Annuities
Taxes on Bonds vs. Annuities
THE PROBLEM
Bonds Are Not as Tax-Efficient as You Think
Every year you hold a bond, the IRS sends a bill. The interest you earn is taxed as ordinary income — annually, whether you want it or not.
Unlike stocks, where you only owe taxes when you sell, bonds generate mandatory annual taxable income. On a $400,000 bond portfolio earning 4%, a taxpayer in the 32% bracket owes roughly $5,120 in federal income tax every year — before state taxes.
A Fixed Index Annuity solves this problem entirely. All credited interest accumulates tax-deferred inside the contract — no annual 1099, no annual tax bill, no compounding drag. You pay tax only when you choose to withdraw.
And the three most common bond types — municipal, Treasury, and corporate — are not all taxed the same way. Understanding the differences is essential before putting any money into bonds as a “safe money” strategy.
“The best-kept secret in retirement planning isn’t a hot stock tip — it’s understanding that when you pay taxes matters as much as how much you pay.”
at 4% yield — 32% bracket, 6% state rate, Year 1
| Bond Type | Annual Tax | Net Kept |
|---|---|---|
| Municipal Bond | $608 | $15,392 |
| U.S. Treasury Bond | $5,728 | $10,272 |
| Corporate Bond | $6,688 | $9,312 |
| Bond Alternative (FIA) | $0 | $16,000* |
*FIA credited interest is illustrative based on S&P 500 price return, 0%/10% cap strategy. Actual results vary by product and year. Hypothetical for educational purposes only.
KNOW THE DIFFERENCE
Not All Bonds Are Taxed The Same
Before comparing to a Fixed Index Annuity, it is important to understand that the three most common bond types each carry a very different tax profile. Most advisers lump them together as "bonds" — but from a tax standpoint, they are three completely different instruments.
Federally tax-exempt — but not always state-exempt
Interest is exempt from federal income tax. However, bonds issued outside your home state are typically subject to state and local income taxes. Certain private activity bonds may also trigger the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). Still subject to the 3.8% NIIT for higher earners.
Federally taxable — exempt from state and local tax
Interest is fully subject to federal income tax (up to 37%) but is exempt from all state and local income taxes by federal law. Capital gains on bonds sold before maturity are also taxable. The 3.8% NIIT applies to higher earners.
Fully taxable at every level
Interest is subject to federal income tax, state income tax, and local income tax where applicable — making corporate bonds the least tax-efficient of the three. Combined federal and state rates can exceed 50% for top earners in high-tax states.
FEDERAL TAX COMPARISON
Every Tax — Side by Side
All comparisons assume a non-qualified (after-tax) account — the most common scenario for retirees holding bonds or annuities outside of an IRA or 401(k).
| Tax Category | Municipal Bonds |
U.S. Treasury Bonds |
Corporate Bonds |
Bond Alternative (FIA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Taxes | ||||
| Annual Interest Income TaxTax owed each year on interest received | Exempt Federal only |
10%–37% Annually |
10%–37% Annually |
$0 Deferred |
| Short-Term Capital GainsIf bond sold before 12 months | 10%–37% | 10%–37% | 10%–37% | Not applicable |
| Long-Term Capital GainsOn sale of appreciated bond before maturity | 0%, 15%, 20% | 0%, 15%, 20% | 0%, 15%, 20% | Not applicable |
| Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)3.8% surtax — single >$200K, married >$250K | +3.8% | +3.8% | +3.8% | Excluded Annuity distributions exempt |
| Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)Certain private activity muni bonds only | Possible | No | No | No |
| State & Local Taxes | ||||
| State Income Tax on InterestAnnual — added to taxable income each year | Varies Exempt if in-state; taxable if out-of-state |
Exempt All 50 states |
0%–13.3% Fully taxable in most states |
Deferred |
| Local / City Tax on InterestNYC, Philadelphia, and other cities | Sometimes | Generally exempt | Fully taxable | Deferred |
| State Capital Gains Tax on SaleMost states tax capital gains as ordinary income | 0%–13.3% | 0%–13.3% | 0%–13.3% | Deferred until withdrawal |
| Accumulation & Compounding Impact | ||||
| Annual Tax Drag on CompoundingTax paid each year reduces principal available to compound | Low–Moderate | Moderate | High | None |
| Annual Tax Reporting Required1099-INT issued each year regardless of whether you sell | Yes — 1099-INT | Yes — 1099-INT | Yes — 1099-INT | No — only at withdrawal |
| Overall Tax Efficiency During Accumulation | Moderate | Moderate | Low | High |
YEAR 1 ILLUSTRATION
What the Tax Difference Actually Costs You
Hypothetical $400,000 invested at 4% gross yield. Taxpayer in the 32% federal bracket, 6% state income tax rate, income exceeds NIIT threshold. Non-qualified (after-tax) account.
| Line Item | Municipal Bond |
U.S. Treasury Bond |
Corporate Bond |
Bond Alternative (FIA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross interest earned4% × $400,000 | $16,000 | $16,000 | $16,000 | $16,000* |
| Federal income tax32% bracket | $0 | –$5,120 | –$5,120 | $0 |
| State income tax6% rate (in-state muni exempt) | $0 | $0 | –$960 | $0 |
| Net Investment Income Tax3.8% — income exceeds threshold | –$608 | –$608 | –$608 | $0 |
| Total tax paid in Year 1 | $608 | $5,728 | $6,688 | $0 |
| Net kept / compounding | $15,392 | $10,272 | $9,312 | $16,000* |
| Gross interest earned4% × $400,000 | $16,000 | $16,000 | $16,000 | $16,000* |
| Federal income tax32% bracket | $0 | –$5,120 | –$5,120 | $0 |
| State income tax6% rate (in-state muni exempt) | $0 | $0 | –$960 | $0 |
| Net Investment Income Tax3.8% — income exceeds threshold | –$608 | –$608 | –$608 | $0 |
| Total tax paid in Year 1 | $608 | $5,728 | $6,688 | $0 |
| Net kept / compounding | $15,392 | $10,272 | $9,312 | $16,000* |
*FIA credited interest is illustrative based on S&P 500 price return, 0%/10% annual cap. Actual credited interest varies by product and year. All comparisons assume a non-qualified account. Hypothetical for educational purposes only.
Even though municipal bonds outperform the FIA on a pure after-tax basis at the same 4% yield, the FIA's real advantage shows up in the credited rate — not the tax treatment alone. Over 2015–2025, the FIA strategy averaged +7.14% per year vs. +1.30% for IEF. When you combine a higher credited rate with zero annual tax drag, the compounding difference over 10–20 years becomes substantial.
All gains inside a Fixed Index Annuity are taxed as ordinary income at withdrawal — not at the lower long-term capital gains rate. Additionally, annuity assets do not receive a step-up in basis at death — heirs pay ordinary income tax on accumulated gains, whereas inherited bonds receive a step-up that eliminates capital gains tax entirely. The Bond Alternative is most advantageous during the accumulation phase, and estate planning considerations should always be discussed with a qualified advisor.
STATE-BY-STATE IMPACT
How State Income Tax Changes the Equation
THE RISKS
What Risks Do Bonds Have That FIAs Don’t?
The Risks That Threaten Bonds
Even when held to maturity, individual bonds carry risks that most investors overlook. Here is how each risk compares to a Fixed Index Annuity — and how the Bond Alternative is specifically designed to eliminate or reduce them.
Inflation Risk
A fixed coupon never adjusts upward. When inflation runs above your bond's yield — as it did in 2021–2022 — you lose real purchasing power every year you hold it. The longer the term, the greater the damage.
Tax Rate Risk
Bond interest is taxed as ordinary income every year at whatever rate Congress sets — you have no ability to defer or time it. If tax rates rise in the future, your annual bond tax bill rises automatically with no recourse.
Reinvestment Risk
When your bond matures or pays a coupon, that cash must be reinvested at whatever rates are available then — which may be far lower than your original rate. Income can erode significantly as your bond ladder rolls over.
Credit & Default Risk
Corporate and municipal bonds can default — leaving you with partial or zero recovery. Puerto Rico, Detroit, and numerous investment-grade issuers during 2008 are examples. U.S. Treasuries are the exception, not the rule.
Opportunity Cost Risk
When rates rise after you buy, you are locked into a below-market coupon for the full bond term. New buyers collect 4–5% while you collect 2%. That gap in income over a decade is a real and substantial cost, even if you receive par value at maturity.
Liquidity Risk
Corporate and municipal bonds trade in dealer markets with wide spreads and thin liquidity. Selling before maturity in a stress environment often means accepting a below-market price — precisely when you need the money most.
Sequence of Returns Risk
If you must sell bonds before maturity or roll over at a low-rate moment right as you begin withdrawals, the income reduction can permanently impair your retirement plan. Bonds offer no protection against unfavorable timing. Learn more about Sequence of Returns Risk →
Legislative Risk
The federal tax exemption for municipal bonds has been debated in Congress multiple times. If eliminated, existing muni holders would face immediate new annual tax bills. Treasury and corporate bond holders face the same risk from any income tax rate increase.
The Bond Fund Alternative:
Your Safe-Money Strategy
2015–2025
In 11 Years
On $100K
Guaranteed
A complete comparison of Bond ETFs vs. the Bond Alternative strategy — with 11 years of real data.
Download Our FREE Guide: Your Safe Money Deserves More
Some advisors invest their clients' retirement income in bond funds, which are different than investing directly into bonds. There is a difference between the two and you can learn more about bond funds on our Annuities vs. Bond Funds page. We've also put together a clear, simple comparison of the top bond ETFs against the Bond Fund Alternative strategy — using 11 years of real market data (2015–2025). You'll see exactly how much the difference in returns and principal protection can mean for your retirement.
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