retirement · 2026-05-01
Decide between a pension lump sum vs lifetime monthly annuity by comparing the present value of the annuity stream against the lump sum offer.
| Lump sum offer | $350,000 |
| Monthly annuity offer | $2,400 |
| Your age now | 65 |
| Your life expectancy | 87 |
| Your discount rate % | 5% |
| Annuity COLA % | 0% |
| Annuity present value | $387,706 |
| Annuity break-even age | 77 |
| Lifetime annuity total | $633,600 |
When a company offers you both options at retirement, they've already done the actuarial math. The lump sum is calibrated to be slightly favorable to them — they're shifting longevity + investment risk to you. Whether you should take it depends on three things they don't know: your discount rate, your real life expectancy, and your cash-flow needs.
Use your realistic expected return if you invested the lump sum at your risk tolerance. 60/40 stocks/bonds: ~5-6% real return historically. 100% stocks: 6-8%. Bonds-only: 3-4%. The advisor 'standard' is 5-6% for most retirees. If you'd just put the lump sum in a SPIA (Single Premium Immediate Annuity), use that quoted rate.
Some plans allow this — take 30% lump sum + 70% annuity. Reduces longevity exposure while keeping protected-income floor. Often the optimal answer for retirees who can't decide. Ask HR if it's offered; most large pensions allow some flexibility.
PBGC insures pensions up to ~$85k/yr (2024) per individual at age 65. If your annuity is below the PBGC max, the annuity is essentially government-guaranteed. If it's above, take the lump sum to avoid haircut risk — Sears retirees with $120k pensions got cut to PBGC max when the company failed.