Published: April 7, 2026 | By Jason Caudill, MBA | My Annuity Store
On March 25, 2026, Corebridge Financial and Equitable Holdings announced a definitive agreement to combine in an all-stock merger valued at approximately $22 billion. When the deal closes – expected by year-end 2026 – the combined company will become the largest annuity seller in the United States, controlling roughly 10.5% of a $448 billion annual market.
If you own an annuity from either carrier, are considering one, or work with advisors who distribute their products, here is what you need to know.
What Was Announced
The two companies will combine in an all-stock transaction. Corebridge shareholders will receive 1.0000 share of the new combined company for each Corebridge share; Equitable shareholders will receive 1.55516 shares. Upon closing, Corebridge shareholders will own approximately 51% of the combined entity and Equitable shareholders approximately 49%.
Marc Costantini, current President and CEO of Corebridge, will lead the combined company. Mark Pearson, Equitable’s longtime CEO, will serve as Executive Chair. The new headquarters will be in Houston, Texas – Corebridge’s current base.
The companies have targeted more than $500 million in annual cost savings by the end of 2028, primarily through consolidation of technology systems, administrative functions, and vendor relationships. They expect earnings accretion of more than 10% by 2028.
How Big This Deal Is
To put the scale in context: the combined company will serve over 12 million customers and manage $1.5 trillion in assets across individual retirement, group retirement, wealth management, life insurance, and institutional markets.
In annuities specifically, Corebridge and Equitable combined for more than $50 billion in sales in 2025. That makes the merged entity the #1 annuity seller in the country by volume – ahead of New York Life, Athene, and MassMutual. The product mix is particularly dominant:
- Registered Index-Linked Annuities (RILAs): #1 in the U.S. at $17.8 billion combined – this is the fastest-growing annuity segment in the country
- Variable Annuities: #2 at $11 billion combined
- Fixed Index Annuities: #3 at $10 billion combined
Nippon Life Insurance, which completed a $3.8 billion purchase of a 21.6% stake in Corebridge in early 2025, is supportive of the transaction.
What This Means for Existing Policyholders
If you own a Corebridge or Equitable annuity, the immediate answer is: nothing changes for you today.
Your contract terms, guaranteed rates, income riders, and death benefits are contractually binding regardless of corporate ownership changes. The new combined entity will be legally obligated to honor every policy it inherits. State insurance regulators – not the companies themselves – have authority over those contracts, and any merger is subject to their approval precisely to protect policyholders.
State guaranty associations provide an additional layer of protection: if a carrier became insolvent (a remote scenario for a company this size), your state’s guaranty fund would cover annuity values up to your state’s limits – typically $250,000 to $500,000 per carrier.
What may change over the 12-24 months following close: product names may be consolidated, administrative portals may migrate, and your point-of-contact for service may shift. These are integration-related changes, not policyholder-adverse ones. Watch for mail from your carrier about any account or portal transitions.
What This Means for Annuity Buyers
For buyers considering Corebridge or Equitable products, the merger creates a short-term question worth monitoring but not a reason to avoid either carrier. Both companies will continue operating independently until regulatory approvals are complete – likely late 2026 at the earliest.
A few things to watch:
Product consolidation. When two large carriers merge, duplicate products eventually get rationalized. If you are considering an Equitable or Corebridge product with a specific feature you value, locking it in before the product lineup gets restructured is a reasonable consideration. This is not urgency manufactured for sales purposes – it is how post-merger product management works across the insurance industry.
Distribution changes. The combined company will have significant leverage over independent distribution channels. The practical effect for buyers: more of their sales efforts may shift toward their own tied distribution, which could affect how products are priced in the independent broker channel over time. Working with an independent brokerage that maintains relationships across all major carriers – not just Corebridge and Equitable – remains important.
Rate competitiveness. The combined cost structure and $1.5 trillion in AUM create real scale advantages. Over time, that should translate to competitive pricing. Short-term, integration costs may dampen this. Neither carrier is expected to become uncompetitive during the transition period.
What Advisors and Agents Should Know
The combined company will have what analysts are calling “unparalleled manufacturing power” across annuity categories. That breadth – particularly the dominant RILA position – strengthens its hand in negotiations with independent distributors.
For independent advisors, the practical implication is straightforward: maintain breadth. The advisors who have historically been most resilient through carrier consolidation cycles are those with active relationships across 8-12 carriers, not those who have concentrated too heavily on one or two. If a significant portion of your book runs through Corebridge and Equitable, now is a reasonable time to deepen relationships with complementary carriers.
The integration will also create a period of operational volatility – new case management systems, shifted wholesaler territories, possible changes to suitability and illustration software. Factor that into your timeline management for any pending cases.
Timeline: What Happens Next
- Now through mid-2026: Both companies operate independently. Products remain available through normal channels. No policyholder impacts.
- Mid-2026: Expected shareholder votes at both companies
- Late 2026: Regulatory approvals expected; deal closes
- 2027-2028: Integration phase – technology consolidation, product rationalization, $500M in cost savings executed
Bottom Line for Annuity Buyers
This is the largest annuity industry merger in recent memory. Both carriers remain financially strong and operationally stable today. For existing policyholders, the contractual protections on your current policy are unchanged. For prospective buyers, neither carrier is off the table – but it is a reasonable time to compare both against the full independent market to make sure you are getting the best available rate and features, not just the most familiar name.
If you own a Corebridge or Equitable annuity and have questions about how this affects your specific contract, we are happy to review it with you. If you are considering an annuity purchase and want to compare Corebridge and Equitable to the broader market, request a free comparison and we will show you where they sit relative to the current field.