The 1035 Exchange Escape Plan:
How to Strip a Legacy Variable Annuity
Without Triggering a Tax Event
Somewhere in America, a client is sitting inside a variable annuity sold in 2009 that charges 3.2% per year in combined M&E, sub-account, and rider fees. The contract has $170,000 in it. That fee structure is consuming $5,440 per year — silently, automatically, without a line item on any statement the client ever reads. Section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code exists to fix exactly this situation, tax-free. This is the complete CPA and fiduciary workflow for doing it right.
1. The Silent Fee Drain: What a Legacy Variable Annuity Is Actually Costing
Variable annuities sold through broker-dealers in the 2000s and early 2010s were among the highest-margin products in the financial services industry. The client received a tax-deferred wrapper and, often, a guaranteed minimum benefit rider. The insurance company and broker received a layered fee structure that most clients never parsed in full. Understanding exactly what those layers are — and what they cost in terminal wealth — is the first step in building the mathematical case for a 1035 exchange.
A typical legacy variable annuity has three to four fee layers operating simultaneously. First, the mortality and expense risk charge (M&E): typically 1.25% to 1.50% of account value per year, charged by the insurance company for maintaining the contract wrapper and insurance guarantees. Second, the administrative fee: typically 0.15% to 0.30% annually. Third, the sub-account investment management fees: typically 0.60% to 1.20% annually depending on the fund options selected — often actively managed mutual fund share classes not available outside the contract. Fourth, the optional guaranteed benefit rider: if the client purchased a guaranteed minimum income benefit (GMIB), guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefit (GMWB), or death benefit rider, add another 0.50% to 1.20% per year.
The compounding cost of this fee differential is not trivial. On a $200,000 contract held for 15 more years, a 3.0% annual fee reduction equates to approximately $143,000 in additional terminal wealth assuming 7% gross investment returns — before accounting for the investment quality improvement that typically accompanies a move from expensive actively managed sub-accounts to institutional index alternatives. For a CPA presenting this case to a client, the 15-year fee drag number is the number that moves the conversation.
2. Section 1035 Exchange Rules: What the Code Actually Says
IRC Section 1035(a)(3) provides that no gain or loss shall be recognized on the exchange of an annuity contract for another annuity contract. This is the foundational statutory authority for the entire exchange workflow. But the statute is brief, and the operational requirements that make an exchange qualify under Section 1035 — versus being treated as a taxable surrender followed by a new purchase — are governed by IRS regulations, revenue rulings, and private letter rulings that have accumulated over decades.
The IRS confirmed in Revenue Ruling 2002-75 that a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer between insurance carriers qualifies as a Section 1035 exchange. The practical execution requires the new carrier to initiate the transfer request using a 1035 exchange transfer form, directing the old carrier to liquidate the sub-accounts and wire or check the proceeds directly to the new carrier — with the exchange box checked on the transfer documentation. The contract owner signs the transfer authorization but does not receive or control the funds at any point in the process.
3. Annuity Tax Basis Calculation: The Number the CPA Must Get Right
The tax basis of an annuity contract — formally called the “investment in the contract” under IRC Section 72(e)(6) — is the accumulated amount of after-tax premiums paid into the contract, reduced by any tax-free amounts previously received. Getting this number wrong means either overstating the gain (the client pays unnecessary tax at withdrawal) or understating it (the client underpays and faces an IRS adjustment). In a 1035 exchange, the basis transfers intact to the new contract. It does not reset. It does not change. The new carrier inherits the exact basis figure from the old contract.
The old carrier is required to report the basis to the new carrier as part of the exchange transfer documentation. In practice, this reporting is often incomplete, delayed, or simply missing — particularly for older contracts that were serviced by carriers who have since merged or been acquired. The CPA’s job is to reconstruct the basis independently using every annual statement, Form 1099-R, and premium payment confirmation available. Do not rely on the old carrier’s exchange paperwork as the basis source of record. Build it from primary documentation.
4. The Surrender Charge Breakeven Analysis: The Math That Decides the Timing
Almost every legacy variable annuity purchased within the last 7 to 10 years still carries a surrender charge schedule — a declining penalty for early contract termination that typically starts at 7% to 10% and decreases by 1% per year until it reaches zero. When executing a 1035 exchange, the surrender charge is not waived. The contract owner pays the charge, which reduces the transfer value sent to the new carrier. The exchange is still tax-free, but the starting value in the new contract is lower by the surrender charge amount.
The decision to exchange now versus waiting for the surrender charge to decline further is a pure financial optimization problem, and the breakeven formula resolves it precisely.
Exchange Now vs. Wait: Net Financial Impact at Various Surrender Charge Levels
5. The Rider Value Analysis: What You’re Giving Up and Whether It Matters
The most sophisticated objection to a 1035 exchange from a legacy variable annuity is not the fee level — it is the guaranteed benefit rider. Many contracts from the 2007 to 2015 era contain guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefit (GMWB) or guaranteed minimum income benefit (GMIB) riders that have significant option value, particularly if the contract is “in the money” — meaning the guaranteed benefit base is higher than the current contract value due to a market decline or a built-up roll-up credit.
The CPA and fiduciary’s job is to value the rider honestly — not dismiss it reflexively and not overstate it because the insurance company’s marketing materials describe it in glowing terms. A GMWB rider that guarantees 5% annual withdrawals on a benefit base of $220,000 (on a contract currently worth $170,000) is providing $11,000 per year of guaranteed withdrawal income. The question is: what does it cost to replicate that income stream outside the variable annuity structure, and does the 3.35% annual drag on the $170,000 account value represent a rational price to pay for it?
GMWB Rider: In-the-Money Option Value vs. Ongoing Fee Cost
This analysis changes if the benefit base significantly exceeds the SPIA equivalent income at current payout rates, or if the contract is very close to or already in income phase where the rider is being actively used. A GMWB already in payment mode should not be 1035-exchanged — the exchange would terminate the active income stream. The workflow below addresses the full decision tree before any exchange paperwork is initiated.
Calculate Your Legacy Annuity’s True Annual Fee Drag and 1035 Breakeven
Run your contract value, fee structure, and surrender charge schedule through our Annuity Payout Calculator to generate the full breakeven analysis and rider value comparison before initiating any exchange paperwork.
6. Partial 1035 Exchanges: Revenue Procedure 2011-38 and the 180-Day Rule
A full 1035 exchange transfers the entire contract value to a new carrier and terminates the old contract. A partial 1035 exchange, permitted under Revenue Procedure 2011-38, transfers a portion of the contract value to a new annuity while the original contract remains in force. This structure is used when the contract owner wants to diversify across carriers, lock in a portion of gains in a different product type, or begin building a longevity floor with part of a large contract without fully surrendering the original policy.
The tax treatment of a partial 1035 exchange requires careful basis allocation. The IRS allocates basis proportionally based on the percentage of contract value transferred. If 40% of contract value is exchanged, 40% of the adjusted basis moves to the new contract. The remaining 60% of the basis stays in the original contract. Neither contract recognizes gain at the time of the exchange.
7. The Complete 1035 Exchange Workflow: 10 Steps from Identification to Completion
The operational workflow for a 1035 exchange involves four parties: the contract owner (client), the CPA or fiduciary advisor, the old carrier, and the new carrier. The new carrier typically drives the paperwork process — they want the asset, so they take responsibility for initiating the transfer request. The CPA’s role is pre-exchange analysis, documentation, and post-exchange basis verification.
Request the current contract statement, the full fee disclosure (M&E, administrative, sub-account, rider charges), the current surrender charge schedule and expiration date, the contract’s adjusted cost basis as reported by the carrier, and any guaranteed benefit rider details including the current benefit base, roll-up rate, and income phase status.
Required: All fee layers + surrender schedule + basis + rider statusUsing original premium payment confirmations, all annual statements, and every Form 1099-R ever received from this contract, calculate the adjusted basis from primary documentation. Compare to the carrier’s reported basis. Resolve any discrepancy before proceeding — the basis you carry into the exchange is the basis the client will live with for the life of the new contract.
Critical: Do not rely on carrier-reported basis without independent verificationBuild the fee comparison model: legacy all-in fee rate vs. target new platform fee rate, applied to the current contract value, projected forward 10 to 15 years at the expected gross investment return. Show the client the terminal wealth differential in dollar terms — not basis points. The $143,000 number lands differently than “approximately 3%.”
Presentation: Show 10-year and 15-year terminal wealth in dollarsCalculate the annual income or benefit the rider provides, compare it to the replication cost via a SPIA or other guaranteed income product outside the contract, and net the incremental rider value against the ongoing fee cost. If the rider is already in payment mode or the benefit base significantly exceeds replication cost, document the reason not to exchange.
If rider is in payment mode: Do not exchange — income stream terminatesApply the surrender charge breakeven formula: surrender charge amount divided by annual fee savings. If the breakeven is under 3 years and the client intends to hold the new contract for 10+ years, the exchange is financially justified immediately. If the surrender charge drops to 0% within 12 months, model whether waiting one year is worth more than the fee savings foregone during that year.
At most surrender charge levels: Exchange now beats waitingFor investment-only variable annuities (IOVAs), DPL Financial Partners provides access to institutional-grade contracts with M&E charges of 0.10% to 0.25%. Jefferson National’s Monument Advisor charges a flat $20/month regardless of account value — optimal for large contracts above $800,000 where a percentage-based fee would be prohibitive. For fixed index annuities as the destination product, run carrier AM Best rating checks and index crediting rate comparisons before selecting.
IOVA platforms: DPL, Jefferson National, Ameritas, Nationwide Low-CostThe new carrier’s 1035 exchange transfer form directs the old carrier to liquidate sub-accounts and transfer proceeds directly to the new carrier. The form must specify: (a) this is a Section 1035 exchange, not a surrender; (b) the transfer is direct carrier-to-carrier; (c) the contract owner information is identical on both contracts; and (d) the adjusted basis of the surrendering contract. The client signs the authorization but does not receive any funds.
Critical: Verify “1035 exchange” is checked — not “surrender and transfer”Standard carrier-to-carrier transfer time is 10 to 30 business days. During this period, assets are typically held in a money market or fixed account. Once the new contract is funded, request written confirmation from the new carrier of the starting contract value, the confirmed adjusted basis carried over from the old contract, and confirmation that no taxable distribution was recorded. File this confirmation in the client’s permanent tax record.
Target: Written basis confirmation from new carrier within 30 days of fundingThe old carrier will issue a Form 1099-R for the tax year in which the exchange occurred. For a qualifying 1035 exchange, Box 7 (Distribution Code) should show Code 6 (Section 1035 exchange). Box 2a (taxable amount) should be $0. If the 1099-R shows any taxable amount or an incorrect distribution code, contact the old carrier immediately to request a corrected 1099-R (Form 1099-R Corrected) before the client files their tax return. Filing with an incorrect 1099-R without correction creates an IRS matching problem that requires Form 8275 or written explanation to resolve.
Verify: Box 7 = Code 6; Box 2a = $0. Anything else requires correction.Create a permanent exchange documentation file: original contract basis reconstruction, exchange transfer form copies, new carrier basis confirmation, and the corrected or confirmed Form 1099-R. This documentation chain protects the client if the IRS ever questions the exchange’s tax-free treatment — which can occur years or decades later when withdrawals begin and the gain characterization is first reported on a return.
Permanent record: Basis chain of custody protects the client for the life of the contract8. Moving From Variable to Fixed Index Annuity: The Specific Math for FIA Exchanges
A significant portion of 1035 exchanges in the current rate environment involve moving from a legacy variable annuity into a fixed index annuity (FIA). The FIA offers downside protection (floor of 0% — you cannot lose principal to market declines) with upside participation tied to an equity index (typically the S&P 500) subject to a participation rate, cap rate, or spread. For clients who are exhausted by the complexity and volatility of a variable annuity’s sub-account structure, the FIA represents a simpler, lower-risk alternative — though it introduces its own complexity in the form of crediting method selection.
| Feature | Legacy Variable Annuity | Low-Cost IOVA (Post-Exchange) | Fixed Index Annuity (Post-Exchange) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual all-in fee | 2.5–3.5% | 0.25–0.40% | 0% (embedded in spread/cap) |
| Downside exposure | Full market risk in sub-accounts | Full market risk (institutional index funds) | 0% floor — principal protected from index decline |
| Upside potential | Full sub-account return minus fees | Near-full index return minus minimal fee | Capped or participation-rate limited (typically 8–12% cap on S&P 500) |
| Transparency | Low — multiple fee layers | High — explicit flat fee | Medium — cap/spread is implicit cost |
| Surrender charges (new contract) | N/A (existing contract) | None on most IOVAs | 5–10 year new surrender schedule |
| Best for | N/A — exchange away | Growth-oriented clients comfortable with equity volatility | Conservative clients prioritizing principal protection over maximum upside |
9. Post-Exchange Platform Selection: DPL, Jefferson National, and the IOVA Market
The investment-only variable annuity market has matured significantly since Jefferson National introduced the Monument Advisor flat-fee IOVA in 2006. Today, fee-only advisors and their clients have access to a small but growing set of institutional-grade annuity platforms that strip away the insurance guarantees, riders, and distribution costs of retail variable annuities and deliver pure tax deferral at minimal cost.
| Platform | Annual Fee Structure | Break-Even Account Size | Sub-Account Access | 1035 Exchange Accepted? | Fiduciary Access |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jefferson National (now Nationwide) | $20/month flat ($240/yr) | ~$24,000 (vs. 1% M&E alternative) | 150+ institutional funds | Yes | RIA direct access |
| DPL Financial Partners | 0.10–0.25% M&E (varies by carrier) | Competitive above $100K | Carrier-specific; multiple carriers | Yes | Fee-only RIA exclusive platform |
| Ameritas No-Load VA | 0.45% M&E (no rider) | Competitive for moderate accounts | Vanguard and DFA fund access | Yes | Fee-only advisors; direct consumer |
| Nationwide Advisory Solutions | 0.20–0.25% M&E | Competitive above $75K | Institutional index series | Yes | RIA platform |
| Fidelity Personal Retirement Annuity | 0.25% (below $1M) / 0.10% (above) | Competitive; no surrender charges | Fidelity fund lineup | Yes | Direct to consumer and advisor |
For large contracts above $500,000, the Jefferson National flat-fee structure at $240 per year creates an extraordinarily low all-in fee — equivalent to 0.048% on a $500,000 contract. At this account size, the annual fee savings from a 1035 exchange out of a 3.0% legacy variable annuity exceeds $14,500 per year. The breakeven on even a 7% surrender charge ($35,000 on $500,000) is under 2.5 years. For CPA clients with legacy contracts in this size range, the 1035 exchange case is not a close call. It is a fiduciary obligation to present it.
10. CPA Documentation Requirements and IRS Audit Defense for 1035 Exchanges
A properly executed 1035 exchange produces a Form 1099-R with Distribution Code 6 and a $0 taxable amount. It should generate no tax liability and, ideally, no IRS attention. However, large exchanges — particularly those involving contracts with significant accumulated gains — can trigger IRS matching notices if the exchange documentation is incomplete or if the 1099-R reporting contains errors. Building a complete audit defense file at the time of the exchange is far easier than reconstructing it three years later in response to an IRS notice.
1035 Exchange Audit Defense File — Required Documents
One additional documentation layer matters for fiduciaries operating under SEC or FINRA oversight: the written suitability or best-interest analysis. Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI) under SEC Rule 17 CFR § 240.15l-1 requires broker-dealers to document that an annuity exchange recommendation is in the retail customer’s best interest at the time of the recommendation. Fee-only RIAs operating under the Investment Advisers Act have the fiduciary standard. In both cases, a written record of the fee comparison, surrender charge breakeven, and rider value analysis — placed in the client file before the exchange is executed — is the primary compliance defense if the recommendation is ever challenged.
11. When Not to Execute a 1035 Exchange: The Four Stop Conditions
The 1035 exchange workflow above applies when the financial case is clear — high legacy fees, no meaningful rider value, and a long holding horizon in the new contract. There are four specific conditions under which a CPA or fiduciary should stop the exchange process, document the reason, and either wait or abandon the exchange entirely.
| Stop Condition | Reason | Correct Action |
|---|---|---|
| Rider is in active payment mode (GMWB or GMIB distributing income) | Exchange terminates the income stream permanently; cannot be reinstated in new contract | Abandon exchange — model a separate income floor strategy instead |
| Client is within 12 months of the surrender charge expiring to 0% | Waiting preserves the full transfer value; fee savings during one more year are less than the surrender charge saved | Wait — model the year-by-year cost of waiting vs. exchanging now; often worth waiting if charge drops from 1–2% to 0% |
| Client is terminally ill or has significantly shortened life expectancy | At death, annuity gain is income in respect of a decedent (IRD) — taxable to the beneficiary as ordinary income; a step-up in basis is NOT available. However, the estate may benefit from keeping the contract for estate planning reasons depending on beneficiary tax rates | Consult estate attorney — exchange may still be warranted if beneficiary tax rate is lower; requires case-by-case analysis |
| The 1035 transfer will trigger a new surrender charge period on the destination contract | Some FIA and VA products impose surrender charge schedules of 5–10 years; if the client may need liquidity within that window, a new surrender schedule creates a liquidity trap | Select no-surrender-charge IOVA (Jefferson National, DPL platforms) or confirm client’s liquidity needs before committing to a new surrender schedule |
| The legacy contract contains a death benefit that exceeds current contract value | A stepped-up death benefit rider that locks in a higher guaranteed death benefit amount provides value to the beneficiary that is forfeited on exchange | Value the death benefit — calculate the actuarial value of the death benefit guarantee and weigh against ongoing fee cost; consult with insurance specialist |
The most common stop condition in practice is the client nearing the end of a surrender charge schedule. An advisor who recommends a 1035 exchange 8 months before the surrender charge expires to zero — costing the client 1% or 2% in avoidable surrender fees — when the fee savings during those 8 months would not offset the charge, has made a defensible but suboptimal recommendation. Build the year-by-year waiting cost analysis into every engagement before recommending immediate execution. Sometimes the right answer is: exchange in 8 months, not today.
Run Your Legacy Annuity’s 1035 Exchange Breakeven Analysis
Our Insurance Annuity Payout Calculator models the full fee drain comparison, surrender charge breakeven, and 15-year terminal wealth differential between your legacy contract and a low-cost IOVA alternative — generating the numbers your CPA or fiduciary needs before initiating any exchange paperwork.
Run My Breakeven Analysis →Frequently Asked Questions: 1035 Exchange Annuity Rules
Under IRC Section 1035(a)(3), an annuity contract can be exchanged for another annuity contract without triggering a taxable event, provided four conditions are met: (1) the transfer is direct carrier-to-carrier — funds never pass through the contract owner’s hands; (2) the contract owner is identical on both the old and new contracts; (3) the exchange is annuity-to-annuity (or life insurance-to-annuity); and (4) the transaction is completed properly within the same tax year or under applicable constructive receipt rules. The cost basis and accumulated gain from the original contract carry over to the new contract intact, with no federal income tax triggered at exchange.
The annuity tax basis — formally the “investment in the contract” under IRC Section 72(e)(6) — equals total after-tax premiums paid, minus any tax-free return-of-basis amounts previously received. It does not include accumulated earnings, gains, or dividends inside the contract. The gain in the contract equals current contract value minus adjusted basis. On a 1035 exchange, this basis transfers intact to the new contract. CPAs should reconstruct basis independently from primary documents (premium receipts, annual statements, every historical Form 1099-R) rather than relying solely on the old carrier’s reported figure, which is frequently incomplete for older or transferred contracts.
Breakeven Years = Surrender Charge Amount ÷ Annual Fee Savings. Surrender Charge Amount = Contract Value × Current Surrender Charge %. Annual Fee Savings = Contract Value × (Legacy Fee % − New Platform Fee %). Example: $170,000 contract, 4% surrender charge ($6,800), legacy fee 3.20%, new IOVA fee 0.30%, annual savings $4,930. Breakeven = $6,800 ÷ $4,930 = 1.38 years. At virtually every surrender charge level on a contract with a 2.5%+ fee differential, the exchange is financially justified if the client will hold the new contract for more than 2 to 3 years — which covers almost every realistic client scenario.
Yes — Revenue Procedure 2011-38 permits partial 1035 exchanges. The tax basis is allocated proportionally: if 40% of contract value is transferred, 40% of the adjusted basis moves to the new contract. The 180-day rule is the critical compliance requirement: no withdrawal, surrender, or annuitization from either the old or new contract for 180 days after the partial exchange date. If either contract is touched within 180 days, the IRS may recharacterize the exchange as a taxable distribution, triggering ordinary income recognition on the allocated gain. Advisors must calendar this restriction and communicate it explicitly to clients in writing before the exchange is executed.
For a qualifying Section 1035 exchange, Form 1099-R from the old carrier should show: Box 7 (Distribution Code) = Code 6 (Section 1035 exchange); Box 2a (Taxable Amount) = $0; and Box 1 (Gross Distribution) = the full transfer amount. If Box 2a shows any taxable amount, or if Box 7 shows any code other than 6 (particularly Code 7 for normal distribution or Code 1 for early distribution), the reporting is incorrect. Contact the old carrier immediately to request a corrected 1099-R before the client files their return. Filing without correction creates an IRS matching discrepancy that requires a written explanation or Form 8275 to resolve.
A surrender terminates the annuity contract and triggers immediate ordinary income tax on all accumulated gains (contract value minus adjusted basis), plus a 10% IRS early withdrawal penalty if the owner is under age 59½. On a $170,000 contract with $86,000 in accumulated gain, a surrender generates $86,000 of ordinary income — potentially $31,820 in federal tax at the 37% marginal rate, plus state tax. A 1035 exchange transfers the same $170,000 and the same $86,000 in deferred gain to a new contract with zero current-year tax. The surrender-and-repurchase approach is almost never correct when the goal is moving from a high-cost to a low-cost annuity. The 1035 exchange accomplishes the same restructuring at no tax cost.
The four primary stop conditions for a 1035 exchange are: (1) the guaranteed benefit rider is already in active payment mode — the exchange permanently terminates the income stream; (2) the surrender charge expires within 12 months and the fee savings during that waiting period are less than the charge being paid to exchange now; (3) the client has a significantly shortened life expectancy and estate planning considerations around beneficiary tax rates may outweigh the fee savings; and (4) the destination contract imposes a new multi-year surrender charge schedule and the client has near-term liquidity needs. In any of these scenarios, the exchange requires additional analysis before proceeding — it is not an automatic recommendation.
What are the Section 1035 exchange rules for annuities?
Under IRC Section 1035(a)(3), an annuity contract can be exchanged for another annuity contract without triggering a taxable event, provided the exchange is direct carrier-to-carrier (never passing through the contract owner’s hands), the same contract owner is maintained on both the old and new contracts, and the transaction is completed within the same tax year or under proper constructive receipt rules. The cost basis and gain from the original contract carry over to the new contract. Partial 1035 exchanges are permitted under Revenue Procedure 2011-38 but require the old contract to remain in force for at least 180 days after the exchange to avoid the IRS treating the partial exchange as a taxable distribution.
How do you calculate the tax basis of an annuity contract for a 1035 exchange?
The annuity tax basis (also called investment in the contract under IRC Section 72(e)) equals total after-tax premiums paid into the contract, minus any tax-free amounts previously received (such as return-of-basis distributions or partial annuitizations). It does not include earnings, dividends, or capital gains that accumulated inside the contract — those are the untaxed gain. The gain in the contract equals current contract value minus the adjusted basis. On a 1035 exchange, this basis transfers to the new contract intact, preserving the tax-deferral position without triggering recognition of the accumulated gain.