflation-adjusted income sources.
Module 4 · COLA vs. Non-COLAYes. Many federal and military pensions include automatic COLA adjustments tied to inflation. That means the real value of your payment is largely preserved over time. In those cases, the annuity is much more valuable than a similar-sized private pension with no COLA. When you use this calculator for a government pension, be sure to set an appropriate COLA rate instead of 0%, and understand that the NPV and break-even results will heavily favor the annuity in many scenarios.
Module 4 · COLA vs. Non-COLAThe break-even probability module starts from Social Security Administration life tables for your age and gender, then adjusts up or down based on self-reported health, smoking status, and family longevity. It uses these inputs to approximate a personalized life expectancy and a probability curve of living to each future age. This is a statistical estimate only — it cannot predict your individual lifespan, but it can show whether the odds heavily favor outliving the break-even age or not.
Module 5 · Break-Even ProbabilityThis number estimates the chance that you will live long enough for the total value of annuity payments to surpass what the lump sum would have provided (at your chosen investment return). If the calculator shows a 70% probability the annuity wins, that means there is a 70% chance, based on your inputs, that you live beyond the break-even age. That probability should be considered alongside your risk tolerance and your desire for guaranteed income.
Module 5 · Break-Even ProbabilitySequence-of-returns risk is the danger that poor market returns early in retirement permanently damage a withdrawal strategy. If you take the lump sum and invest it, a large market drop in the first few years while you are withdrawing income can deplete the portfolio much faster than average-return projections suggest. The annuity, by contrast, pays the same amount regardless of market performance. This is one reason risk-averse retirees often favor at least some guaranteed lifetime income even when the lump sum looks competitive on paper.
Module 5 · Break-Even ProbabilityState tax can change the lifetime value of your pension or lump sum by tens of thousands of dollars. Some states fully exempt pension income, some partially exempt it, and others tax it like ordinary income. If you plan to relocate, the key point is that most states tax you based on where you live when you receive the income, not where you earned it. Moving to a tax-friendly state before starting benefits can materially increase your net retirement income.
Module 6 · State TaxThe Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) insures many private defined-benefit plans up to a maximum annual amount that depends on your age when benefits begin. If your promised pension is below that limit, you are largely protected if your employer plan fails. If your benefit exceeds the cap, the portion above the limit is not insured and could be reduced in a plan termination. Executives and highly paid professionals with large pensions should pay close attention to how much of their benefit is actually covered.
Module 7 · Executive / PBGCNon-qualified plans like NQDC and SERP are not protected by ERISA or PBGC and are typically considered unsecured promises by your employer. In a bankruptcy, these benefits can be reduced or lost entirely. In addition, Section 409A imposes strict rules on when and how you can change your payout elections. For executives whose retirement income depends heavily on non-qualified plans, diversifying away from employer credit risk is often more important than minor NPV differences.
Module 7 · Executive ModeYes. If you already have substantial investable assets, you may not need the lump sum to fund retirement spending, and the guaranteed annuity may serve as a stable income floor while you invest your other assets more aggressively. Conversely, if the pension is your only major asset, concentrating all your retirement security in a single employer’s promise may feel risky, and diversifying through a rollover could be more attractive. The calculator helps quantify the trade-offs, but your overall balance sheet and risk tolerance should drive the final decision.
All Modules · Holistic ViewSome plans allow a partial lump sum plus a reduced annuity, but many offer only an all-or-nothing choice. Whether you can split depends entirely on your plan’s document. A partial lump sum can be a powerful compromise — giving you guaranteed income from the annuity plus flexibility and legacy value from the rolled-over portion. Check your plan’s Summary Plan Description (SPD) or ask HR whether a partial lump sum option exists and how it affects your monthly benefit.
Plan-Specific · Check SPDIf you choose the annuity with no survivor benefit and die early, the remaining value generally stays with the plan — your estate may get little or nothing beyond any minimum guarantee your plan offers. With a lump sum rolled into an IRA, whatever remains in the account passes to your beneficiaries, subject to tax rules. If you live much longer than expected, the annuity’s lifetime payments can far exceed the original lump sum value, while a lump-sum portfolio may struggle to keep up if returns are poor.
Modules 1, 3 & 5Because the choice between lump sum and annuity depends on factors this tool can’t fully know: your complete financial picture, health, family situation, risk tolerance, and tax profile. The calculator’s role is to make the trade-offs transparent — showing NPVs, hurdle rates, tax differences, survivor costs, COLA impact, longevity probabilities, state tax effects, and PBGC coverage. A human advisor who understands your personal goals should help you weigh those trade-offs and make the final call.
All ModulesAt minimum, you should speak with a fee-only Certified Financial Planner (CFP) who specializes in retirement income, and a CPA or enrolled agent who can model the tax impact of each path (cash-out, Traditional IRA, Roth conversions). If you have a complex situation — divorce/QDRO, non-qualified plans, or a very large pension — consulting an ERISA attorney or benefits lawyer is also wise. Bring printed PDFs from each calculator module to make those meetings far more productive.
Real-World Next StepsAll outputs generated by the Pension Payout Calculator — including NPV values, break-even ages, hurdle rates, tax estimates, survivor benefit costs, COLA comparisons, state tax differentials, and PBGC calculations — are educational illustrations only.
Nothing on USFinanceCalculators.com constitutes, or should be interpreted as, financial advice, investment advice, tax advice, legal advice, or any other form of professional advisory service. The information is provided for general educational purposes to help users understand the concepts involved in a pension payout decision.
Before making any pension payout election, consult with a qualified financial professional who has fiduciary responsibility, knowledge of your complete financial situation, and familiarity with current ERISA regulations, IRS rules, and your specific plan documents.
While we make every reasonable effort to ensure this calculator uses accurate formulas, current IRS brackets, correct PBGC guarantee limits, and up-to-date state tax rates, we make no warranty — express or implied — regarding the accuracy, completeness, reliability, or timeliness of any output produced.
Tax laws, IRS segment rates, PBGC guarantee amounts, state income tax rules, and pension regulations change frequently. The results you see may not reflect the most current law as of the date you use this calculator. Always verify critical figures directly with the IRS, your state revenue department, the PBGC, and your plan administrator.
Input errors, non-standard plan provisions, unusual beneficiary arrangements, or plan-specific rules not captured in this general-purpose tool may cause material differences between calculator output and your actual benefit entitlement.
Under ERISA and most defined benefit plan documents, a pension payout election is permanent and irrevocable once the plan’s election deadline has passed — typically 30 to 90 days before your retirement date. There are very limited exceptions, and courts have consistently upheld plan administrators’ refusal to allow election changes after the deadline.
This means a mistake based on incorrect calculator inputs, misunderstood plan provisions, or an unanticipated life change cannot be reversed after the election is submitted. This tool cannot know your specific plan’s rules, elections deadlines, or any plan amendments that may affect your benefit.
The irreversible nature of this decision makes professional verification mandatory — not merely advisable — before you sign any election form.
This calculator models hypothetical scenarios using assumptions you provide — including investment return rates, inflation rates, life expectancy, discount rates, and tax rates. Actual future results will differ materially from projected outcomes. Markets are volatile. Tax laws change. Health outcomes are uncertain. Inflation rates fluctuate.
Past investment returns are not indicative of future performance. The calculator’s use of historical averages or typical rate assumptions does not constitute a prediction, projection, or guarantee of any specific financial outcome for any individual user.
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Defined benefit pension plans are governed by ERISA (Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974) and are subject to the specific terms of your Summary Plan Description (SPD) and plan document. Your actual benefits, payout options, reduction factors, survivor benefit elections, and COLA provisions are determined entirely by your plan’s legal documents — not by general formulas used in this calculator.
This tool does not have access to your plan documents, your employer’s actuarial assumptions, your specific plan’s segment rate lookback period, your plan’s funding status, or any plan amendments. Always request your SPD and verify every figure with your HR department or plan administrator before running any calculations.
The federal and state tax estimates produced by Module 2 (Tax & IRA Rollover) and Module 6 (State Tax Optimizer) are simplified illustrations based on publicly available tax bracket information and general rate assumptions. They do not account for your complete tax profile, including:
- Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) exposure
- Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) surcharge
- Medicare IRMAA premium surcharge triggers
- Social Security income taxation thresholds
- State-specific deductions, exemptions, and credits
- Your actual AGI from all income sources combined
- Phase-outs affecting deductions or credits
- Local or city income taxes where applicable
Always consult a licensed CPA or enrolled agent for your actual tax liability before making a distribution or rollover decision.
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All calculation formulas are derived from primary government sources: IRS publications, PBGC official guidance, US DOL ERISA regulations, and actuarial standards published by the Society of Actuaries. We do not invent proprietary formulas — we implement publicly documented methodologies.
Federal income tax brackets, standard deductions, IRA contribution limits, and PBGC guarantee maximums are reviewed and updated each January following IRS Revenue Procedures and PBGC annual announcements. State tax rates are reviewed quarterly using official state revenue department publications.
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The annuity Net Present Value is calculated by discounting each future monthly payment at the user-specified discount rate using the standard present value formula: PV = PMT / (1 + r)^t where r is the annual discount rate and t is time in years. The hurdle rate is determined via binary search to find the investment return that equates the invested lump sum to the annuity’s NPV. Break-even age is the first year in which cumulative annuity payments exceed lump sum growth. These are standard actuarial and financial planning methodologies.
Federal tax is calculated using 2026 IRS marginal bracket tables for three filing statuses (Single, MFJ, HoH). State tax is modeled as a flat rate applied to pension income — users should enter their state’s applicable pension income rate, which may differ from general income tax rates in states with pension-specific exemptions. The three-path comparison (cash out, Traditional IRA, Roth) uses compound growth formulas at the user-specified IRA return rate over the years to withdrawal age, then applies applicable taxes at distribution.
Personalized life expectancy is estimated using base Social Security Administration (SSA) period life tables, adjusted for gender, smoking status, health self-assessment (as a proxy for lifestyle and chronic condition risk), and family longevity history. Survival probability curves are based on simplified Gompertz mortality modeling. These are statistical estimates only — individual longevity cannot be predicted. Actual life expectancy depends on factors this model cannot capture.
State pension income tax rates are sourced from official state revenue department publications and the AARP Public Policy Institute’s annual state pension tax survey. Rates reflect the general pension income tax treatment for retirees aged 59½ and above; they may not capture all state-specific age exemptions, income phase-outs, or military pension special treatment. Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming have no state income tax and are flagged as fully exempt in this calculator’s database.
Verify all figures used in your pension analysis directly with authoritative government sources. These links go to the official US government agencies responsible for pension regulation, tax law, insurance guarantees, and retirement benefit rules. Always cross-reference this calculator’s outputs with primary sources before making any final decision.
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