A state guaranty association is a state-mandated nonprofit that protects insurance policyholders if a member insurance company becomes insolvent. Every state has at least one guaranty association, and every licensed insurer is required to be a member. For annuity owners, the guaranty association functions similarly to FDIC coverage at a bank – a backstop if the carrier fails.
How Coverage Works
If a member insurer is declared insolvent by its home state regulator, the guaranty association steps in to either continue the contract under another carrier or pay benefits up to the state’s coverage limit. Coverage limits vary by state but most states protect annuity benefits up to $250,000 in present value per insurer per individual. Some states protect up to $300,000 or $500,000 for certain product types.
Coverage Is Per Insurer, Per State, Per Insured
If you own annuities from three different carriers and each fails, you receive guaranty coverage on each one separately – up to the limit. This is why advisors often recommend splitting large annuity premiums across multiple carriers when totals exceed the state’s per-insurer limit. A $750,000 deposit split across three carriers in a state with a $250,000 limit gives you full coverage; the same amount with one carrier exceeds the limit.
What’s NOT Covered
Guaranty associations don’t cover unregistered or non-resident transactions, contracts issued in states where the carrier wasn’t licensed, or amounts above the coverage limit. They also don’t pay until the carrier is formally declared insolvent – which can take 18-24 months. See our state guaranty association page for current coverage limits in your state.
