In This Article
  • 1. What is an annuity (and why most Indians end up with one)
  • 2. The Indian annuity market in 2026
  • 3. The four main annuity types — and which works when
  • 4. Why mandatory NPS annuity is a controversial design
  • 5. Annuity rates vs SWP from mutual funds
  • 6. Tax treatment of annuity income
  • 7. The right place for annuities in your retirement
  • 8. Decision framework: annuity yes/no for you

1. What is an annuity (and why most Indians end up with one)

An annuity is a financial contract where you pay a lump sum (or series of payments) to an insurance company, and they pay you a regular income for life — or for a specified period. It's essentially a "do-it-yourself pension" you buy from an insurer.

Most Indians encounter annuities not through choice, but through compulsion. The National Pension System (NPS) requires that at least 40% of the retirement corpus be used to purchase an annuity. Many corporate pension schemes (EPS, superannuation funds) similarly direct payouts through annuity structures.

Despite this widespread exposure, annuities remain poorly understood. Many retirees discover annuity rules and rates only after retiring, when their flexibility to change is limited.

2. The Indian annuity market in 2026

The Indian annuity market is concentrated. Most annuities are sold by:

Indian annuity rates in 2026 are typically 5.5% to 7.5% (annual income as % of purchase price), depending on:

For context: an Indian government 10-year bond yields around 6.8-7% currently, and a long-tenor FD might pay 7-7.5%. Annuity rates aren't dramatically better than these alternatives — and that's the crux of the annuity debate in India.

3. The four main annuity types — and which works when

TypeHow It WorksWhen It Makes Sense
Immediate AnnuityPay lump sum today, income starts within 1 yearYou're already retired and need income now
Deferred AnnuityPay lump sum or premiums now, income starts in 5-15 yearsYou're saving for retirement and want guaranteed future income (rare in India)
Single-LifeIncome for one person's life onlySingle retirees, or those whose spouse has independent income
Joint-Life (Spouse)Continues to spouse after primary annuitant diesMost married couples — rate is lower but security is higher
With Return of Purchase Price (ROP)Lower rate (5-6%), nominees get original corpus backYou want to leave inheritance + lifetime income
Without ROP (life-only)Higher rate (6.5-7.5%), nothing returned to nomineesYou want maximum income; no concern for nominees

The Joint-Life with Return of Purchase Price is the most common variant chosen by Indian retirees. It offers lower rates (~5.5-6.5%) but provides for spouse and inheritance.

4. Why mandatory NPS annuity is a controversial design

The NPS requirement that 40% of corpus must purchase an annuity is one of the most debated rules in Indian retirement planning. The arguments:

For the rule:

Against the rule:

Practical workaround: structure your retirement corpus across multiple buckets. Keep NPS as one bucket (the mandatory annuity is what it is), and ensure your other savings (mutual funds, PPF, EPF, real estate) provide flexibility, growth potential, and inflation protection that compensate for the rigid NPS structure.

5. Annuity rates vs SWP from mutual funds

The most important comparison most retirees never make: annuity vs Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) from mutual funds.

Suppose you have ₹1 crore at retirement. Options:

OptionAnnual IncomeTax TreatmentInflation ProtectionCorpus Preserved
Annuity (Joint-Life with ROP, age 60)~₹6 lakh (6%)Slab rateNoneReturned to nominee on death
SWP from Hybrid MF (4% withdrawal)₹4 lakh starting12.5% LTCG above ₹1.25LIncreases with fund returnsLikely grows over time
SWP from Equity MF (4% withdrawal)₹4 lakh starting12.5% LTCG above ₹1.25LStrong (higher equity returns)Volatile but typically grows
FD ladder (7% interest)₹7 lakhSlab rateNonePreserved at face value (eroded in real terms)

The catch: SWP is sustainable only if your fund returns exceed your withdrawal rate. At 4% withdrawal from a 60% equity / 40% debt fund returning 9-10%, your corpus typically grows. Higher withdrawal rates (6-8%) eat into corpus and risk running out.

The simplistic answer "annuity gives more income": initially yes (6% vs 4%), but the SWP corpus grows while annuity income is fixed.

6. Tax treatment of annuity income

This is where annuities become particularly painful for retirees in higher tax brackets:

For a retiree withdrawing ₹6 lakh annually:

Over a 25-year retirement, this tax difference compounds significantly.

7. The right place for annuities in your retirement

Despite the criticisms, annuities have a place in retirement planning:

The right structure for many retirees: annuity for "essential expenses" floor (food, utilities, insurance, basic healthcare), SWP from mutual funds for "lifestyle expenses" and growth potential.

For a couple with ₹3 crore retirement corpus:

8. Decision framework: annuity yes/no for you

Reasons to maximise annuity allocation:

Reasons to minimise annuity allocation:

Key Takeaways

Annuities — use them strategically, not by default

  • Indian annuity rates (5.5-7.5%) aren't dramatically better than FDs and underperform SWP from balanced funds.
  • Annuity income is taxed at slab rate, while MF SWP enjoys 12.5% LTCG treatment — significant difference over 25 years.
  • The 40% NPS annuity rule is binding — work around it, don't fight it.
  • Right structure for most retirees: annuity for essential-expense floor, MF SWP for lifestyle and growth.
  • Annuities ARE useful for longevity protection, behavioural simplification, and spouse security — just not for everything.
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