Annuity Complaint Index 2025: A-Cap Carriers Hit Historic Highs, Oceanview Improves

Updated April 24, 2026

What the 2025 NAIC Complaint Data Actually Says

The National Association of Insurance Commissioners just released its 2025 closed-complaint data on individual annuities. One number jumps off the page so loudly that it is almost easy to miss the rest of the story.

Sentinel Security Life Insurance Company posted a 2025 individual annuity complaint index score of 356.

For context on what that means:

  • Index of 1.0 = a carrier received exactly the number of complaints expected for its size
  • Index of 2.0 = double the expected complaints
  • Index of 356 = 356 times the rate you would expect for a carrier of that size

That is an outlier so extreme it is not really comparable to anything else in the industry.

Its sister carrier under Advantage Capital Holdings (A-Cap), Atlantic Coast Life Insurance Company, posted a 119 score. Also bad. Also without precedent in any normal year of NAIC data.

How do you get there? You stop selling annuities almost entirely. Then the few complaints you do get carry massively disproportionate weight against your shrunken premium share.

The A-Cap Story Behind the Numbers

Sentinel earned $26.6 million in annuity premiums in 2025. The year before, the same company wrote $1.5 billion. That is a 98% drop in twelve months. The complaints did not surge, only rising from 7 to 11. The denominator collapsed.

The collapse happened because state regulators in Utah and South Carolina ordered both A-Cap subsidiaries to stop writing new business effective December 31, 2024. Utah’s order against Sentinel cited three specific concerns:

  • More than 10% of the company’s investments concentrated in a single related entity (a violation of Utah code)
  • A declining risk-based capital ratio
  • What regulators called “a disproportionately large number of high-risk investments”

South Carolina’s parallel order against Atlantic Coast Life flagged $200 million of the company’s investments and $460 million at affiliated reinsurer Southern Atlantic Re as non-admitted assets, meaning they could not be counted toward statutory capital.

The legal back-and-forth that followed has been ugly and is still ongoing:

  • February 2025: South Carolina’s administrative law judge sided with A-Cap, rejecting the state insurance department’s “financial distress” finding
  • May 2025: Utah dropped its litigation
  • June 2025: A-Cap announced negotiations with Oaktree Capital Management for emergency funding support
  • March 2026: Oaktree Capital Management took control of Atlantic Coast Life

That last development is the most consequential. Solvent, healthy carriers do not get bailout-style takeovers from distressed-debt specialists. Oaktree’s involvement signals that the underlying balance sheet problems were real, not a regulatory misunderstanding.

Both A-Cap carriers are technically allowed to write new business again. Most independent agents and broker-dealers, including this one, are not writing it.

The Atlantic Coast Life Rate That Keeps Showing Up

Here is the part where I get to be a little personal.

You will still see Atlantic Coast Life listed near the top of “best fixed annuity rates” comparison sites, often at headline numbers like 7.45%. That number is real. It is also, almost always, a first-year teaser bonus, not the rate you actually earn over the life of the contract.

How the Safe Harbor Bonus Guarantee MYGA actually works:

  • Year one: A juicy bonus rate (the headline number you see advertised)
  • Years two through term: A much lower base credit for the remainder of the surrender period
  • End of term: Auto-renews at whatever rate is in effect at that moment
  • Floor: The contract guarantees only that the renewal rate cannot fall below 1.00%

The blended yield over a 5-year hold typically lands closer to 5.50% to 6.00%, depending on the year. That is not bad. It is not 7.45%.

Dressing it up as 7.45% on a comparison page, without an asterisk explaining that the headline number applies to year one only, has consistently put MAS in an awkward position. Visitors compare our honestly-blended rate tables to a competitor’s teaser-rate-as-headline display, and the competitor looks better even though the buyer would walk away with less money.

Side-by-side line charts comparing a 7. 45% first-year teaser bonus that drops to a 1% renewal floor versus a steady 5. 75% true blended yield over 5 years
A 7.45% first-year bonus that resets to a 1% floor for years 2-5 is not a 7.45% MYGA. The honest blended yield is 5.75%.

Why MAS Does Not List Atlantic Coast Life

Two reasons we leave it off our top-rated fixed annuity rates page:

  1. The teaser-rate display is misleading. We list the blended, full-term yield. We will not show a year-one bonus as if it is the contract rate.
  2. The parent company A-Cap has been in regulatory and balance-sheet distress for over a year and is now under the de facto control of Oaktree. Neither factor disappears because the headline number is high.

If you are curious about the carriers themselves, our full Atlantic Coast Life review walks through the products, regulatory history, and current ownership. Same for our Sentinel Security review.

The Carrier That Actually Improved

Lost in the noise around A-Cap is a much quieter, much more positive story: Oceanview Life and Annuity.

Oceanview’s 2025 results:

  • Annuity complaints cut to 6 in 2025, down from 17 in 2024
  • Complaint index halved year-over-year
  • Premium volume continued to grow during the same period

For a carrier that has been growing aggressively, that is not a normal trajectory. Carriers that grow fast almost always see complaint counts rise in absolute terms, even if the rate per dollar of premium falls. Oceanview cut both the absolute number and the index score at the same time. Service operations got better while the book got bigger. That is genuinely hard to do.

Oceanview is also one of the carriers that frequently sits at the top of our honestly-blended MYGA rate tables on a real, full-term basis. Not a teaser. The rate you see is the rate you earn for the entire surrender period. Our Oceanview review has the full carrier breakdown.

Honorable mention to U.S. Life Insurance Co. (a Corebridge Financial subsidiary), which cut complaints by 10 year-over-year and dropped its index 1.89 points to settle just slightly above industry average. Less dramatic than Oceanview, but a real operational win.

And Then There Is Athene

Worth noting, because the headlines focus on the bad actors:

  • Athene ranked as the #1 individual annuity seller in the United States for the third consecutive year in 2025
  • Generated roughly $33 billion in premium
  • That is well over 5% of the entire $465 billion U.S. annuity market
  • Complaint index sits in normal-carrier territory

A carrier that big, processing that many policies, would normally generate a high raw complaint count just from the volume. It did not. For the largest annuity seller in the country, that is the complaint profile you want to see. Our Athene review covers the products and ratings in detail.

The Transamerica situation, by contrast, deserves scrutiny:

  • 41 complaints (largest absolute count in the survey)
  • +10 year-over-year (largest YoY increase)
  • Index of 10.4 against $3.4 billion in premium

That is not the catastrophic outlier Sentinel posted, but it is also not a rounding error. When a top-15 annuity seller logs that many complaints, something operational is off. Worth watching as 2026 progresses.

Checklist comparing green-light criteria (am best a or better, no cease-and-desist orders, transparent rate disclosure, no pe takeover) versus red-flag criteria for evaluating a fixed annuity carrier
A two-column carrier-vetting checklist plus the two-question test to run on any agent before signing.

What This Means If You Are Shopping for a Fixed Annuity

Headline rates are not yields

A 7.45% first-year bonus on a 5-year contract is not a 7.45% MYGA. The blended rate is what you earn. Always ask the agent for:

  • The year-one rate as a separate line item
  • The year-two-through-end rate as a separate line item
  • The guaranteed renewal floor (the rate below which the carrier cannot drop)

If they will not provide all three, the headline is doing work it should not be doing.

Financial strength is not optional

An A-rated or better AM Best carrier with a clean regulatory track record is the floor we recommend for any fixed annuity placement. Two situations that fail that floor:

  • Carriers under cease-and-desist orders, even temporarily reversed ones
  • Carriers being taken over by distressed-debt firms

There is no headline rate worth signing a 7-year or 10-year contract with a carrier whose balance sheet is being argued about in court.

If you want to see what the live, full-term, no-teaser rates look like across the 50+ top-rated carriers we work with, check our current fixed annuity rates. Or grab a quick quote and we will run an apples-to-apples comparison for your specific deposit amount and term.

Sources & Citations

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Editorial Disclosure: Our editorial team independently reviews and rates annuity products. We may earn commissions when you request a quote through our partner links. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Learn more.
Disclaimer: This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Annuity products vary by state and carrier. Always consult a licensed financial professional before making any financial decisions. My Annuity Store is an independent marketplace and does not provide investment advice.
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Pros and Cons of Fixed Annuities

Before you commit to a fixed annuity, weigh the advantages and drawbacks for your retirement situation.

✓  Pros

  • Guaranteed rate locked in for the full term, no surprises
  • Principal is 100% protected from market losses
  • Often pays significantly more than CDs or savings accounts
  • Tax-deferred growth, no annual tax bill until withdrawal
  • Up to 10% annual free withdrawal without surrender charge
  • State guaranty association coverage (typically up to $250,000)
  • Simple to understand, no moving parts or index tracking

✗  Cons

  • Surrender charges apply if you withdraw more than 10% early
  • Not FDIC insured. Backed by the insurance company, not the government
  • Earnings taxed as ordinary income (not capital gains rates)
  • 10% IRS early-withdrawal penalty before age 59½
  • Rate is fixed, so you won't benefit if market rates rise
  • Less liquidity than a savings account or money market

Learn more: Are annuities safe?

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Rates sourced from AnnuityRateWatch. A-rated carriers (AM Best) only. Not a solicitation. Rates vary by state. Verify before purchasing.

Types of Annuities

Insurance companies offer several types of annuities to fit different financial goals. Here's how they compare.

A MYGA (Multi-Year Guaranteed Annuity) is the simplest fixed annuity. Your rate is guaranteed for the entire term of 3, 5, or 7 years. No market exposure, no index tracking. What you see is what you earn.

Best for: Savers who want a predictable, guaranteed return and are comfortable locking funds for a set term. Often compared to CDs but frequently pays more.

Learn more about MYGAs →

A Fixed Indexed Annuity (FIA) links your interest credits to a market index (like the S&P 500) with a floor of 0%, so you can never lose principal. Upside is capped via participation rates or caps.

Best for: Investors who want some market participation with a safety net. More complex than MYGAs but potentially higher returns in strong market years.

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A SPIA (Single Premium Immediate Annuity) converts a lump sum into a guaranteed income stream: monthly checks that start within 30 days and continue for life or a set period.

Best for: Retirees who need guaranteed income immediately and want to eliminate the risk of outliving their money. The "pension replacement" product.

Learn more about SPIAs →

A Variable Annuity invests your premium in sub-accounts (similar to mutual funds). Returns fluctuate with the market, so you can earn more but can also lose principal.

Best for: Long-term investors who want market exposure inside a tax-deferred wrapper and are comfortable with investment risk. Higher fees than fixed products.

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A RILA (Registered Index-Linked Annuity) offers partial market participation with a defined buffer against losses (e.g., 10% or 20%). Unlike FIAs, RILAs can lose money, but losses are limited.

Best for: Investors willing to accept limited downside in exchange for higher upside potential than a traditional FIA. A middle ground between fixed and variable.

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Rate Methodology

My Annuity Store monitors MYGA rates from over 50 A-rated insurance carriers via AnnuityRateWatch. Our rate data refreshes every 6 hours.

To make our list, a carrier must be rated A− or better by AM Best, a financial strength rating that indicates the insurer's ability to meet obligations. Carriers with ratings of B++ or lower are excluded regardless of how attractive their rate appears.

Rates are sorted by highest guaranteed APY within each term group. Products using simple interest (SI) are labeled. The effective compound yield is lower than the stated rate. Minimum premiums shown are for non-qualified (after-tax) purchases.

Data: AnnuityRateWatch · A-rated carriers only · Updated daily
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