Best Annuity Rates in California: 2026 Rate Table
The rates below reflect top offers from A-rated insurance carriers available to California residents as of March 2026. Rates vary by carrier, premium amount, and product type.
Rates shown are for informational purposes only and subject to change without notice. Products marked SI use simple interest, effective compound yield is lower than the stated rate. Minimum premiums shown are for non-qualified (after-tax) funds. Always verify current rates with a licensed annuity professional before purchasing.
One thing California buyers should know: the state’s 2.35% premium tax, one of the highest in the country, means carriers net slightly less on California-issued business. Some carriers price California rates 0.05%–0.15% lower than identical products sold in lower-tax states. The difference is real but modest, and rates remain highly competitive against CDs and Treasuries.
For the full picture on how these rates are set and what drives them higher or lower, see our MYGA guide and the live rate comparison table.
How California Annuity Rates Are Affected by State Regulations
California’s premium tax of 2.35% is paid by the insurance carrier when they receive your premium. You never write a separate check for it, it’s baked into the carrier’s cost structure. But because it reduces the carrier’s effective yield on your money, it creates mild downward pressure on credited rates compared to states with lower premium taxes.
The California Department of Insurance (CDI) regulates all annuity products sold in the state. Every product must be approved before it can be offered to California residents. The CDI also enforces suitability rules requiring agents to document that an annuity recommendation fits the buyer’s financial situation, time horizon, and risk tolerance.
California has a 30-day free look period for annuity buyers age 60 and older, longer than the national standard of 10 days. This gives senior buyers a full month to review their contract, consult family or an advisor, and return the annuity for a full refund of premium if anything doesn’t feel right. Buyers under 60 receive a 10-day free look period under standard CDI rules.
Surrender charges also fall under CDI oversight. California caps surrender charge periods and requires carriers to disclose all charges prominently in the contract. Before you sign, confirm the surrender charge schedule with your agent and make sure the lock-up period aligns with when you’ll actually need access to those funds.
Example:
California is home to more annuity buyers than nearly any other state, and for good reason. With millions of retirees, a high cost of living, and no shortage of financial anxiety around outliving savings, fixed annuities are one of the few tools that offer guaranteed income for life. In 2026, top rates on 5-year fixed annuities from A-rated carriers are reaching 5.60%, giving California residents a genuinely competitive alternative to CDs and bond ladders.
Take Maria, a 62-year-old retired schoolteacher in San Jose with $250,000 in a maturing CD. At the bank, her renewal rate is 4.2%. With a 5-year fixed annuity, she locks in 5.60%, guaranteed, tax-deferred, adding roughly $35,000 more to her balance over five years compared to renewing the CD.
California Life and Health Insurance Guarantee Association
The California Life and Health Insurance Guarantee Association (CLHIGA) provides a safety net for annuity owners if their carrier becomes insolvent. Coverage limits in California are $250,000 per covered life per carrier.
Here’s how it works: if the carrier holding your annuity fails, CLHIGA steps in to either transfer your contract to a solvent carrier or pay the covered amount, up to $250,000. You don’t need to file a claim with CLHIGA proactively. The association activates automatically when a carrier is declared insolvent by the CDI.
The $250,000 limit applies per carrier, not per policy. If you have two separate annuities with the same carrier totaling $350,000, only $250,000 is covered. The practical solution for larger sums is straightforward: spread your money across two or more carriers. A $400,000 rollover split between two A-rated carriers gives you full guaranty coverage on the entire amount.
Guaranty association protection is not the same as FDIC insurance. It’s a state backstop funded by assessments on member insurers, not a federal guarantee. Still, in the history of U.S. insurance regulation, annuity policyholders have never lost principal due to carrier insolvency when state guaranty associations were in place.
Sticking with A-rated carriers (AM Best ratings of A, A+, or A++) reduces your insolvency risk further. Every carrier in our rate comparison tool is A-rated or better.
Annuity Tax Treatment in California
California taxes annuity withdrawals as ordinary income at the state level, using a graduated rate that runs from 1% on the first $10,412 of taxable income up to 13.3% on income above $1 million. For most middle-income retirees, the effective California rate on annuity distributions falls between 6% and 9.3%.
California does not offer a blanket exclusion for retirement income. Unlike Pennsylvania or other states that exempt pension and annuity distributions for retirees, California treats every dollar of annuity gain as taxable income in the year it is withdrawn. This makes tax-deferred growth particularly valuable: the longer your annuity compounds without distributions, the more you defer the California tax hit.
For qualified annuities (funded with pre-tax IRA or 401(k) money), the entire distribution is subject to both federal and California income tax. For non-qualified annuities (funded with after-tax money), only the gain, not your original principal, is taxable. This is calculated using the exclusion ratio.
California also imposes a 2.5% additional tax on early distributions before age 59½, on top of the 10% federal penalty. Early withdrawals are expensive in California, plan your surrender charge windows and distribution timing carefully. A qualified tax advisor familiar with California’s rules can help you sequence withdrawals efficiently across retirement years to manage bracket exposure.
One useful planning note: tax-deferred growth inside a multi-year guaranteed annuity delays the California tax event entirely until withdrawal. For a retiree in the 9.3% California bracket, deferring $50,000 in gains for five years has real dollar value beyond the interest itself.
How to Buy an Annuity in California: Step by Step
- Compare current rates from multiple carriers. Start with our live rate table to see which A-rated carriers are offering the best California-available rates right now. Rates change weekly, what was best in January may not be best today.
- Confirm the carrier’s financial strength ratings. Look up AM Best, S&P, or Moody’s ratings for any carrier you’re considering. Stick to carriers rated A- or higher. This is your first line of defense before the guaranty association ever becomes relevant.
- Request a no-obligation quote. Use our free quote request form to get personalized illustrations from multiple carriers. The illustration shows your guaranteed rate, surrender charge schedule, and projected account value at contract maturity.
- Review the contract during your free look period. California gives buyers age 60+ a 30-day free look period. Use it. Read the surrender charge schedule, the market value adjustment provisions (if any), and the terms for accessing your money during the contract period. Confirm the credited rate is guaranteed, not a teaser rate that resets after year one.
- Complete the application and fund the contract. Your agent will submit the application to the carrier. Funding typically comes from a bank wire, CD rollover, or IRA/401(k) transfer. Make sure the paperwork correctly designates your beneficiaries, this determines how the death benefit passes outside of probate.
For a deeper walkthrough of the full process, read our guide on how to buy an annuity.
Frequently Asked Questions About Annuities in California
Are annuities a good investment for California retirees?
For retirees who want guaranteed, predictable growth on a portion of their savings, fixed annuities are one of the strongest options available in 2026. California’s high income tax rates make tax-deferral especially valuable, the longer gains compound untaxed inside the annuity, the more you ultimately accumulate. Fixed annuities are not suited for money you may need access to within the surrender period, so they work best as part of a broader retirement income strategy rather than the sole vehicle for all your savings.
How does California’s premium tax affect my annuity rate?
California’s 2.35% premium tax is paid by the carrier, not by you directly. However, it does modestly suppress credit rates compared to lower-tax states, typically by 0.05%–0.15%. In practice, the difference is minor relative to the rate spread between strong and weak products. Choosing the right carrier and product matters far more than the premium tax differential. Our rate table always reflects California-available rates after carrier pricing adjustments.
What is the guaranty association limit in California?
The California Life and Health Insurance Guarantee Association covers up to $250,000 per covered life per carrier. If you have more than $250,000 to invest, consider splitting across two or more A-rated carriers to ensure the entire amount falls within guaranty protection. This strategy is sometimes called “carrier laddering” and is a common approach among annuity buyers with $500,000 or more to deploy.
Can I put my annuity inside an IRA in California?
Yes. Fixed annuities and MYGAs can be held inside a traditional IRA or Roth IRA. For a traditional IRA, the annuity’s tax-deferral is redundant (the IRA already provides deferral), but the guaranteed rate and principal protection are still valuable. For a Roth IRA, annuity gains inside the Roth can grow and be distributed entirely tax-free at the federal and California state levels if you meet Roth distribution requirements. This makes Roth-funded annuities particularly attractive for California residents facing high state income taxes in retirement.