The Basic Idea
A Deferred Income Annuity (DIA) is a contract where you pay a lump sum now, and the insurance company commits to paying you a guaranteed stream of income starting at a future date you choose — often five, ten, or more years out.
Think of it as buying tomorrow's paycheck at today's price. You're not accessing income now; you're locking in a known, guaranteed amount for later.
DIA vs. SPIA: What's the Difference?
Both are income annuities, and both work off the same basic principle — you hand over a lump sum, the insurer guarantees you income. The difference is timing:
- SPIA (Single Premium Immediate Annuity): income starts almost right away, usually within a year
- DIA (Deferred Income Annuity): income starts at a future date you select when you buy the contract
Because a DIA gives the insurer more time to invest your premium before paying it out, the same deposit often buys a meaningfully larger income stream than an immediate annuity would — assuming you're comfortable waiting.
Why Someone Buys a DIA
The classic use case: someone in their late 50s or early 60s who wants to guarantee a paycheck starting at, say, age 70 — effectively building their own private pension for a specific future date. It's also used to fill a known income gap, like bridging the years between an early retirement and when Social Security or a pension kicks in at full value.
How Payments Are Calculated
Your future income amount depends on a few factors locked in at purchase: your deposit, your age, the deferral period (how long until payments start), and the payout option you choose (single life, joint life, a guaranteed minimum period, and so on). Once the contract is issued, that income amount is generally fixed and guaranteed — you know today exactly what you'll receive starting on your chosen date.
The Trade-Off: Liquidity
This is the honest part. Once you buy a DIA, that money is largely committed to the income stream you've selected. Some contracts offer limited liquidity features or a return-of-premium option, but the core design is meant to be permanent — you're trading access to a lump sum for the certainty of guaranteed future income. It's not the right tool for money you might need for something else.
Who a DIA Tends to Fit
- Someone who has a specific future date in mind when they'll want guaranteed income
- Someone comfortable committing a portion of savings permanently in exchange for a locked-in payout
- Someone trying to close a known gap between retirement and other income sources
The Bottom Line
A DIA is a precise tool for a specific job: guaranteeing a known income stream starting at a future date of your choosing. It's less flexible than a MYGA, but for the right situation — closing an income gap, building a personal pension — it does something few other financial products can replicate with the same certainty.
Questions about your specific situation? Contact Devin for a free, no-pressure conversation. Independent, licensed, and never a call center.