Learn β†’ Wiki β†’ Glossary β†’ Qualified vs Non-Qualified

Qualified vs Non-Qualified

Tax treatment differences for annuities

πŸ“˜ Glossary⏱️ 4 min readπŸ—“οΈ January 2026

Quick Definition: Qualified annuities are funded with pre-tax dollars (IRA, 401k rollover) and follow retirement account rules. Non-qualified annuities are funded with after-tax money and have different tax treatment. The distinction affects contributions, withdrawals, and taxation.

Key Differences

FeatureQualified AnnuityNon-Qualified Annuity
Funding sourceIRA, 401k, pre-tax dollarsAfter-tax savings
Contribution limitsYes (IRA limits: $7,000-$8,000/year)No limits
Tax on growthDeferred until withdrawalDeferred until withdrawal
Withdrawal taxation100% taxableOnly gains taxable
RMDs requiredYes, starting age 73No
Early withdrawal penalty10% IRS penalty before 59Β½10% IRS penalty before 59Β½

Qualified Annuities (IRA Annuities)

Funded with retirement account money. Common sources:

Taxation: Since you never paid tax on contributions, 100% of withdrawals are taxable as ordinary income.

RMDs: Must start taking required minimum distributions at age 73, calculated based on IRS life expectancy tables.

Non-Qualified Annuities

Funded with money you already paid taxes on. No contribution limitsβ€”you can invest $500K if you want.

Taxation: Only growth is taxable. Your original premium comes back tax-free. Uses exclusion ratio to determine taxable portion of each payment.

No RMDs: Money can grow tax-deferred indefinitely. No forced withdrawals.

Which Is Better?

Qualified makes sense if:

Non-qualified makes sense if:

The Bottom Line

Qualified annuities follow IRA rules: fully taxable withdrawals, RMDs required, contribution limits. Non-qualified annuities have no limits, no RMDs, and only gains are taxable. Choose based on funding source and tax goals.