Deuterium annealing effects on the electrical properties of (Ba,Sr)TiO3 (BST) thin films were investigated using electrical measurements and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) band bending analysis as a function of Pt surface coverage. In combination with the results from secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) depth profiling, these results suggest that the majority of deuterium defects incorporated during low temperature D2/N2 anneals is electrically inactive. Therefore, there are quite likely other contributors, in addition to charged interstitial deuterium defects, to the observed leakage current degradation after deuterium/hydrogen forming gas annealing, such as oxygen vacancies formed under reducing D2 annealing conditions and annealing-induced changes in the BST/Pt interface state density. The XPS band bending analysis provides information on the electrostatic potential difference across BST thin films with a Pt bottom electrode. With this boundary condition as input, simulations based on a previously developed equilibrium point defect model and the static (annealing time independent) deuterium depth profiles obtained by SIMS analysis have been performed to predict equilibrium defect distributions across BST thin films.