I'm assisting an elderly lady straighten up her financial affairs after the passing of her husband this past May. He had a non-qualified annuity of which she is the sole beneficiary. It is not yet transferred to her name. I notified the company that holds the annuity of the annuitant's passing and they are sending paperwork to my client so that she can access the funds.
My question: The annuity is valued at $105,000. The deceased ACB in the annuity is $100,000. Will the $5,000 be automatically considered income on the 2009 tax return? I'm not sure if my client will be able to have the paperwork complete by year end, as she has not received it as of today and is leaving out of town for the holidays.
I'm trying to figure how much dollars she should take as a distribution from her IRA and need to know whether the $5000 from the annuity will definitely be included in income. She has the option to renew the contract to term, partial withdrawl or withdraw the whole thing. My conundrum is she won't be dealing with it until 2010 -I imagine if she elects for a partial withdrawl (the income portion) it will be 2010 income as it is distributed in 2010?
Thanks
Carolyn
My question: The annuity is valued at $105,000. The deceased ACB in the annuity is $100,000. Will the $5,000 be automatically considered income on the 2009 tax return? I'm not sure if my client will be able to have the paperwork complete by year end, as she has not received it as of today and is leaving out of town for the holidays.
I'm trying to figure how much dollars she should take as a distribution from her IRA and need to know whether the $5000 from the annuity will definitely be included in income. She has the option to renew the contract to term, partial withdrawl or withdraw the whole thing. My conundrum is she won't be dealing with it until 2010 -I imagine if she elects for a partial withdrawl (the income portion) it will be 2010 income as it is distributed in 2010?
Thanks
Carolyn
Comment