What an annuity actually is, the four main types, who they make sense for, and how to evaluate one. Honest answers, no sales pitch, no jargon. Vol. 01 · MAY 2026

Annuities 101 — A Plain-English Guide for 2026

If you’ve Googled “what is an annuity” and gotten a wall of jargon, fees-fees-fees scare-pieces, or breathless infomercials, you’re in good company. Annuities are one of the most misunderstood products in personal finance. Some of that’s the industry’s fault — annuities used to be sold with high commissions, opaque structures, and lock-ups that didn’t fit most buyers. A lot of those products still exist. But many of the modern ones are genuinely useful for genuinely common situations.

This guide tries to do something rare: explain annuities the way an honest licensed agent would explain them to a family member. What they are. What they’re not. When they make sense. When they don’t. How to tell the good ones from the bad. No fee math designed to confuse you, no “limited-time bonus rate” pressure tactics.

If by the end you decide an annuity isn’t for you, that’s fine — better to figure that out from a free article than from a broker pitching commission. If you decide it might be, a licensed LAD agent can run a real quote on the carriers that actually fit your situation.

What an annuity actually is

An annuity is a contract between you and an insurance company. You give the company money — either as a lump sum or in installments. In return, the company guarantees to give it back to you over time, with interest, in a way that’s defined upfront in the contract.

That’s it. No magic. The marketing wrapping varies, but the core is: you pay them, they invest the money, they pay you back later.

The reason annuities exist as a product category — and why insurance companies sell them instead of banks — is that insurance companies are uniquely good at one thing: pricing the risk that you live longer than expected. Banks can pay you interest on a deposit. Only an insurance company can pay you guaranteed income for the rest of your life, however long that turns out to be. That guarantee — that you can’t outlive your money — is the thing annuities sell that nothing else really sells.

The four main types

Most annuities fall into one of four buckets. There are wrinkles and hybrids, but if you understand these four you understand the category.

MYGA — Multi-Year Guaranteed Annuity

Think of a MYGA as a CD from an insurance company. You deposit a lump sum, the carrier guarantees a fixed interest rate for a fixed period (typically 3, 5, 7, or 10 years), and at the end you can take your money plus accumulated interest, or roll it into a new MYGA.

FIA — Fixed Indexed Annuity

A FIA gives you principal protection (you can’t lose money to market downturns) plus growth tied to a market index — typically the S&P 500 — but with a cap on how much of the index’s gain you participate in.

If the S&P returns 12% in a year and your FIA has a 6% cap, you earn 6%. If the S&P returns -20%, you earn 0% — your account doesn’t go down. Over many years, this trades higher upside for principal protection.

SPIA — Single Premium Immediate Annuity

A SPIA converts a lump sum into a guaranteed monthly check that starts almost immediately and lasts as long as you specified — often “for life.”

DIA — Deferred Income Annuity (and QLAC)

Same idea as a SPIA, but income payments start later — often 5, 10, or 20 years in the future. The longer the deferral, the higher the eventual monthly check (because the carrier has more time to invest your premium).

A QLAC (“Qualified Longevity Annuity Contract”) is a special DIA you can buy with up to $200,000 of qualified retirement money (IRA / 401(k)). It defers required minimum distributions (RMDs) on that money until age 85.

What about variable annuities?

Variable annuities exist but aren’t covered above because they’re a different animal: you allocate the premium across mutual-fund-like sub-accounts, your value goes up and down with markets, and the contract typically wraps everything in income or death benefit guarantees that come with significant fees. They require a securities license to sell. They’re outside the scope of this guide and aren’t part of LAD’s primary product mix. If you’re being pitched a variable annuity, get a second opinion from a fee-only fiduciary before signing.

Who annuities make sense for

Annuities are the right product for a specific set of situations:

Who annuities don’t make sense for

Equally important — situations where annuities are usually the wrong tool:

The trade-off everyone has to understand

Every annuity is a trade-off between liquidity and certainty.

You give up some access to your money in exchange for a guarantee from the insurance company — guaranteed interest rate, guaranteed income for life, guaranteed principal protection. The longer you’re willing to leave the money with them, the better the guarantee you get. This is why a 10-year MYGA pays a higher rate than a 3-year MYGA: the carrier knows it has your money for ten years, so it can invest it longer-dated and pay you more.

If that trade-off doesn’t fit your life, an annuity isn’t your product. If it does, the question becomes: which annuity, from which carrier, on what terms.

How surrender charges work

Most annuities have a surrender period during which you owe a charge if you withdraw more than the contract’s free-withdrawal allowance (typically 10% per year).

A typical 7-year MYGA surrender schedule looks like:

| Year | Surrender charge if you fully withdraw | |—|—:| | 1 | 7% | | 2 | 6% | | 3 | 5% | | 4 | 4% | | 5 | 3% | | 6 | 2% | | 7 | 1% | | 8+ | 0% |

The schedule is in the contract. After the surrender period ends, you can withdraw the entire balance with no charge. Until then, you can take the 10% free withdrawal each year without penalty — useful for retirees who want regular income from their annuity.

Surrender charges are how the carrier protects itself against having to liquidate long-term investments early. They’re not punitive; they reflect the cost the carrier eats if you leave early. The right answer to “what about the surrender charge?” is “I don’t plan to surrender — this money is committed for the term.” If you can’t say that, the term is too long for you.

Tax treatment

Two things to know:

  1. Tax-deferred growth. Whatever interest your annuity earns is not taxed until you withdraw it. This is similar to an IRA but without the contribution limits — you can put $500,000 into a MYGA and the entire interest stream compounds tax-deferred. For someone already maxing IRAs and 401(k)s, this is meaningful.
  2. Ordinary income on withdrawal, not capital gains. When you do withdraw, the gain portion is taxed as ordinary income (not the lower capital-gains rate). This is the main tax disadvantage of annuities vs. taxable equity accounts. For high-bracket taxpayers, this matters. For most middle-bracket retirees who’ll be in a lower bracket once they stop working, it doesn’t.

Qualified money (IRA / 401(k)) inside an annuity follows the rules of the underlying retirement account — RMDs apply, and withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income regardless. The annuity wrapper doesn’t change those rules.

How to evaluate any annuity offer

Five things to look at, in order:

  1. The carrier’s financial strength rating. AM Best ratings (A-, A, A+, A++) measure the carrier’s ability to pay claims. Stick to A-rated or better. A carrier that defaults can leave you waiting for state guaranty association coverage, which is real but capped (most states are $100,000–$250,000 of present value for annuity contracts; a few are higher — verify your state’s limit at nolhga.com).
  2. The headline rate or income figure. For MYGAs, the guaranteed yield. For FIAs, the cap rate or participation rate (and whether they’re guaranteed for the surrender period or only the first year). For SPIAs, the monthly income per $100k of premium.
  3. The surrender schedule. How long, and how steep. Compare to your actual liquidity needs.
  4. Fees and riders. Base MYGA: usually no fees beyond the surrender schedule. Base FIA: usually no fees, but optional income or enhanced death benefit riders typically cost 0.5%–1.5% per year. Variable annuities have multiple fee layers (mortality & expense, sub-account fees, rider fees) that can total 2.5%–4% annually. Add them all up.
  5. State availability. Some carrier products aren’t sold in every state. Your resident state’s insurance department approves specific product filings; what’s available in Texas may not be available in New York.

If your agent can answer all five questions clearly and the answers are competitive, the product is probably fair. If they hedge on any of them, get a second opinion.

Common myths

Get a real quote

If you got this far, an annuity might fit your situation. The next step is comparing actual carrier rates and products against your specific goals. A licensed LAD Financial agent can run a quote across the carriers we represent at no charge and with no obligation. You’ll get carrier-by-carrier comparisons in writing, usually the same day you ask.

Get a quote from a licensed LAD agent — takes about two minutes to fill out the form. We’ll have an agent reach out within one business day.

Or if you want to see live rates first, this week’s top MYGA rates are here.


Information shown is for educational purposes and is not a recommendation, solicitation, or offer of any specific product. Insurance products are offered by licensed agents of LAD Financial, LLC and the issuing carriers. Product availability, rates, and features vary by state and individual circumstances. Verify current terms with a licensed agent before making any decision.

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