The Reliance Accumulator 7 is a fixed indexed deferred annuity issued by Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company, a member of the Tokio Marine Group. It is built for accumulation: six index crediting strategies, high participation rates, and an optional enhanced death benefit – with no income rider.
Of the three indexed annuities reviewed here, the Reliance Accumulator 7 stands out for using primarily established indexes with real, live track records rather than proprietary backtested alternatives. The S&P MARC 5% ER Index, which drives the product’s headline crediting rates, has been live since March 2017.
Reliance Accumulator 7 at a Glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Issuing Carrier | Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company |
| Parent Company | Tokio Marine Group |
| AM Best Rating | A (Excellent) |
| Product Type | Single Premium Fixed Indexed Deferred Annuity |
| Surrender Period | 7 years |
| Minimum Premium | $20,000 (ages 0-75); $500,000 maximum age 76-85 |
| Maximum Premium | $1,000,000 (ages 0-75) |
| Free Withdrawals | 10% of account value per year; 25% with nursing care |
| Market Value Adjustment | No (notable advantage over many competitors) |
| Income Rider Available | No |
How Does the Reliance Accumulator 7 Work?
The Accumulator 7 credits interest annually based on the performance of a chosen index strategy. Principal is fully protected – you cannot lose money due to index declines. At each anniversary, gains are locked in permanently and cannot be reversed.
A significant advantage over many competing products: no Market Value Adjustment (MVA). Many FIAs include an MVA that can reduce your payout if interest rates have risen since you purchased the contract. The Accumulator 7 does not apply an MVA, meaning your cash surrender value is more predictable throughout the surrender period.
Current Index Crediting Options (2026)
| Index Strategy | Crediting Method | Current Rate | Min. Guarantee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed Account | Guaranteed fixed rate | 4.65% | 1.00% |
| S&P 500 | Annual Point-to-Point – Cap | 10.00% cap | 1.00% cap |
| S&P 500 | Annual Point-to-Point – Participation | 54% par rate | 10% par rate |
| S&P 500 | Annual Monthly Average – Cap | 10.50% cap | 1.00% cap |
| S&P MARC 5% ER Index | Annual Point-to-Point – Participation | 210% par rate | 40% par rate |
| S&P MARC 5% ER Index | Annual Point-to-Point – Par + Spread | 230% par / 1.00% spread | 100% par / 1.00% spread |
Rates are current as of early 2026 and subject to change at each contract anniversary. Minimum guaranteed rates are contractual minimums that cannot be reduced below the stated floor for the life of the contract.
Understanding the S&P MARC 5% ER Index
The headline crediting strategy – 230% participation rate with a 1% spread on the S&P MARC 5% ER – deserves explanation.
The S&P MARC 5% ER (Multi-Asset Risk Control 5% Excess Return) is a rules-based, volatility-controlled index that allocates dynamically across U.S. equities, commodities, and bonds while targeting a 5% annualized volatility level. It has been live since March 27, 2017, with approximately eight years of real performance data.
Because it targets low volatility (5%), the index typically moves more slowly than the standard S&P 500. That is why the participation rate is so high – the carrier can afford to offer 230% participation on a low-volatility index because the cost to hedge that exposure is much lower than hedging a raw S&P 500 strategy.
In practical terms: if the S&P MARC 5% ER gains 6.00% in a year and your spread is 1.00%, your effective gain used for crediting is 5.00% (6.00% – 1.00% spread). Applied at 230% participation, your credited interest would be 11.50%. If the index gains only 1.00% – less than the spread – you receive zero interest, not a loss.
No Market Value Adjustment – A Key Differentiator
Most fixed indexed annuities include a Market Value Adjustment that applies when you take excess withdrawals or surrender the contract before the end of the surrender period. The MVA adjusts your payout based on how interest rates have moved since contract issue – and in a rising-rate environment, this adjustment is typically negative.
The Reliance Accumulator 7 does not include a Market Value Adjustment. Your surrender value during the surrender period is calculated without an MVA – making the product’s liquidity more straightforward to understand and plan around.
Surrender Charge Schedule
| Contract Year | Surrender Charge |
|---|---|
| Years 1-2 | 8% |
| Year 3 | 7% |
| Year 4 | 6% |
| Year 5 | 5% |
| Year 6 | 4% |
| Year 7 | 3% |
| Year 8+ | 0% |
After the surrender period, 100% of your contract value is accessible without charge. The 10% annual free withdrawal provision allows you to access funds during the surrender period without penalty, subject to the standard limitations.
Optional Enhanced Death Benefit
The Reliance Accumulator 7 offers an Enhanced Death Benefit rider for an annual fee of 0.40% of account value. This rider provides:
- The death benefit grows at 8% simple interest per year on the original premium, for up to 13 years
- On death, your beneficiaries receive the greater of the contract value or the enhanced death benefit value
- Useful for clients whose primary goal is wealth transfer, not income
Example: Bob, age 65, invests $200,000 in the Accumulator 7 with the Enhanced Death Benefit rider. Each year, the death benefit base grows by $16,000 (8% simple interest on $200,000). If Bob passes away in year 10, his beneficiaries would receive at least $360,000 ($200,000 + $160,000 accumulated death benefit growth) – regardless of how the index performed. At 0.40% on a $200,000 contract, the annual rider fee is approximately $800 per year.
If wealth transfer is not a priority, declining the Enhanced Death Benefit rider saves the 0.40% annual fee and slightly improves net accumulation performance.
Nursing Care and Terminal Illness Benefits
- Nursing Care Benefit – After 90 consecutive days of nursing facility confinement, surrender charges are waived and you can access up to 25% of account value per year penalty-free (vs. the standard 10%)
- Terminal Illness Benefit – Full access to account value upon terminal illness diagnosis, with surrender charges waived
Who Is the Reliance Accumulator 7 Best For?
The Accumulator 7 is a strong fit for clients who:
- Want principal protection with exposure to multiple crediting strategies
- Prefer index options with real, established live performance history
- Value the absence of a Market Value Adjustment for more predictable liquidity
- Are interested in a high-participation strategy tied to a low-volatility index
- Want optional wealth transfer protection via the Enhanced Death Benefit
It is not a fit for clients who need guaranteed lifetime income – the Accumulator 7 has no income rider. Compare with income-focused products like the NAC BenefitSolutions 10 if a guaranteed income stream is the priority.
Reliance Accumulator 7 Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| No Market Value Adjustment – cleaner liquidity | No income rider – pure accumulation only |
| S&P MARC 5% ER Index has 8+ years of live history (since 2017) | High participation rates are on a low-volatility, dampened index |
| Multiple crediting strategies including standard S&P 500 options | $20,000 minimum premium; lower maximum at older ages |
| A (Excellent) AM Best rating (Tokio Marine-backed) | Single premium only – no additional deposits after issue |
| Enhanced Death Benefit available (8% simple interest) | Rider fee (0.40%) reduces net accumulation if elected |
| Contractual minimum par rate guarantees (e.g., 100% floor on MARC spread strategy) | Reliance Standard is less widely known than top-tier carriers |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Reliance Standard a reputable insurance company?
Yes. Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company is a member of the Tokio Marine Group, one of the world’s largest insurance organizations (founded in Japan in 1879). Reliance Standard itself has been operating in the U.S. since 1907 and holds an A (Excellent) rating from AM Best. The Tokio Marine parent structure provides strong reinsurance backing.
What is the S&P MARC 5% ER Index?
The S&P Multi-Asset Risk Control 5% Excess Return Index is a rules-based index that dynamically allocates across U.S. equities, commodities, and bonds while targeting a 5% annualized volatility level. It has been live since March 27, 2017 – giving it approximately eight years of real performance history, unlike many newer proprietary indexes used in FIA illustrations today.
Does the Accumulator 7 have a Market Value Adjustment?
No. This is one of the product’s key differentiators. Most competing FIAs include an MVA that can reduce your cash value if you surrender during a rising interest rate environment. The Reliance Accumulator 7 does not apply an MVA.
Can I take income from the Accumulator 7?
The product does not have an income rider or GLWB. You can take the standard 10% annual free withdrawal as a form of income, or annuitize the contract at the end of the surrender period. For structured guaranteed lifetime income, you would need a different product.
Is the Enhanced Death Benefit worth the 0.40% fee?
It depends on your goals. If wealth transfer to heirs is important – and you want a predictable, growing death benefit that is not subject to market performance – the Enhanced Death Benefit provides meaningful value at 0.40% annually. If accumulation for your own use is the primary goal, declining the rider keeps more of your returns working for you.
Product features and rates are subject to change. Contact a licensed agent for current rates and availability in your state. Annuities are insurance products, not bank deposits, and are not guaranteed by any federal agency. Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company is the issuing entity.