Florida Annuity Calculator 2026
Estimate your monthly retirement income from a lump-sum annuity purchase in Florida. Includes Florida state tax (no state income tax) and 1.0% state premium tax on your payout.
How Florida Annuity Payouts Work
An annuity converts a lump-sum payment into a guaranteed income stream for retirement. In Florida, the most common type is an immediate fixed annuity — you pay a premium and receive monthly checks within 30 days. Florida Florida charges a 1.0% premium tax, reducing your net invested amount. Payout rates depend on your age at purchase: older buyers receive higher monthly amounts because the payment period is shorter.
Our calculator uses standard industry payout factors (age 65 = $5.50/mo per $1,000 invested, scaling to $9.00/mo at age 80) and interpolates linearly for other ages. These are estimates; actual rates vary by insurer and market interest rates.
Florida Taxes on Annuity Income
Florida has no state income tax on annuity payouts. On the federal side, annuity payouts from non-qualified contracts are partially taxable — the IRS taxes the earnings portion at ordinary income rates. This calculator uses a 22% effective federal rate as a conservative estimate for middle-income retirees. Florida does not impose a state income tax, so your annuity income is not taxed at the state level. You still owe federal income tax.
For qualified annuities (funded with pre-tax dollars such as a rollover IRA), 100% of each payment is taxable at ordinary rates. Always consult a CPA for your specific situation.
Choosing the Right Annuity Type in Florida
Immediate fixed annuities provide the highest certainty — the payout rate is locked at purchase. Deferred fixed annuities accumulate interest tax-deferred before the payout phase begins. Variable and fixed-index annuities link growth to market performance, offering upside potential but less predictable income. For retirees prioritizing a predictable budget, immediate or deferred fixed types are often recommended. Joint and survivor options reduce monthly income slightly but protect a spouse if the primary annuitant dies first.