What Is a QLAC?
Qualified Longevity Annuity Contract (QLAC)Qualified Longevity Annuity Contract (QLAC)
A deferred income annuity purchased within a qualified retirement account (Traditional IRA, 401(k), 403(b), or governmental 457(b)) that receives a special tax exemption: the QLAC premium is excluded from the account balance used to calculate required minimum distributions (RMDs). Income can be deferred up to age 85. Maximum premium is $200,000 per person under the SECURE 2.0 Act. Guarantees are backed by the issuing insurer’s financial strength and claims-paying ability. Not FDIC-insured.
A QLAC solves two problems at once: it reduces your tax bill today by lowering required minimum distributions, and it guarantees income tomorrow for the years when longevity risk is greatest.
Here is the core idea. When you turn 73, the IRS forces you to withdraw a minimum amount from your IRA or 401(k) every year — your required minimum distribution (RMD). These withdrawals are taxable, and for retirees with large qualified accounts, they can push you into a higher tax bracket or trigger Medicare premium surcharges (IRMAA). A QLAC removes up to $200,000 from that RMD calculation, reducing your annual tax hit while converting those funds into guaranteed lifetime income that begins when you choose.
QLACs were created by Treasury regulations in 2014 and significantly expanded by the SECURE 2.0 Act in 2022, which raised the maximum premium from $145,000 to $200,000 and eliminated the old 25%-of-account-balance limit. These changes made QLACs accessible and practical for a much wider range of retirees.
How a QLAC Works: Step by Step
- You purchase a QLAC inside your qualified account. The premium (up to $200,000) is transferred from your Traditional IRA, 401(k), or other eligible account to an insurance company. The purchase itself is not a taxable event.
- Your RMD base drops immediately. The QLAC premium is subtracted from your account balance for RMD calculations. If your IRA was $800,000 and you buy a $200,000 QLAC, your RMDs are now calculated on $600,000 — a 25% reduction in taxable distributions.
- You choose when income starts (up to age 85). Common choices: age 75, 80, or 85. Later start = higher monthly payment.
- During the deferral period — lower RMDs. You continue taking RMDs from the remaining (non-QLAC) portion of your IRA, but the RMD amounts are smaller because the QLAC premium has been removed from the calculation. This tax savings compounds each year.
- When income starts — guaranteed payments for life. Monthly payments begin at your selected age and continue for life. All payments are fully taxable as ordinary income (since funded with pre-tax qualified money). QLAC payments satisfy your RMD obligation for the year they are received.
The QLAC Tax Advantage: RMD Reduction
Tax Disclaimer: The following is general educational information only and does not constitute tax advice. RMD calculations, tax brackets, and IRMAA thresholds change. Consult a qualified tax professional before making QLAC decisions.
How the RMD exemption works
The RMD exemption is what makes a QLAC different from a standard DIA purchased inside an IRA. Without a QLAC, every dollar in your IRA — including money in a standard DIA — is included in your RMD calculation. With a QLAC, the premium amount is subtracted before the calculation.
Illustrative example
Scenario: You are 73, your Traditional IRA balance is $800,000, and you purchase a $200,000 QLAC with income starting at age 80.
Without QLAC: RMD calculated on $800,000. At age 73 (IRS factor 26.5), your RMD is approximately $30,189. Taxed as ordinary income.
With QLAC: RMD calculated on $600,000 ($800K minus $200K QLAC). Your RMD is approximately $22,642. That is $7,547 less in taxable income this year alone.
Cumulative impact: Over the 7-year deferral period (age 73–80), the reduced RMDs could save approximately $40,000–$60,000 in taxes depending on your bracket. And at age 80, the QLAC starts paying guaranteed income for life.
Note: These figures are illustrative, using 2026 IRS life expectancy tables. Actual RMDs depend on your specific account balance and age. The tax savings depend on your marginal rate.
Who benefits most from the RMD reduction?
The tax savings are largest for retirees who meet one or more of these criteria:
- Large IRA balances ($500K+): Larger accounts mean larger RMDs and higher tax impact
- Near or above a tax bracket boundary: Reducing RMDs by $7,000–$10,000 annually may keep you in a lower bracket
- Near IRMAA thresholds: Medicare Part B and D premiums increase when modified adjusted gross income exceeds certain levels. Reducing RMDs can keep you below these thresholds, saving $1,000–$5,000+ per year in premium surcharges
- Subject to Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT): Lower AGI from reduced RMDs can help avoid the 3.8% NIIT surcharge
- Receiving Social Security: Lower income from reduced RMDs may reduce the portion of Social Security benefits subject to tax
SECURE 2.0 Act: How QLACs Changed in 2022
The SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 made three significant changes that expanded QLAC accessibility:
Rule | Before SECURE 2.0 | After SECURE 2.0 (Current) |
|---|---|---|
Maximum premium | $145,000 (or 25% of account balance, whichever less) | $200,000 (no percentage limit) |
Percentage-of-balance limit | 25% of total qualified account balance | Eliminated — flat $200,000 regardless of account size |
Inflation indexing | Yes, in $10,000 increments | Yes, in $10,000 increments |
Roth 401(k) RMDs | Roth 401(k) subject to RMDs | No RMDs for Roth 401(k) (eliminating potential QLAC use case) |
RMD starting age | Age 72 | Age 73 (increasing to 75 in 2033) |
The elimination of the 25% limit was the most impactful change. Previously, someone with a $400,000 IRA could only put $100,000 into a QLAC (25% of $400K), even though the dollar cap was $145,000. Now, anyone with at least $200,000 in qualified accounts can purchase the maximum QLAC regardless of total account size.
QLAC vs. Standard DIA: Key Differences
Feature | QLAC | Standard DIA |
|---|---|---|
Funding source | Qualified accounts only (IRA, 401k, 403b, 457b) | Any source — qualified, non-qualified, 1035 exchange |
Maximum premium | $200,000 per person (SECURE 2.0) | No limit |
RMD exemption | Yes — premium excluded from RMD calculation | No — premium still included in RMD base |
Latest income start | Age 85 | No regulatory limit (carrier-specific, typically up to age 95+) |
Death benefit during deferral | Generally required (ROP standard on most contracts) | Optional — ROP available but not required |
Tax on payments | 100% taxable as ordinary income | Non-qualified: exclusion ratio (partial tax-free). Qualified: 100% taxable. |
Roth IRA eligible | No | Yes (though no RMD benefit from Roth) |
Payout options | Same: Life, Period Certain, Joint, Refund | Same: Life, Period Certain, Joint, Refund |
Best for | Reducing RMDs while creating future income from IRA/401k | Creating future income from any source, no premium limit |
When to use which: If your primary goal is reducing RMDs from a qualified account and you need $200,000 or less in deferred income, use a QLAC. If you need more than $200,000 in deferred income, or if you are funding with non-qualified (after-tax) money, use a standard DIA. You can use both: a $200,000 QLAC from your IRA plus additional DIA purchases from other savings.
Which Accounts Qualify?
Eligible for QLAC
Traditional IRA, SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, 401(k), 403(b), Governmental 457(b)
NOT Eligible for QLAC
Roth IRA (no RMDs during owner’s lifetime), Roth 401(k) (no RMDs under SECURE 2.0), taxable brokerage accounts, savings accounts, non-qualified annuities
Roth IRAs are not eligible because they are not subject to RMDs during the owner’s lifetime under SECURE 2.0. Since the entire purpose of a QLAC is to defer RMDs, there is no tax benefit to purchasing one inside a Roth. If you want a deferred income annuity from a Roth IRA, you can purchase a standard DIA — but you would not receive any RMD exemption (nor would you need one).
The $200,000 limit is per person, not per account
If you have multiple IRAs, you can split the QLAC purchase across accounts or buy from a single IRA, but the total across all qualified accounts cannot exceed $200,000. Married couples can each purchase up to $200,000 from their own respective qualified accounts, for a combined household total of $400,000.