LindaA
Expert Alumni

Retirement tax questions

Form 1099-R is used to report distributions from pensions, annuities, retirement or profit-sharing plans, IRAs, insurance contracts, etc.

Proceeds from life insurance policies are generally not taxable to the recipient, unless the contract itself has been sold or there is something unusual about the policy.  Life insurance companies also sell certain financial products that are sometimes marketed as "life insurance" policies but do not meet the strict legal definition of such.

Your best source of determining the taxability of the proceeds in this case is to look at the Form 1099-R itself.  There should be a payout amount in Box 1 (Gross Distributions). Is there a similar sum in Box 2a (Taxable Amount), or is the Box 2b (Taxable Amount Not Determined) checked instead?

If the former, then it is a taxable policy; if the latter, then it probably is not a taxable payout, and is indeed a life insurance policy. Regardless, you'll need to enter the Form 1099-R on your tax return this year as the recipient.

For further details or an explanation about the proceeds, contact the insurance company itself. You might also find this IRS FAQ helpful: http://www.irs.gov/Help-&-Resources/Tools-&-FAQs/FAQs-for-Individuals/Frequently-Asked-Tax-Questions...