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Catalina Structured Funding
Annuities buyer serving New Hampshire — Catalina Structured Funding

Sell Your Annuity Payments in New Hampshire

If you own an annuity in New Hampshire and need cash now, you can sell some or all of your future payments for a lump sum. CSF has helped annuity holders across New Hampshire get top offers, whether the payments come from a settlement, an insurance policy, or an inheritance.

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Sell Your Annuity Payments in New Hampshire

If you are reading this, you have probably been thinking about cashing out your annuity for a while. Maybe your financial situation has changed, or the monthly payments just are not keeping up with what you need right now. You are not alone. We have helped annuity holders across New Hampshire work through exactly this decision.

The process depends on the type of annuity you hold and whether New Hampshire law requires court approval for the transfer. CSF handles the entire process from quote to funding, including all New Hampshire court filings when required. The amount we quote is the amount you receive. Not a penny less.

How Selling Annuity Payments Works in New Hampshire

The process for selling annuity payments in New Hampshire depends on the type of annuity. Structured settlement annuities require court approval under New Hampshire's Structured Settlement Protection Act. Insurance annuities and inherited annuities may follow a different path.

Structured Settlement Annuities

If your annuity payments come from a legal settlement (personal injury or wrongful death), the transfer must be approved by a Superior Court judge in New Hampshire. The judge will confirm that selling your payments is in your best interest before approving the transaction. Workers' compensation structured settlements may also be transferable, but SSPA coverage of workers' comp varies by state, and separate anti-assignment statutes may apply. CSF's attorneys evaluate the specific laws in New Hampshire to determine the correct legal pathway. The typical timeline in New Hampshire is 30–45 days from the time you accept an offer to receiving your lump sum. We see most New Hampshire customers close within that range. For the full step-by-step framework and New Hampshire-specific court details, see our New Hampshire structured settlement page.

The court process includes these steps:

  1. Get a free quote. Tell CSF about your annuity payments, including the amount, frequency, and how long payments continue. We provide a competitive offer, typically within 24 hours.
  2. Review and accept. Take your time. Compare offers and accept when you are ready. There is no pressure and no obligation.
  3. CSF files the transfer petition. We prepare all legal documents and file the petition with the Superior Court in New Hampshire. CSF serves notice to all interested parties, including the annuity issuer and any dependents.
  4. Attend the court hearing. New Hampshire courts require you to attend the hearing (in person, by phone, or by video depending on the court). CSF's attorney handles the legal presentation. Most hearings take 15 to 30 minutes.
  5. Receive your lump sum. After the judge approves the transfer, funds are sent directly to you.

Need cash sooner? CSF offers cash advances of up to $1,500 upon signing your transfer agreement, before court approval. Advances can be released the same day you sign through DocuSign or a notary. Call (800) 317-3769 or request a quote online to learn more.

Insurance and Inherited Annuities

If your annuity is a standard insurance product (not from a lawsuit), court approval may not be required in New Hampshire. The good news is that this can shorten the timeline considerably, and funding can happen as quickly as one business day once all underwriting items are complete. Inherited annuities follow a similar path. CSF evaluates the annuity contract, provides a quote, and handles all transfer paperwork with the insurance company. Have questions about your specific annuity? Call us at (800) 317-3769. We can usually tell you what type of annuity you have within minutes.

New Hampshire Laws Governing Annuity Transfers

When a structured settlement annuity is involved, New Hampshire's transfer process is governed by RSA §§ 408-G:1 through 408-G:6. This law requires court approval for any sale of structured settlement payment rights and is designed to protect the person selling their payments.

Key requirement: The court must consider whether the payee compared competing offers. The payee is required to attend the hearing, though courts may excuse attendance for good cause and many allow remote appearances by Zoom, phone, or video.

New Hampshire law requires that you be advised of your right to seek independent professional advice regarding the legal, tax, and financial implications of the transfer. You may choose to consult an advisor of your own choosing or waive this right in writing.

The disclosure must state that the payee has the right to negotiate the purchase price and is advised to obtain competing offers.

For non-settlement annuities (insurance annuities, annuity vs. lump sum conversions, and inherited annuities), New Hampshire insurance regulations and the terms of the annuity contract govern the transfer process. These transactions typically do not require court involvement, though the annuity issuer must approve the assignment. CSF works directly with the issuer to complete the transfer.

For more information on New Hampshire's insurance regulations, visit the IRS Publication 575 on annuity taxation or your state insurance department.

New Hampshire Annuity Consumer Protections and What They Mean for Sellers

New Hampshire was the 43rd state in the country to adopt the NAIC 2020 Best Interest revisions. The New Hampshire Insurance Department amended N.H. Code Admin. R. Ins 305, "Suitability in Annuity Transactions," with an effective date of February 16, 2024 under Commissioner D.J. Bettencourt during Governor Chris Sununu's administration. New Hampshire adopted by administrative rule rather than statute. Producers licensed before February 16, 2024 had until June 16, 2025 to complete updated training.

New Hampshire annuity contracts carry a 10-day free-look period under N.H. Admin. R. Ins 401.05(f), permitting return of the policy within 10 days of receipt for a full premium refund.

NHLHIGA: New Hampshire's Annuity Safety Net

If a New Hampshire-licensed insurance company issuing your annuity becomes insolvent, the New Hampshire Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association (NHLHIGA) protects up to $250,000 in present value of annuity benefits per individual life, and the same $250,000 in present value of structured settlement annuity benefits per individual life.

How This Affects You as a Seller

The short answer is that Ins 305 applies to producers selling annuities to New Hampshire consumers, not to transactions where you are converting an annuity you already own into a lump sum. CSF's purchase of your future payments is governed by separate New Hampshire law depending on the annuity type.

For structured settlement annuities, transfers in New Hampshire are governed by the New Hampshire Structured Settlement Protection Act (RSA Chapter 408-G), signed into law as SB 134 by Governor Sununu on August 11, 2021. The Act requires advance court approval based on express findings that the transfer is in the best interest of the payee (taking into account the welfare and support of the payee's dependents), that the payee was advised in writing to seek independent professional advice and either received it or knowingly waived it in writing, and that the transfer does not contravene any applicable statute or court order. New Hampshire is procedurally distinctive: it requires an in-person hearing by the payee. The state's Youth Development Center (YDC) Claims Administration and Settlement Fund operates under a separate statutory scheme at RSA 21-M:11-a, distinct from the SSPA.

We go deeper into the New Hampshire SSPA framework, including the required court findings, the IPA requirement, the transfer timeline, and the New Hampshire courts where we file most often, on our New Hampshire structured settlement page.

If you ever feel an annuity buyer in New Hampshire is pressuring you, hiding material terms, or not licensed in the state, call the New Hampshire Insurance Department Consumer Services Unit at 800-852-3416 or 603-271-2261, or visit insurance.nh.gov/consumers/filing-complaint. We have handled hundreds of New Hampshire structured settlement and annuity transfers. Have questions about your specific contract? Call us at (800) 317-3769.

What Affects Your Annuity Payout in New Hampshire

The lump sum you receive for your annuity depends on several factors. Understanding these can help you evaluate offers and decide how many payments to sell.

  • Payment amount and frequency. Larger payments and more frequent payments (monthly vs. annual) generally produce higher lump sums.
  • Remaining payment duration. An annuity with 20 years of payments remaining is worth more than one with five years left.
  • Guaranteed vs. life contingent payments. Guaranteed payments (also called "period certain") continue regardless of whether you are alive and are worth more than life contingent payments, which stop if the annuitant passes away. CSF specializes in purchasing life contingent payments that many other companies will not touch.
  • Discount rate. The discount rate is how the buyer calculates the present value of your future payments. Lower discount rates mean a higher payout for you. Discount rates for annuity transfers typically range from 9% to 18% depending on payment type and risk. Use our structured settlement calculator to see how different discount rates affect your payout.
  • Annuity issuer. Some insurance companies process transfers faster than others. A few issuers have specific policies that can affect the transfer timeline or the types of partial sales they allow.

Types of Annuities You Can Sell

CSF purchases several types of annuity payment streams from New Hampshire residents.

  • Structured settlement annuities. These are the most common type CSF purchases. If you received a personal injury, wrongful death, or workers' compensation settlement paid as periodic payments, those payments come from an annuity contract. Selling requires Superior Court approval in New Hampshire under RSA §§ 408-G:1 through 408-G:6. Read more about selling annuity payments.
  • Fixed annuities. If you purchased a fixed annuity from an insurance company (or one was purchased on your behalf), you receive guaranteed payments on a set schedule. Depending on the contract terms, you may be able to sell the remaining payment stream without court approval.
  • Inherited annuities. If you inherited an annuity from a spouse, parent, or other family member, you may be able to sell the payment stream for a lump sum. The process depends on the annuity contract and whether you are a spousal or non-spousal beneficiary.
  • Life contingent annuities. These payments continue only as long as the annuitant is alive. Because of the added risk to the buyer, many companies refuse to purchase life contingent payments. CSF has deep experience pricing and purchasing life contingent annuity payments and can often make offers where other companies will not.
  • Period certain annuities. These pay for a fixed number of years regardless of whether the annuitant is alive. Period certain payments are the easiest to value and typically receive the highest offers relative to their total value.

Not sure what type of annuity you have? Call CSF at (800) 317-3769 and we will help you identify your annuity type and explain your options. You can also read our guide on how to cash out an annuity for a detailed overview.

Why Choose CSF in New Hampshire

We want to earn your business. Get quotes from at least two or three companies and compare. We say that because we are confident in what happens next.

  • We will not be beat on price. CSF purchases structured settlement annuities, fixed annuities, inherited annuities, and life contingent annuities. If you receive another offer, give us the chance to beat it. Not a penny less.
  • New Hampshire court experience. We have handled annuity and structured settlement transfers in New Hampshire and know the Superior Court process. We manage the entire filing process at no cost to you.
  • Cash advances available. Get up to $1,500 upon signing, released the same day through DocuSign or a notary. This helps bridge the gap during the 30–45 days court process in New Hampshire.
  • Life contingent expertise. CSF specializes in buying life contingent payments that other companies will not purchase. If you have been told your payments cannot be bought, contact us for a second opinion.
  • Transparent pricing. The amount we quote is the amount you receive.
  • Free, no-obligation quotes. Call (800) 317-3769 or request a quote online. There is never any pressure to accept.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sell my annuity payments in New Hampshire?
Yes. New Hampshire residents can sell annuity payments, though the process depends on the type of annuity. Structured settlement annuities require court approval under RSA §§ 408-G:1 through 408-G:6. Insurance annuities and inherited annuities may be transferred without court involvement, depending on the contract terms and the annuity issuer's policies.
How long does it take to sell an annuity in New Hampshire?
For structured settlement annuities that require court approval, the typical timeline in New Hampshire is 30–45 days from accepting an offer to receiving your lump sum. We see most New Hampshire customers close within that range. This includes filing the petition, the mandatory notice period, and the Superior Court hearing. Non-settlement annuities that do not require court approval can close even faster, with funding as quickly as one business day once all underwriting items are in place. CSF offers cash advances upon signing to bridge the wait.
Do I need court approval to sell my annuity in New Hampshire?
If your annuity is part of a structured settlement (from a lawsuit or legal claim), then yes. New Hampshire law under RSA §§ 408-G:1 through 408-G:6 requires Superior Court approval for all structured settlement transfers. If your annuity is a standard insurance product or an inherited annuity, court approval is generally not required.
How much can I get for my annuity in New Hampshire?
The lump sum amount depends on your payment amount, frequency, remaining duration, and whether payments are guaranteed or life contingent. Discount rates typically range from 9% to 18%. CSF provides free, no-obligation quotes. Call (800) 317-3769 or request one online to get a specific number for your annuity.
Can I sell just part of my annuity payments in New Hampshire?
In most cases, yes. You can sell a specific number of future payments while keeping the rest, sell a portion of each payment, or sell all of your payments. Many New Hampshire customers choose a partial sale to get the cash they need while preserving some future income. CSF will walk you through all options during the free quote process.
Does CSF handle New Hampshire court filings for annuity transfers?
Yes. When court approval is required for a structured settlement annuity transfer, CSF manages the entire process. We prepare the transfer petition, file with the Superior Court in New Hampshire, serve notice to all interested parties, and our attorney handles the legal presentation at the hearing. The amount we quote is the amount you receive.
What is New Hampshire's annuity Best Interest rule and does it apply when I sell my payments?
New Hampshire was the 43rd state in the country to adopt the NAIC 2020 Best Interest revisions. The New Hampshire Insurance Department amended N.H. Code Admin. R. Ins 305, Suitability in Annuity Transactions, effective February 16, 2024 under Commissioner D.J. Bettencourt during Governor Chris Sununu's administration. The rule applies to producers selling annuities to consumers, not to transactions where you are selling future payments from an annuity you already own. CSF's purchase of your future payments is governed by separate New Hampshire law, including the New Hampshire Structured Settlement Protection Act (RSA Chapter 408-G) for settlement annuities, signed into law as SB 134 by Governor Sununu on August 11, 2021. New Hampshire's Youth Development Center (YDC) Claims Administration and Settlement Fund operates under a separate statutory scheme at RSA 21-M:11-a, distinct from the SSPA.

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