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Structured settlement
Structured settlement
from Wikipedia

A structured settlement is a negotiated financial or insurance arrangement through which a claimant agrees to resolve a personal injury tort claim by receiving part or all of a settlement in the form of periodic payments on an agreed schedule, rather than as a lump sum. As part of the negotiations, a structured settlement may be offered by the defendant or requested by the plaintiff. Ultimately both parties must agree on the terms of settlement. A settlement may allow the parties to a lawsuit to reduce legal and other costs by avoiding trial.[1] Structured settlements are most widely used in the United States, but are also utilized in Canada, England and Australia.

Structured settlements were first utilized in Canada as part of the settlement of birth defect claims arising out of pregnant mothers ingesting Thalidomide.[2] Structured settlements are now used in a wide variety of types of lawsuit settlements such as aviation, construction, auto, medical malpractice and product liability.

Structured settlements may include income tax and spendthrift provisions. Often the periodic payments will be funded through the purchase of one or more annuities, that generate the future payments. Structured settlement payments are sometimes called periodical payments, and when incorporated into a trial judgment may be called a "structured judgment".[3]

United States

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Structured settlements became more popular in the United States during the 1970s as an alternative to lump sum settlements.[4] The increased popularity was due to several rulings by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), an increase in personal injury awards, and higher interest rates. The IRS rulings stated that if certain requirements were met, claimants would owe no federal income tax on the amounts received.[5] Higher interest rates result in lower present values, hence lower cost of funding of future periodic payments.

In the United States, structured settlement laws and regulations have been enacted at both the federal and the state levels. Federal structured settlement laws include various provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.[6] State structured settlement laws include structured settlement protection statutes and periodic payment of judgment statutes. There are 47 states with structured settlement protection acts, created by a model promulgated by the National Conference of Insurance Legislators ("NCOIL"). Of the 47 states, 37 are based in whole or in part on the NCOIL model act. Medicaid and Medicare laws and regulations affect structured settlements. A structured settlement may be used in conjunction with settlement planning tools that help preserve a claimant's Medicare benefits. A Structured Medicare Set Aside Arrangement (MSA) generally costs less than a non-structured MSA because of amortization of the future cash flow over the claimant's life expectancy, as opposed to funding all the payments otherwise due in the future in a single non-discounted sum today.

Structured settlements have been endorsed by many of the nation's largest disability rights organizations, including the American Association of People with Disabilities,[7] and for a time there was a Congressional Structured Settlement Caucus.[8]

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The typical structured settlement arises and is structured as follows: An injured party (the claimant) comes to a negotiated settlement of a tort suit with the defendant (or its insurance carrier) pursuant to a settlement agreement that provides as consideration, in exchange for the claimant's securing the dismissal of the lawsuit, an agreement by the defendant (or, more commonly, its insurer) to make a series of periodic payments.

If any of the periodic payments are life-contingent (i.e. the obligation to make a payment is contingent on someone continuing to be alive), then the claimant (or whoever is determined to be the measuring life) is named as the annuitant or measuring life under the annuity. In some instances the purchasing company may purchase a life insurance policy as a hedge in case of death in a settlement transfer.

Assigned cases

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The defendant, or the property/casualty insurance company, generally assigns its periodic payment obligation to a third party by way of a qualified assignment ("assigned case").[9] An assignment is said to be "qualified" if it satisfies the criteria set forth in Internal Revenue Code Section 130.[10] Qualification of the assignment is important to assignment companies because without it the amount they receive to induce them to accept periodic payment obligations would be considered income for federal income tax purposes. If an assignment qualifies under Section 130, however, the amount received is excluded from the income of the assignment company. This provision of the tax code was enacted to encourage assigned cases; without it, assignment companies would owe federal income taxes but would typically have no source from which to make the payments.

The qualified assignment company receives money from the defendant or property/casualty insurer, and in turn purchases a "qualified funding asset" to finance the assigned periodic payment obligation.[11] Pursuant to IRC 130(d) a "qualified funding asset" may be an annuity or an obligation of the United States government.

In an assigned case, the defendant or property/casualty company does not wish to retain the long-term periodic payment obligation on its books. Accordingly, the defendant or property/casualty insurer transfers the obligation, through a legal device called a qualified assignment, to a third party. The third party, called an assignment company, will require the defendant or property/casualty company to pay it an amount sufficient to enable it to buy an annuity that will fund its newly accepted periodic payment obligation. If the claimant consents to the transfer of the periodic payment obligation (either in the settlement agreement or, failing that, in a special form of qualified assignment known as a qualified assignment and release), the defendant and/or its property/casualty company has no further liability to make the periodic payments. This method of substituting the obligor is desirable for defendants or property/casualty companies that do not want to retain the periodic payment obligation on their books. A qualified assignment is also advantageous for the claimant as it will not have to rely on the continued credit of the defendant or property/casualty company as a general creditor. Typically, an assignment company is an affiliate of the life insurance company from which the annuity is purchased.

Unassigned cases

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In the less common unassigned case, the defendant or property/casualty insurer retains the periodic payment obligation and funds it by purchasing an annuity from a life insurance company, thereby offsetting its obligation with a matching asset. The payment stream purchased under the annuity matches exactly, in timing and amounts, the periodic payments agreed to in the settlement agreement. The defendant or property/casualty company owns the annuity and names the claimant as the payee under the annuity, thereby directing the annuity issuer to send payments directly to the claimant. One of the reasons an unassigned case is less popular is that the obligation is not truly off the books, and the defendant or casualty insurer retains a contingent liability. While a default is a rare occurrence, contingent liability did come into play with the liquidation of Executive Life Insurance Company of New York.[12] Some annuitants suffered shortfalls, and a number of obligors at the wrong end of unassigned cases made up the difference.

Tax issues

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In 1982, Congress adopted special tax rules to encourage the use of structured settlements to provide long-term financial security to seriously injured victims and their families.[13][14] These structured settlement rules, as codified in the enactment of the Periodic Payment Settlement Act of 1982, which established Section 130 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (IRC) and in amendments to section 104(a)(2) of the Code, have been in place working effectively since then. In the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, Congress extended the structured settlements to worker's compensation to cover physical injuries suffered in the workplace. A "structured settlement" under the tax code's terms is an "arrangement" that meets the following requirements.

Damages on the account of personal physical injury, physical sickness and workers compensation are income tax free due to exclusions provided in IRC section 104.[15] The structured settlement tax rules enacted by Congress lay down a bright line path for a structured settlement. Once the plaintiff and defense have settled the tort claim in exchange for periodic payments to be made by the defendant (or the defendant's insurer), the full amount of the periodic payments constitutes tax-free damages to the victim. The defendant, or its insurer, may assign its periodic payment obligation to a qualified assignment company (typically a single purpose affiliate of a life insurer) that funds its assumed obligation with an annuity purchased from its affiliated life insurer. The rules also permit the assignee to fund its periodic payment obligation under the structured settlement via U.S. Treasury obligations. However, this U.S. Treasury obligation approach is used much less frequently because of lower returns and the relative inflexibility of payment schedules available under Treasury obligations. In this way, with a qualified assignment, there is a legal novation, the defendant or insurer can close its books on the liability, and the claimant can receive the long-term financial security of an annuity (or annuities) issued by one or more financially strong life insurance companies.

What makes this work is the tax exclusion to the qualified assignment company afforded by IRC section 130.[16] Without the tax exclusion, the cost of assignment would be higher, because the assignment company would need to recognize the premium as income. The resulting net after tax amount would be insufficient to fund the assumed obligation.

To qualify for special tax treatment, a structured settlement must meet the following requirements:

  • A structured settlement must be established by:
    • A suit or agreement for periodic payment of damages excludable from gross income under Internal Revenue Code Section 104(a)(2) (26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2)); or
    • An agreement for the periodic payment of compensation under any workers' compensation law excludable under Internal Revenue Code Section 104(a)(1) (26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(1)); and
  • The periodic payments must be of the character described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of Internal Revenue Code Section 130(c)(2) (26 U.S.C. § 130(c)(2))) and must be payable by a person who:
    • Is a party to the suit or agreement or to a workers' compensation claim; or
    • By a person who has assumed the liability for such periodic payments under a qualified assignment in accordance with Internal Revenue Code Section 130 (26 U.S.C. § 130).

Sales of rights to structured settlement payments

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A claimant who has agreed to a negotiated structured settlement elects to receive part of their settlement money at the time of settlement, and part of their settlement money in the future through a negotiated, customized schedule of periodic payments that are "fixed and determinable as to amount and time of payment."[16] The life insurance companies who underwrite these periodic payment obligations and the associated qualified assignment companies, must comply with the Internal Revenue Code 130,[16] which, in part, does not allow for acceleration or modification of payments. Options exist for structured settlement annuitants to sell or transfer the rights to future periodic payments to purchasers of structured settlement payment rights, mostly known as structured settlement factoring companies. Some life insurers, such as Berkshire Hathaway Life Insurance Company of Nebraska, and former structured annuity issuers Allstate Life Insurance Company and Symetra, offer to buy part or all of one's structured settlement payment rights in return for a lump sum cash provided such transaction complies with IRC §5891.[6]

Although many beneficiaries of a structured settlement find that the settlement suits their needs, some may experience changed financial circumstances and find themselves unable to obtain funds through conventional financing or other sources. They may want to obtain funds from the structured settlement in order to pay down debt, help pay for a house, help pay for a child's college tuition, or for other significant financial needs. At the same time, companies that buy structured settlements have been known to take advantage of beneficiaries' circumstances in order to obtain the settlements for a relatively small price.[17]

The act of the sale and purchase of structured settlement payment rights is known as a structured settlement factoring transaction.[6] For example, a structured settlement payment stream of 20 years could be transferred in exchange for one discounted payment now.

Any sale of structured settlement payment rights will require the approval of a judge to comply with the local state structured settlement protection act and IRC 5891. Enforcement of structured settlement Approval is not a given. In 2012, a Tennessee Chancery Court issued an order denying a payee's transfer of workers' compensation settlement payments under a structured settlement agreement. Judge William E. Lantrip held that (i) workers' compensation payments are not within the definition of "structured settlement " under the Tennessee Structured Settlement Protection Act, Tenn. Code. Ann. §47-18-2601 [18]

Enforcement of the state system of structured settlement protection acts has come under heavy scrutiny after a highly publicized story of alleged abuse of a cluster of annuitants who received structured settlements as part of lead paint settlements in Baltimore City appeared in the Washington Post on August 25, 2015.[19] leading to rapidly passed reform of the Maryland Structured Settlement Protection Act[20] and lawsuits brought against the Chevy Chase MD company that originated the deals and a number of its executives by the Maryland Attorney General,[21] The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau[22] and a plaintiff's class action.

On September 14, 2017 a class action lawsuit filed in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania,[23] alleging Portsmouth Virginia Circuit Court judges were complicit in an "Annuity Fraud Enterprise" scheme, in which a Virginia lawyer and 79th District delegate Steve Heretick was the central figure, representing JG Wentworth, Seneca One, 321 Henderson Receivables and other settlement purchasers, that allegedly violated the rights of thousands of structured settlement annuitants. Plaintiffs allege violations of RICO statutes against multiple defendants, violations of right to due process an seek a constructive trust against all defendants and all nominal defendants which include several life insurers who issue the annuities.

United Kingdom

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The Damages Act 1996 grants the power for courts in the United Kingdom to make periodical payments in cases of personal injury.[24] This legislation was introduced to implement the recommendations of the Law Commission.[25] Reforms were also made to tax law through the Finance Acts of 1995 and 1996 to ensure that payments made under structured settlements are tax free.[26] As applied to England and Wales, Part 41 of the Civil Procedure Rules[27] along with the accompanying Practice Direction 41B[28] set out the factors the court is to use to assess whether to make an order for periodical payment.

The law in Scotland slightly differs from the law in England, Wales and Northern Ireland: in Scotland, courts may only order periodical payments with the consent of the parties, while in the rest of the UK, courts can make an order for it with or without consent.[29] In 2019, the Scottish Parliament passed the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Act 2019 to amend the rules concerning periodical payments.[30]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A structured settlement is a negotiated in a tort claim whereby the claimant agrees to resolve the case through periodic payments of , typically funded by the defendant's purchase of an from a company, rather than receiving a single lump-sum payment. These payments are structured to provide ongoing financial support over time, often tailored to cover medical expenses, living costs, or lifetime needs, and are established via approval or settlement agreement to ensure enforceability. Under U.S. federal , such payments qualify for exclusion from if they meet specific criteria, including funding through qualified assignment and annuity contracts, preserving the tax-free status originally applicable to personal injury . Originating in during the 1960s and gaining traction in the U.S. following congressional incentives in the Periodic Payment Settlement Act of 1982, structured settlements emerged as a tool to mitigate risks associated with lump-sum awards, such as rapid depletion by recipients lacking financial expertise. The 1982 legislation provided tax parity between periodic payments and lump sums, encouraging defendants and insurers to opt for annuities that guarantee payments backed by highly rated life insurers, thereby reducing litigation costs and promoting efficient claim resolutions. By the , widespread adoption led to state-level regulations, including Structured Settlement Protection Acts (SSPAs) enacted post-2002 to curb exploitative transfers of payment rights to factoring companies, which often offer discounted lump sums that erode the settlement's protective intent. While structured settlements offer benefits like inflation-adjusted payments, from creditors, and professional management to prevent mismanagement, they have faced criticism for limiting recipient and enabling predatory buyouts, prompting ongoing federal scrutiny of transfer practices to safeguard vulnerable plaintiffs. Despite these challenges, they remain a cornerstone of , with annual U.S. market volumes exceeding billions in premiums, underscoring their role in balancing claimant security against defendant liability.

Definition and Fundamentals

Core Concept and Mechanisms

A structured settlement constitutes a negotiated agreement in claims, predominantly those involving personal physical injuries, , or wrongful , whereby the claimant forgoes a lump-sum in favor of a customized series of periodic payments funded through an . These payments are designed to cover ongoing medical expenses, living costs, and future needs, with schedules tailored via actuarial analysis to match the claimant's , age, and projected requirements—such as immediate interim payments, deferred lump sums at milestones like age 18 or entry, lifetime annuities, or period-certain guarantees spanning 20–30 years. The operational mechanism hinges on the —typically an insurer—purchasing an annuity contract from a highly rated company to guarantee the payment stream, thereby transferring the long-term obligation from the original obligor. This , priced at a discounted based on prevailing rates and mortality assumptions, generates fixed or indexed payments insulated from or insurer , as obligations are backed by the issuing company's general account assets and state guaranty associations. In most cases, a qualified assignment under (IRC) Section 130 is executed, allowing the defendant to assign its payment liability to the annuity provider in exchange for a one-time funding payment, which qualifies as a expense while shielding the recipient from taxation on the payments or embedded under IRC Section 104(a)(2). Court oversight ensures the structure's appropriateness, particularly for vulnerable parties like minors or those with diminished capacity, requiring judicial findings that the terms promote financial security and align with demonstrable needs rather than speculative windfalls. Payments may incorporate cost-of-living adjustments tied to indices like the to counteract , with annual increases ranging from 2–3% in fixed designs, though such features elevate the upfront cost by 20–50% depending on duration and indexing method. This framework originated from practices but gained statutory reinforcement in the U.S. via the Periodic Payment Settlement Act of , embedding tax neutrality to incentivize adoption over lump sums.

Key Components and Parties Involved

A structured settlement typically comprises a settlement agreement that mandates periodic payments in lieu of a lump-sum award, often for excludable from under Section 104(a)(2), such as those arising from physical or sickness. Central to this arrangement is a qualified assignment, whereby the original obligor transfers its liability for future payments to an assignee, usually a specialized entity, which then funds the obligations through the purchase of an from a company. The serves as the funding mechanism, guaranteeing payments over a specified period, which may include lifetime benefits, survivors' annuities, or lump sums at designated intervals, designed to align with the payee's financial needs like medical expenses or living costs. Key parties include the payee, the claimant or entitled to compensation, who receives the tax-free periodic payments directly from the annuity issuer. The obligor, typically the or its property-casualty insurer, initially bears responsibility for the settlement but often executes a qualified assignment to offload ongoing payment duties, enabling tax deferral advantages under IRC Section 130. The assignee, frequently an affiliate of the insurer, assumes the periodic payment obligation upon receiving a lump-sum funding from the obligor and uses it to acquire the . The annuity issuer, a rated company, provides the annuity policy that generates the stream of payments, ensuring their security and predictability. Additional participants may involve structured settlement consultants or brokers, who specialize in designing payment schedules to optimize tax efficiency and match the payee's long-term requirements, often collaborating with attorneys during negotiations. In cases of payment rights transfer, factoring companies emerge as buyers seeking court approval to purchase future streams at a discount, though such transfers are regulated to protect payees from financial exploitation. These elements collectively ensure the arrangement's stability, with payments insulated from the obligor's credit risk post-assignment.

Distinctions from Lump Sum Payments

Structured settlements provide periodic payments over a designated period, often for life or a fixed term, typically funded through the purchase of an by the or insurer, in contrast to lump-sum payments, which deliver the entire settlement amount in a single upfront . This in structured settlements aims to ensure long-term financial support, particularly for claimants with ongoing needs or disabilities, while lump sums grant immediate full access to funds for potential or discretionary use. A primary distinction lies in tax treatment under U.S. federal law: payments from qualified structured settlements arising from physical injury or sickness are entirely excluded from , including both principal and the imputed interest component, pursuant to Sections 104(a)(1) and 104(a)(2). In comparison, lump-sum settlements exclude only the principal from taxation, but any subsequent earnings from investing that principal—such as interest or capital gains—are taxable as ordinary income, potentially eroding the net value over time. This exclusion for structured settlements creates an economic incentive, as the government effectively subsidizes the growth of the funds by not taxing the annuity's internal yield, which a 1999 Joint Committee on Taxation analysis estimated could increase the after-tax value of settlements by 20-30% depending on payment duration and rates. From a perspective, structured settlements mitigate the potential for rapid depletion of funds common with lump sums, where recipients may face poor decisions, claims, or inflation; studies of lottery winners and similar windfalls indicate that up to 70% of such recipients exhaust large sums within seven years. Periodic payments enforce disciplined spending and can incorporate cost-of-living adjustments or survivor benefits, enhancing longevity for catastrophic injury cases, whereas lump sums demand self-management and expose claimants to market volatility or risks. However, structured settlements offer less liquidity, as payments are contractually fixed and transfers to third parties for cash advances are heavily regulated under state laws modeled on the federal Protecting Victims from Predatory Lawsuit Settlement Transfers Act of 2006, often requiring approval to prevent discounted sales. Defendants may prefer structured settlements because the cost can be lower than a comparable , as annuity providers assume and leverage tax-deferred growth, though this depends on prevailing interest rates and assumptions. s, by contrast, require immediate full funding without such leveraging, potentially straining insurer reserves but providing closure without ongoing obligations. These distinctions make structured settlements particularly suitable for minors, incapacitated individuals, or those with lifelong needs, as evidenced by their frequent use in U.S. Department of Justice civil settlements exceeding $1 million since the 1980s.

Historical Development

Origins in the United Kingdom

Structured settlements in the United Kingdom originated as a response to the limitations of traditional lump-sum damages awards in personal injury cases, particularly the risks of mismanagement and depletion of funds by claimants with lifelong needs. The concept, imported from , involved defendants purchasing annuities from companies to provide tax-free periodic payments in lieu of a single payment, often at a discounted cost to the payer. This mechanism aimed to ensure long-term financial security while reducing administrative burdens on courts and parties. The first structured settlement was implemented in 1981, though such arrangements remained rare and experimental for the next decade, limited to isolated cases amid legal uncertainties and lack of formal tax clarity. Early adoption faced hurdles, including the preference for lump sums and doubts over enforceability, but gained momentum in the late 1980s following negotiations with the . By 1987, judicial and governmental intervention helped clarify that annuity payments derived from compensation funds were exempt from , providing a critical for uptake. A notable early example occurred in 1989 with the case of Kelly v Dawes, where structured payments were arranged to support the claimant's ongoing needs, marking a pivotal advancement in practical application. By 1991, usage expanded beyond sporadic instances, with nearly 200 settlements in place by 1993 and an associated annuity market valued at £30 million annually. The judiciary, including endorsements from the Law Commission in its 1992 consultation paper, increasingly supported these arrangements for their alignment with claimant welfare, paving the way for statutory recognition under the Damages Act 1996.

Adoption and Expansion in the United States

Structured settlements were first utilized in the United States during the mid-1970s, adapting practices initially developed in in the to address escalating medical inflation and future care costs in claims. Early adoption focused on claims, where insurers assigned periodic payments to life insurance companies via annuities, providing claimants with tax-free income streams tailored to lifelong needs rather than lump-sum awards prone to rapid depletion. Federal tax incentives formalized in the Revenue Act of 1982 marked a pivotal expansion, enacting Internal Revenue Code Sections 104(a)(2) and 130, which qualified structured settlement payments as excludable from gross income and enabled tax-free assignments to qualified annuity providers. This legislative framework reduced administrative burdens on defendants and encouraged broader use by ensuring payments' tax efficiency, with the policy rooted in protecting claimants from fiscal mismanagement evidenced by studies showing 90% of large lump-sum recipients exhausting funds within five years. Further growth occurred in 1997 when amendments to Section 104(a)(1) extended tax advantages to workers' compensation claims, broadening applicability beyond physical injury torts to include occupational injuries and broadening the market base. Industry formation accelerated with the establishment of the National Structured Settlements Trade Association (NSSTA) in the , standardizing practices and advocacy, while rising litigation volumes—particularly in and product liability cases—drove demand. Empirical expansion is evident in premium placements: annual structured settlement annuity premiums grew from $3.08 billion in 2021 to $3.95 billion in the first three quarters of 2022 alone, surging 63% to over $8.6 billion by 2023 amid higher interest rates enhancing yields. In 2024, placements reached a record $9.48 billion, reflecting a 10% year-over-year increase and 58% growth from pre-pandemic levels, underscoring sustained adoption driven by economic factors and claimant preferences for secure, inflation-adjusted income over volatile lump sums. Outstanding structured settlement obligations now exceed $80 billion, with annual increments of approximately $6 billion, affirming their entrenched role in U.S. civil resolutions.

Global Spread and Adaptations

The modern practice of structured settlements first emerged in Canada during the 1960s, predating widespread U.S. adoption, as a means to address long-term compensation needs in thalidomide-related birth defect claims against the pharmaceutical responsible for severe deformities in children exposed in utero. These cases necessitated periodic payments to cover ongoing medical and living expenses, establishing a precedent for annuity-funded streams over lump sums to ensure financial stability without tax liability on the payments themselves. This Canadian innovation influenced subsequent developments, with structured settlements gaining traction in select provinces through voluntary agreements, though legislative mandates appeared later in jurisdictions like Ontario and British Columbia by the 1990s and 2000s to standardize their use in personal injury settlements. Adoption extended to Australia in the late 1990s and early 2000s, driven by advocacy for tax parity with lump-sum awards. The Structured Settlement Group, formed in 1999, lobbied for reforms that culminated in the Taxation Laws Amendment (Structured Settlements and Structured Orders) Act 2002, exempting periodic payments from income tax for agreements entered after September 26, 2001, thereby incentivizing their use in personal injury compensation. Prior to this, periodic payments existed informally, but the tax exemption spurred growth, adapting the model to Australia's common law system while imposing restrictions such as ineligibility for fatal accident claims, where surviving dependents typically receive lump sums to avoid annuity dependency risks. In , structured settlements have seen limited and uneven uptake, primarily in common law-influenced areas like and the , but with adaptations constrained by civil law traditions, fragmented tax policies, and less developed markets compared to Anglo-American systems. Countries such as employ analogous periodic payment mechanisms for certain claims, but these often integrate state social security rather than private , reflecting causal differences in welfare provisions that reduce the appeal of U.S.-style tax-driven structures. Overall, global dissemination has concentrated in jurisdictions with robust sectors and favorable tax treatments for awards, with empirical data indicating higher penetration in (where they comprise up to 20-30% of large settlements in some provinces) and post-2002, versus sporadic use elsewhere due to regulatory hurdles.

United States Federal and State Structures

In the United States, the federal framework for structured settlements primarily derives from provisions in the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) that provide tax advantages to encourage their use in resolving personal injury and workers' compensation claims. Under IRC §104(a)(2), periodic payments received as damages for physical injuries or physical sickness are excluded from gross income, preserving tax-free status for recipients that would not apply to lump-sum settlements invested post-tax. To facilitate secure funding, IRC §130 permits "qualified assignments," where defendants or insurers assign their obligation to make periodic payments to a third-party assignee, typically a life insurance company, funded by an annuity contract or obligations of the United States government; this assignment maintains the tax exclusion for both the payee and the assignee, provided the payments are fixed and determinable. Federal law also imposes restrictions on transfers of structured settlement payment rights through IRC §5891, which levies a 40% tax on the transferee in a "structured settlement factoring transaction"—defined as the acquisition of rights for consideration less than the —unless the transfer receives prior approval under applicable state law and disclosure requirements are met; this penalty aims to deter premature discounting of future payments. Additionally, for settlements involving Medicare beneficiaries, federal policy under the Medicare Secondary Payer Act requires consideration of Medicare's interests via Medicare Set-Aside Arrangements (MSAs), where a portion of the settlement is allocated to cover future medical expenses related to the injury that Medicare would otherwise pay; MSAs can be structured as annuities to provide periodic funding, with the (CMS) reviewing proposals for and liability cases exceeding certain thresholds. At the state level, all 50 states and the District of Columbia have enacted Structured Settlement Protection Acts (SSPAs), modeled on uniform legislation, which mandate court approval for any transfer of payment rights to ensure the transaction is in the payee's best interest, based on factors such as financial hardship justification, discount rate reasonableness (often capped near plus 1-2%), and independent professional advice. These acts typically prohibit direct assignments of payments without court oversight, reinforcing anti-assignment clauses in contracts, though federal rules conflicting state laws on treatment. Approximately 30 states have adopted versions of the Periodic Payment of Judgments Act (UPPJA), enabling courts to order periodic payments in judgments for future damages, with adjustments for changes in or economic conditions, but non-adopting states rely on settlement agreements rather than mandatory judgment structures. State variations include differing disclosure timelines (e.g., 10-30 days notice) and approval standards, with some requiring explicit findings on payee competency and alternatives to transfer.

Tax Treatment and Incentives

In the United States, structured settlements arising from personal physical injury or sickness claims are governed by Section 104(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), which excludes the full amount of compensatory damages from the recipient's gross income. This exclusion applies to periodic payments received under a structured settlement annuity, encompassing both principal and any imputed interest, provided the payments are designated as compensation for such injuries. IRC Section 130 further facilitates qualified assignments, allowing defendants or insurers to transfer their periodic payment obligations to a life insurance company in exchange for a lump-sum payment; the assignee excludes this lump sum from income if the payments qualify under Section 104(a) and meet other statutory conditions, such as being fixed and determinable. A primary tax incentive for structured settlements over lump-sum alternatives stems from the preservation of tax-free status on investment growth within the annuity. In a lump-sum settlement, the initial exclusion under Section 104(a)(2) applies only to the principal received; any subsequent earnings from reinvesting that sum—such as interest, dividends, or capital gains—are taxable as ordinary income or capital gains, depending on the investment vehicle. By contrast, structured settlement payments maintain complete , enabling tax-free over the payment period, which can substantially increase the after-tax value for long-term recipients; for instance, analyses indicate that this deferral and exclusion can yield 20-30% higher effective returns in multi-decade payout scenarios compared to taxable reinvestments at equivalent pre-tax rates. This mechanism, codified in the Periodic Payment Settlement Act of 1982 and refined through subsequent amendments, incentivizes structured arrangements by aligning the tax treatment with the policy goal of providing sustained, inflation-adjusted support without eroding funds through annual taxation. State-level conformity generally mirrors federal treatment, with most jurisdictions excluding structured settlement payments from state income taxes, though variations exist; for example, and New York explicitly recognize the federal exclusion for such annuities. However, incentives diminish if payments fail to qualify—such as in non-physical injury cases (e.g., emotional distress without physical harm), where portions may be taxable under Section 104(a)—or upon unauthorized transfers, as factoring transactions under the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 can preserve tax status only if court-approved and compliant, but often expose recipients to imputed interest taxation on discounted buyouts. Empirical reviews confirm these incentives drive adoption, with structured settlements comprising over 20% of large awards by the 1990s, attributed directly to the tax efficiencies over lump sums.

Regulations on Transfers and Factoring

In the United States, under 26 U.S.C. § 5891 imposes a 40% on the factor of any structured settlement factoring transaction, defined as the transfer of structured settlement payment rights for consideration, unless the transfer receives approval via a qualified state . This provision, enacted as part of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, aims to deter unapproved sales by penalizing factoring companies that acquire payment rights without judicial oversight, with the liability falling on the transferee. A qualified order requires the court to determine that the transfer complies with applicable state law, is in the best interest of the payee (considering factors like the payee's financial needs and alternatives), and that the payee has received independent professional advice regarding the implications. Complementing federal measures, all 50 states and the District of Columbia have enacted Structured Settlement Protection Acts (SSPAs), modeled after the National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL) template from 2002, which mandate court approval for any transfer of structured settlement payment rights. These acts declare unapproved transfers void as against , requiring the factoring company to petition the court in the payee's county of residence, provide full disclosure of the transfer terms (including discount rates, net proceeds, and equivalents), and demonstrate that the transaction serves the payee's after considering hardships, tax consequences, and whether the payee consulted independent counsel. Courts must also notify interested parties, such as the annuity issuer or original obligor, and hold hearings where payees can contest the transfer. SSPAs emerged in response to concerns over predatory factoring practices in the , where companies offered lump-sum advances at steep discounts—often 30-50% below —exploiting payees' immediate financial pressures and leading to long-term impoverishment. While states vary slightly in procedural details, such as disclosure timelines (typically 10-30 days pre-hearing) or attorney caps, core protections remain consistent, with approval rates historically around 90% but scrutinized for ensuring genuine necessity over impulse. Factoring companies must also register in some states and face penalties for non-compliance, reinforcing the framework's consumer safeguards without prohibiting transfers outright.

International Variations

United Kingdom Practices

In the , structured settlements provide periodic payments to claimants in cases as an alternative to lump-sum awards, typically funding future care needs, lost earnings, and living expenses through annuities or direct obligations. These arrangements emerged in the late as voluntary agreements between claimants and defendants, often insurers, to mitigate risks of lump-sum mismanagement while ensuring lifelong security. The legal framework distinguishes between voluntary structured settlements, reliant on negotiated annuities, and court-ordered Periodic Payment Orders (PPOs) introduced under the Damages Act 1996, as amended by the Courts Act 2003 effective from April 1, 2005. PPOs mandate periodical payments for damages, requiring courts to confirm continuity of payments (e.g., for life in catastrophic cases) and adequate , often via index-linked gilts or annuities. Courts presume to the Retail Prices Index unless evidence justifies otherwise, prioritizing claimant over defendant preference for lump sums. Funding typically involves the defendant or their insurer purchasing an from an authorized UK life insurer, with payments made directly to the claimant, bypassing intermediate taxation. For PPOs, public bodies like the may secure payments through government-backed mechanisms, as seen in clinical negligence claims exceeding £250,000 since 2019 guidelines. Unlike lump sums, these payments are irrevocable and non-assignable, preventing secondary markets for discounting, which contrasts with practices in jurisdictions allowing transfers. Tax treatment exempts recipients from income tax on qualifying periodical payments under Income Tax (Trading and Other Income) Act 2005 sections 731–735, provided they arise from and meet structured criteria, though the annuity provider faces full corporation tax on underlying income. Defendants receive no for annuity premiums, shifting emphasis to rather than fiscal incentives. Practitioners follow Law Society guidelines emphasizing ethical advice, cost transparency for intermediaries, and suitability for severe cases like brain or spinal injuries, where awards exceed £100,000 and actuarial modeling ensures needs-based structuring. PPOs have grown prevalent post-2005, comprising over 90% of catastrophic settlements by 2015, due to enhanced claimant protections and reduced exposure for defendants. Courts retain discretion to combine PPOs with lump sums for immediate needs, but must prioritize lifetime security, with variations possible only under strict statutory conditions like dependency changes. This framework underscores a policy favoring sustained support over capital windfalls, informed by of lump-sum depletion in similar cases.

Approaches in Canada and Australia

In , structured settlements involve periodic payments funded by annuities purchased by defendants or insurers to compensate for or death, offering an alternative to lump-sum awards. These arrangements provide claimants with steady income streams tailored to needs such as ongoing medical care or living expenses, while protecting payments from creditors under the federal Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. Unlike lump-sum payments, which grant immediate access but risk mismanagement or depletion, structured settlements emphasize long-term financial security, though they limit flexibility for unforeseen opportunities. Tax treatment favors structured settlements, with compensation—including periodic payments—generally exempt from if properly structured, a status formalized in the early . However, exceptions apply to interest components, lost income substitutes, or earnings, potentially requiring tax gross-ups in lump-sum comparisons to achieve equivalent after-tax value. Provincial variations exist in legal frameworks; for instance, British Columbia's Insurance () Act mandates periodic payments for pecuniary exceeding $100,000 or tax gross-up requests, prioritizing the claimant's best interests. Ontario's Courts of Justice Act permits or requires structured payments for future care costs above specified thresholds, while and authorize court-ordered structures under their respective court and automobile insurance acts. Courts in most provinces may impose them for minors or incapacitated claimants to safeguard funds. Australia's approach, formalized through federal tax reforms effective September 26, 2001, exempts structured settlements from income tax for personal injury compensation, provided they include a compulsory personal injury annuity. This annuity, funded by the defendant and purchased from an Australian life insurer or state entity, delivers minimum monthly payments—at least one-twelfth of the annual age pension, indexed to CPI or average weekly ordinary time earnings—for 10 years or the claimant's lifetime, with no commutation or assignment permitted. Optional elements, such as lump sums or additional annuities, must specify recipients and prohibit alterations, ensuring irrevocability once established. State legislation complements federal incentives; ' Civil Liability Act, for example, defines and facilitates structured settlements as agreements for periodic damages payments, often court-approved for vulnerable claimants. These arrangements mitigate risks of lump-sum dissipation by providing inflation- and longevity-protected income, though uptake varies with interest rates and claimant preferences. No federal court approval is mandated for , distinguishing Australia's model from more prescriptive U.S. regulations, but judicial oversight applies where legal disabilities exist. Both nations prioritize claimant protection over lump-sum immediacy, but 's provincial patchwork lacks 's uniform tax-driven compulsion for core annuity components, leading to greater reliance on judicial discretion in . Empirical adoption in surged post-2001 reforms, reflecting cost efficiencies for insurers and reduced premiums, while 's usage remains steady but uneven across jurisdictions.

Challenges in Other Jurisdictions

In civil law jurisdictions across continental Europe, such as and , structured settlements encounter substantial legal and cultural resistance, remaining largely confined to exceptional cases rather than routine practice. National civil codes, including 's Code Civil (Article 1240) and 's (Sections 823–853), traditionally prescribe lump-sum damages equivalent to the discounted of future economic and non-economic losses, reflecting a preference for finality in compensation that discourages ongoing payment obligations. This framework limits courts' authority to impose or approve annuity-based structures, as defendants' liability is typically discharged upon a single payment, complicating the involvement of third-party insurers for periodic annuities without explicit statutory mechanisms. Tax policies further impede adoption, as periodic payments often qualify as in these systems, unlike the tax-exempt status afforded under U.S. Section 104(a)(2), which excludes compensation from and incentivizes structures by preserving payment value. Without comparable exemptions—such as those absent in France's Impôt sur le Revenu or Germany's Einkommensteuer—plaintiffs face diminished net benefits, while defendants lack the fiscal subsidy to offset costs, perpetuating reliance on lump sums despite potential advantages in . Empirical data from European claims indicate near-total dominance of lump-sum awards, with structured arrangements reported in fewer than 1% of cases as of 2015, underscoring systemic over innovation in damages allocation. Beyond Europe, challenges intensify in Asia and Latin America due to economic instability and infrastructural deficits. In countries like and , high rates—averaging 6–10% annually in from 2010–2020—erode the real value of fixed periodic payments, rendering them unreliable for long-term needs like medical care, while underdeveloped annuity markets expose recipients to insurer default risks amid weaker regulatory oversight. Judicial systems, burdened by backlogs (e.g., over 40 million pending cases in as of 2023), struggle to enforce structured terms, leading courts to favor lump sums for simplicity; 's has endorsed periodic payments in motor accident claims for minors since Dhannulal v. Ganeshram (2023), but implementation falters due to payer insolvency and administrative costs, with adoption limited to isolated high-profile verdicts. Similarly, in , despite civil code provisions for future loss compensation (Minpō Article 709), cultural aversion to protracted litigation and preference for immediate resolution confine structures to workers' compensation, excluding broader personal injury contexts. These factors collectively result in structured settlements comprising under 5% of global tort resolutions outside common law spheres, highlighting causal links between institutional rigidity and low uptake.

Benefits and Empirical Outcomes

Financial Security and Tax Efficiency

Structured settlements enhance tax efficiency primarily through the exclusion of periodic payments from federal income taxation under (IRC) Section 104(a)(2), which applies to received on account of personal physical injuries or physical sickness. This exclusion covers not only the principal amount but also the imputed or growth embedded in the payments, providing a form of subsidy that exempts yield from taxation. In contrast, while the principal of a lump-sum settlement is similarly tax-exempt, any subsequent earnings from investing that principal—such as , dividends, or capital gains—are subject to ordinary rates, potentially reducing the net value over time. This tax-free growth in structured settlements effectively increases the of the payments, as the 's internal yield compounds without erosion; for instance, in a typical scenario, the tax-equivalent yield of a structured settlement can exceed that of a taxable by accounting for the recipient's marginal . From a financial security standpoint, structured settlements deliver guaranteed, periodic payments funded by highly rated annuities, minimizing exposure to market volatility and investment mismanagement risks inherent in lump-sum awards. These payments can be customized to align with lifetime needs, such as ongoing medical expenses or living costs, ensuring a steady stream that discourages impulsive depletion of funds. Empirical studies indicate that a substantial minority of lump-sum recipients—estimated at 25-50% in various analyses— financial distress, including or , within five to ten years, often due to poor financial decisions or unforeseen circumstances, thereby supporting the protective role of structured payments for vulnerable plaintiffs. Additionally, structured settlement payments typically receive enhanced legal protections against creditors, as they are not considered assets of the recipient in proceedings and are exempt under many state laws, further safeguarding long-term stability. State guaranty associations provide further security by backing annuity obligations up to specified limits—often $250,000 to $500,000 per annuitant per insurer—in the event of the issuing company's , a safeguard not directly applicable to self-managed lump sums. While industry sources emphasize these features for with limited , academic critiques note that the "squandering plaintiff" narrative may overstate universal mismanagement risks, as many lump-sum recipients fare adequately; nonetheless, for those at higher risk, the enforced discipline of periodic disbursements demonstrably promotes sustained economic well-being. Overall, the combination of tax-deferred and structural safeguards positions structured settlements as a mechanism for preserving settlement value against both fiscal and behavioral hazards.

Evidence from Long-Term Studies

A 2025 survey of settlement recipients conducted by found that 94% of structured settlement recipients reported feeling financially secure due to receiving monthly payments, with 79% indicating an improved since settlement—30% describing it as much better. In comparison, 49% of lump-sum recipients regretted major purchases within the first year, and 51% reduced spending out of fear of depleting funds. These self-reported outcomes, drawn from recipients with varying payment durations, suggest structured settlements may foster sustained , though selection effects—wherein recipients opting for structures often anticipate long-term needs—could influence results. Longer-term tracking remains scarce, with no large-scale, controlled longitudinal studies directly comparing cohort outcomes such as rates or wealth persistence over decades. Anecdotal and actuarial data from structured providers indicate low default rates on payments, providing guaranteed income streams that outlast typical lump-sum depletion periods observed in broader research. However, a 2010 analysis in the Law Journal critiqued the empirical basis for assuming high squandering rates among lump-sum recipients, noting that cited studies often rely on small, non-representative samples and fail to account for injury severity or pre-existing financial behaviors, thus questioning unsubstantiated claims of universal superiority for structures. Overall, available evidence from recipient surveys supports perceived long-term advantages in financial security and budgeting confidence for structured settlements (76% of recipients reported greater decision-making assurance), but rigorous is limited by the absence of randomized assignments and potential biases in industry-sponsored polling. Future research incorporating public data on or asset trajectories could clarify these dynamics.

Psychological and Behavioral Advantages

Structured settlements provide psychological benefits by offering predictable, guaranteed payments that mitigate the anxiety associated with managing a large , particularly for individuals recovering from serious injuries who may lack financial expertise. Recipients of structured settlement annuities report high levels of financial security, with 94% stating that monthly payments make them feel secure and 96% expressing satisfaction with their choice, contrasting sharply with recipients where only 31% would opt for it again. This stability fosters peace of mind, as the structured format eliminates the immediate pressure of decisions and asset preservation, relieving stress often experienced by claimants unaccustomed to handling substantial sums. Behaviorally, periodic payments encourage disciplined financial habits by simulating a steady income stream, which over 90% of recipients credit with improving budgeting and overall . Unlike lump sums, which lead to rapid depletion—evidenced by 50% of recipients regretting major purchases within the first year and 66% distributing significant portions to family—structured settlements curb impulsive spending and reduce vulnerability to external pressures or poor choices. This design aligns with behavioral finance principles, where 70% of lump-sum recipients acknowledge that installments would simplify money management, promoting long-term fiscal responsibility without requiring ongoing self-control.

Criticisms and Risks

Inflexibility and Economic Drawbacks

Structured settlements, by design, impose significant inflexibility on recipients, as the payment schedule is contractually fixed upon establishment and cannot be altered without approval or transfer to a factoring company. This rigidity prevents adjustments to meet unforeseen changes in financial needs, such as medical emergencies or family obligations, locking recipients into predetermined periodic payments regardless of evolving circumstances. Factoring payments to obtain a is possible but requires navigating state-specific regulations under the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, often resulting in substantial discounts—typically 20-50% of —due to the and administrative costs. Economically, the absence of liquidity in structured settlements forgoes the opportunity to invest a lump sum, potentially yielding higher returns through diversified portfolios; for instance, historical average annual returns of approximately 10% since 1926 outpace the conservative yields of settlement annuities, which often range from 2-4%. Fixed payments without cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) expose recipients to risk, eroding real over time; U.S. averaged 3.3% annually from 1913 to 2023, meaning a $1,000 monthly in 2025 could effectively purchase only about 40% as much by 2055 at that rate. While COLAs can mitigate this—escalating payments by 2-3% yearly—they increase initial annuity costs and are not standard in all agreements, amplifying long-term value loss for unprotected settlements.

Abuses in the Factoring Market

In the for structured settlements, factoring companies have engaged in predatory practices by offering lump-sum advances at steep discounts—often 30% to 70% below —to vulnerable recipients, including minors and individuals with cognitive impairments from injuries like . These tactics exploit recipients' immediate financial desperation, leading to long-term income loss; for instance, in from 2013 to 2015, factoring firms handled about 70% of approximately 200 settlement transfers, with average payouts equating to roughly 30% of the payments' . Specific scams include steering sellers toward sham independent advisors paid by the factoring company, as alleged in a 2016 lawsuit against Access Funding, which targeted lead-paint poisoning victims—primarily children under age six—and used cash advances to pressure completions despite cognitive limitations. High-pressure sales and misleading claims about transaction scrutiny have also been documented, with firms bypassing required disclosures or oversight in some cases, resulting in victims receiving funds insufficient for sustained needs and facing tax liabilities on lump sums that were previously tax-free. Congressional probes, such as Rep. ' 2015 investigation, revealed factoring intermediaries purchasing payment streams for "pennies on the dollar" from low-income urban victims before reselling them to investors at 4-7% returns, amplifying profits at the expense of recipients' financial security. Regulatory responses, including state Structured Settlement Protection Acts enacted post-2002 to mandate approval and independent evaluations, aimed to curb these abuses but have faced circumvention through non-adversarial proceedings and inadequate enforcement, as evidenced by a 2018 ban on Sold for fraudulent practices involving civil penalties and restitution. Despite such measures, the market's opacity persists, with annual factoring volumes reaching $1 billion by 2003 and ongoing reports of excessive discounts eroding the protective intent of original settlements.

Impacts on Public Benefits and Insolvency

Structured settlements can influence eligibility for means-tested public benefits such as (SSI) and , where periodic payments are typically classified as countable unearned income, potentially reducing or disqualifying recipients from aid due to strict asset and income thresholds—SSI limits resources to $2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples. Lump-sum settlements exacerbate this by immediately exceeding asset caps, whereas structured periodic payments spread income over time but still trigger offsets; for instance, SSI benefits decrease by $1 for every $2 of countable income above the exemption. To mitigate these effects, settlements may fund first-party special needs trusts (SNTs), which shelter assets if established before age 65 and assigned properly, preserving eligibility by excluding trust funds from counts while allowing supplemental distributions for needs not covered by benefits. Without such planning, structured settlements risk permanent disqualification from lifetime benefits like SSI, as payments may exceed thresholds without trust protections, and improper structuring can lead to overpayments requiring repayment. Annuities compliant with the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005 offer some safeguards by designating payments as non-countable for Medicaid if irrevocable and actuarially sound, but SSI treatment remains stricter, often counting portions as income unless deferred strategically. In practice, combining structured settlements with SNTs balances compensation needs against benefit reliance, though administrative costs and trustee oversight add complexity. Regarding insolvency, structured settlements inherently reduce risks by transferring annuity ownership to an independent life insurer, rendering future payments creditor-proof under federal tax code provisions and most state exemptions, as claimants hold no assignable asset to seize. This structure prevents the depletion seen in lump-sum awards, where 90% of recipients exhaust funds within five years, often leading to financial distress or reliance on public assistance. Bankruptcy filings post-settlement rarely attach to protected payments, though courts may scrutinize if factoring (selling payments for lump sums) occurs, potentially exposing discounted proceeds to creditors and heightening . Empirical outcomes show structured annuities promote long-term stability, with guaranteed streams insulating against market volatility or poor spending decisions that precipitate .

Recent Developments

Market Growth and Record Volumes

The structured settlement market has seen robust expansion in recent years, driven primarily by rising interest rates that improve the cost-efficiency of annuity funding for periodic payments. Following a downturn during periods of historically low rates, annual structured proceeds rebounded sharply, with premiums increasing 63% from 2022 to 2023. This growth reflects heightened adoption amid economic conditions favoring fixed-income instruments, as higher Treasury yields—reaching levels not seen since 2024—reduce the upfront capital required to secure equivalent lifetime payouts. In 2024, the primary market for structured settlement annuities achieved record volumes, with $9.48 billion in settlement proceeds structured—a 10% rise from $8.6 billion in 2023 and a 58% surge from 2022. Independent industry analyses confirm this peak at approximately $9.55 billion in annuity placements, underscoring the sector's recovery and appeal in liability resolutions. The number of individual structured settlements also reached an all-time high that year, signaling broader utilization across personal injury, workers' compensation, and wrongful death cases. This momentum continued into early , supported by sustained elevated rates and insurer preferences for tax-advantaged structures over lump-sum payouts, though comprehensive year-end data remains pending. Data from the National Structured Settlements Trade Association, as referenced in multiple reports, highlights these volumes as indicative of structural advantages in a higher-yield environment, rather than transient factors. Independent Life introduced iStructure Select in June 2025, a structured settlement product featuring built-in flexibility, broader market participation, and customizable index strategies designed to align payments with economic conditions while providing guaranteed floors for plaintiffs. This innovation addresses limitations of traditional fixed annuities by incorporating indexed elements, potentially offering hedging without fully exposing recipients to market volatility. Technological integrations have enhanced in structured settlements, with digital platforms and data analytics streamlining annuity quoting, administration, and compliance processes that previously relied on manual, paper-based systems. technology is emerging to improve transparency and in payment tracking and factoring transactions, reducing risks and enabling verifiable trails for long-term obligations. Fintech developments include AI-driven platforms for optimizing payout structures and valuations, such as those employing algorithms to personalize payment schedules based on recipient needs and predictive financial modeling. In factoring markets, digital tools facilitate faster court approvals and risk assessments, though regulatory scrutiny persists to prevent predatory practices. A notable trend involves bridging structured settlements to alternative assets, exemplified by Structured Strategy's 2025 service, which enables court-approved buyouts of future payments to fund acquisitions via compliant exchanges, aiming to counter fiat inflation erosion with cryptocurrency growth potential. This approach, while innovative, introduces volatility risks absent in traditional annuities and requires adherence to state Structured Settlement Protection Acts. Overall, these trends reflect a shift toward hybrid products blending guarantees with growth opportunities, propelled by technology to meet evolving demands for adaptability amid economic uncertainty.

Legislative and Judicial Changes

In April 2023, the ruled in Cordero v. Transamerica Annuity Service Corp. that structured settlement obligors and annuity issuers bear no implied contractual duty to enforce anti-assignment provisions or object to transfers of payment rights when such transfers receive court approval under state Structured Settlement Protection Acts (SSPAs). The decision arose from a payee who assigned nearly $960,000 in future payments for a discounted of about $268,000 across multiple transactions between 2012 and 2014, despite original settlement terms prohibiting assignments without consent. By rejecting claims of breach of the implied covenant of and , the court clarified that responsibility for evaluating payee lies with SSPA courts, not funding parties, potentially reducing issuer liability but prompting industry calls for enhanced payee safeguards against factoring abuses. In June 2024, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in White v. Symetra Assigned Benefits Service Co. reversed a district court's certification of nationwide classes in a suit alleging improper facilitation of structured settlement payment assignments, citing predominance of individualized causation issues and conflicts under varying state laws on contract enforceability and choice-of-law rules. The case involved approximately 2,000 payees claiming violations of anti-assignment clauses, RICO, and consumer protection statutes, but the ruling underscored barriers to class-wide relief due to case-specific factors like payee circumstances and state-specific SSPA variations. This outcome reinforces the fragmented regulatory landscape, complicating broad challenges to transfer practices by annuity service providers. At the federal level, no substantive amendments to Sections 104(a)(2) or 130 governing tax exclusion for qualified structured settlements have occurred since prior reforms, maintaining income tax-free status for periodic payments compensating physical injuries or sickness. However, in May 2025, the National Structured Settlements Trade Association petitioned the IRS for priority guidance clarifying that damages for (PTSD) qualify as nontaxable physical injury under Section 104(a)(2), arguing physical manifestations and clinical distinguish it from purely emotional distress claims amid inconsistent court interpretations. State legislatures have incrementally updated SSPAs to bolster transfer oversight, with amending definitional provisions in its Structured Settlement Protection Act during the 2023-2024 session to refine applicability and procedural requirements. Similarly, revised its SSPA in April 2023 to mandate automatic expiration of servicer registrations upon surety bond cancellation, aiming to enhance financial accountability in factoring transactions. These targeted adjustments reflect ongoing efforts to address transfer risks without overhauling the federal framework enabling structured settlements.

References

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