The post 63-Year-Old With $2.2M Discovers Pension Buyout Decision Could Cost His Widow $310,000 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
If you’re lucky enough to have a pension, be careful with your payout choices. Pension elections are irreversible. Under many plans, Option A pays the highest monthly income for the pension holder’s life only. Option B pays less monthly but continues to the spouse if the pension holder dies first. Option C offers a lump sum to roll into an IRA.
Women outlive men by several years on average. A 63-year-old husband and similarly aged wife face a survivor period that could stretch a decade or longer. During that window, she still needs housing, healthcare premiums, and inflation-adjusted spending money. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, core PCE, has climbed steadily over the past year, a reminder that even “controlled” inflation erodes fixed payments over a survivor’s horizon.
Social Security helps but rarely fills the gap. The 2026 Social Security COLA came in at 2.8%, which cushions inflation on that slice of income. A single-life pension has no such cushion and stops entirely at the retiree’s death.
The single-life annuity pays the largest monthly check but zeroes out on his death. The joint-and-survivor annuity trims the monthly check (typically 10% to 20%) in exchange for continuing payments to his wife, often at 100%, 75%, 50%, or 25% of the original benefit. The lump sum converts the whole thing into a portable IRA balance he controls and invests.
The lump sum’s fairness depends almost entirely on the discount rate the plan uses. With the 10-year Treasury near 4.5% and the 30-year near 5%, plans are discounting future obligations at elevated rates. That mechanically shrinks lump-sum offers relative to the annuity’s economic value. In a higher-rate environment like today’s, the annuitized options usually win the present-value contest.
A quick sanity check helps. Divide the annual pension by the lump sum. If the ratio clears 6%, the monthly check is usually the better deal. On the Clark Howard podcast recently, advisor Wes Moss ran that math on a listener’s offer: $411 a month versus a $58,000 lump sum worked out to roughly 8.5%, and he leaned toward the monthly payment.
The gap between single-life and joint-and-survivor payout is essentially the price of insuring his wife’s income. Let’s assume our retiree has a $2.2 million pension. If he takes single-life and dies at 72, she loses roughly a decade of pension checks. Compounded and inflation-adjusted, that is where the $310,000 shortfall comes from.
The joint-and-survivor option is the default answer for most married couples. It offers a lifetime income stream that neither spouse can outlive. And federal pension insurance backstops most private plans up to statutory limits.
The pension max strategy takes the higher single-life payout and uses the difference to buy a level-premium life insurance policy on the retiree. It can work only if three things line up:
If the lump sum is on the table, model what withdrawal rate his wife would need if he dies at 70. A safe starting point is 4% of the balance, adjusted for inflation. With the Fed Funds Rate near 3.75% and long Treasuries near 5%, a conservative bond ladder can lock in real yields, but sequence-of-returns risk in her early widowhood is a risk.
Run the numbers with her as the sole account owner. If a 4% draw does not cover her essential expenses net of Social Security, the lump sum is not safer than the joint-and-survivor annuity. It just feels safer because the balance is visible.
Ask the plan for the exact monthly amounts under 100%, 75%, and 50% joint-and-survivor, alongside the single-life and lump-sum figures. The spread between single-life and 100% J&S is the real cost of protecting his wife, and it is often smaller than retirees assume. Second, get a preliminary life insurance quote before considering pension max, so the strategy is evaluated on real premiums instead of hypothetical ones.
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The post 63-Year-Old With $2.2M Discovers Pension Buyout Decision Could Cost His Widow $310,000 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


