What Is a Fixed Indexed Annuity?
Fixed Indexed Annuity (FIA)
An insurance contract that credits interest based on the performance of a market index (most commonly the S&P 500) while guaranteeing that the account value will never decrease due to market losses. Returns are limited by caps, participation rates, and/or spreads. FIAs are insurance products — not securities — regulated by state insurance departments. All guarantees are backed by the issuing insurer’s financial strength and claims-paying ability. Not FDIC-insured.
An FIA sits in a unique space between two worlds. It is not a traditional fixed annuity — your returns vary based on what the market does. And it is not a variable annuity — you cannot lose principal due to market performance. It gives you a portion of the market’s upside in exchange for complete protection from the market’s downside.
This trade-off is the central concept to understand: FIAs trade unlimited upside for a guaranteed floor. In a year when the S&P 500 gains 25%, you might earn 8–12% (limited by a cap). In a year when the S&P 500 drops 20%, you earn exactly 0% — your account stays flat. Over multi-year periods, the combination of partial gains and zero losses can produce competitive returns with significantly less volatility than direct market exposure.
FIA sales reached $57.5 billion in the first half of 2025, according to LIMRA, making them the fastest-growing annuity category. The appeal: in a market environment where both stocks and bonds feel uncertain, FIAs offer a middle path — some growth, no loss.
But FIAs are also the most frequently misunderstood and occasionally mis-sold annuity product. This guide explains exactly how they work, where they fit, and — just as importantly — who should avoid them.
How a Fixed Indexed Annuity Works
Every FIA follows the same core lifecycle:
- You deposit a lump sum with an insurance company (typically $10,000–$500,000). This can come from savings, a maturing CD or MYGA, an IRA or 401(k) rollover, or a 1035 exchange.
- You choose one or more index strategies. Most FIAs let you allocate your premium across multiple indices and crediting methods. For example: 50% to S&P 500 annual point-to-point with a 10% cap, 30% to a proprietary index with an 8% spread method, and 20% to a fixed account earning a declared rate.
- Each year, the carrier calculates your credit. On each contract anniversary, the carrier applies the crediting formula. If the index gained, you receive a credit (subject to the cap, participation rate, or spread). If the index lost, you receive 0%. The credited interest is locked in and can never be taken back.
- Annual reset. After each crediting period, the index starting point resets to the current level. This means gains are locked in, and the next year starts from a new baseline. This annual reset is one of the most powerful FIA features: even after a market crash, you start fresh from the new (lower) level and capture the full recovery.
- At maturity or during the contract, you can withdraw up to 10% annually without surrender charges, take full withdrawal after the surrender period, 1035 exchange to another product, annuitize for lifetime income, or activate an income rider if one was elected.
Caps, Participation Rates, and Spreads: How Upside Is Limited
This is the section that matters most. FIAs limit your upside through one or more of three mechanisms. Understanding these is the key to evaluating any FIA product.
Cap Rate
The maximum credit in any period, regardless of index performance.
Example: 10% cap. S&P 500 gains 25% → you receive 10%. S&P gains 8% → you receive 8%. S&P loses 15% → you receive 0%.
Caps are the most common limiting factor on standard index strategies. As of early 2026, competitive annual point-to-point caps on the S&P 500 range from about 8% to 14%, depending on carrier and interest rate environment. Carriers can (and do) adjust caps at each contract anniversary — check the contract’s guaranteed minimum cap.
Participation Rate
The percentage of the gain that is credited to you.
Example: 80% participation rate. S&P 500 gains 10% → you receive 8% (80% of 10%). S&P gains 20% → you receive 16%. S&P loses 10% → you receive 0%.
Participation rates are often used on proprietary indices or in combination with spreads. They can range from 40% to 150% depending on the crediting method. A participation rate above 100% is possible when paired with a spread or on a volatility-controlled index. Like caps, participation rates can be adjusted annually.
Spread (Margin)
A fixed deduction subtracted from the index gain before crediting.
Example: 2% spread. S&P 500 gains 10% → you receive 8% (10% minus 2%). S&P gains 3% → you receive 1%. S&P gains 1% → you receive 0% (gain does not exceed spread). S&P loses 10% → you receive 0%.
Spreads offer unlimited upside above the spread — there is no cap. However, in modest gain years, the spread can consume the entire credit. A 2% spread sounds small, but in a year the index only gains 2.5%, your credit is just 0.5%.
The adjustment risk. Caps, participation rates, and spreads are all subject to change at each contract anniversary. A carrier may advertise a 12% cap today but is only contractually obligated to maintain the guaranteed minimum (often 1–3%). The current rate attracts you; the guaranteed minimum is what protects you. Always read the guaranteed minimums in the contract before purchasing.
FIA Crediting Methods Explained
The crediting method is the formula used to calculate your annual interest credit. Two FIAs using the same index and the same cap can produce very different returns if they use different crediting methods.
Method
How It Works
Typical Limiting Factor
Best In
Worst In
Annual Point-to-Point
Compares index on two anniversary dates
Cap rate (e.g., 10%)
Steady up-markets
Markets that peak mid-year then fall
Monthly Sum
Sums each month’s capped gain/uncapped loss
Monthly cap (e.g., 2.5%)
Low-volatility up-markets
Volatile markets (negative months drag total down)
Monthly Average
Averages 12 monthly index values vs. start
Participation rate
Volatile markets with strong finish
Markets with early gains that plateau
Performance Trigger
Credits fixed rate if index is flat or up; 0% if down
Fixed trigger rate
Flat or slightly up markets
Strong bull markets (same credit whether index gains 1% or 30%)
Spread/Margin
Index gain minus fixed spread
Spread (e.g., 2%)
Strong bull markets (no cap on upside)
Modest gain years (spread consumes most or all of credit)
If you want the simplest FIA experience: Choose annual point-to-point with a cap on the S&P 500. It is the most transparent crediting method, the easiest to understand and track, and has the longest performance track record. Avoid monthly sum methods unless you deeply understand how monthly caps interact with negative months.
FIA Income Riders: Guaranteed Lifetime Income
The income rider is the feature that distinguishes FIAs from other fixed annuities. Roughly 60–70% of FIAs sold include an income rider, making it the primary reason many people purchase the product.
How an income rider works
An income rider (formally a Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit, or GLWB) is an optional add-on that creates a second value in your contract called the benefit base. This benefit base may grow via a “roll-up rate” (typically 5–7% simple interest) during a deferral period, even if the actual account value grows less. When you activate income, you withdraw a percentage of the benefit base (typically 4–6% depending on your age) each year for life.
Key income rider mechanics
- Cost: 0.50–1.25% annually, deducted from the base account value (not the benefit base)
- Roll-up period: Typically 10–20 years during which the benefit base grows at the declared roll-up rate
- Payout percentage: Varies by age at activation, typically 4% at age 60, 5% at age 65, 5.5–6% at age 70+
- Benefit base vs. account value: The benefit base is not a cash value you can withdraw. It is an income calculation base only. Your actual cash value (surrender value) may be significantly lower.
- Lifetime guarantee: Even if your actual account value reaches $0 (depleted by withdrawals and rider fees), the guaranteed income continues for life
Critical distinction: The benefit base is not your money. It is a mathematical basis for calculating guaranteed income. If you surrender the contract, you receive the account value (which may be much less than the benefit base). Many FIA misunderstandings stem from confusing these two values. A $200,000 “benefit base” growing at 7% does not mean you have $200,000 growing at 7%. It means your guaranteed income will be calculated from that $200,000 base.
When an income rider makes sense
An FIA income rider is appropriate when you want guaranteed lifetime income starting in 5–15 years and prefer to maintain some growth potential during the deferral period. Compare the projected rider income to a DIA or SPIA for the same premium and time horizon — sometimes the simpler product delivers more guaranteed income at lower cost.
FIAs vs. Other Products
Feature
FIA
MYGA
Variable Annuity
S&P 500 Index Fund
Return source
Index-linked (capped/limited)
Fixed declared rate
Subaccount performance (full market)
Full market performance
Best-year potential
8–14% (typical cap range)
Fixed for term (currently 4.5–6.5%)
Unlimited (full subaccount return)
Unlimited
Worst-year potential
0% (floor)
Guaranteed rate (never 0%)
Unlimited loss
Unlimited loss
Principal protection
Yes — 0% floor
Yes — guaranteed rate
No
No
Annual fees
None (base); 0.50–1.25% (rider)
None
2–3%+
0.03–0.20%
Surrender period
5–12 years
2–10 years
5–8 years
None
Income rider option
Yes (primary feature)
Rarely
Yes
No
Tax treatment
Tax-deferred
Tax-deferred
Tax-deferred
Taxed annually (dividends/gains)
Complexity
Moderate–High
Very Low
High
Very Low
Insurance backing
Insurer’s claims-paying ability
Insurer’s claims-paying ability
Insurer + subaccount value
None (market risk)
Best for
Protected growth + future income
Rate certainty + simplicity
Tax-deferred market access
Long-term growth, full liquidity
The honest comparison: Over long periods (15+ years), a low-cost S&P 500 index fund will almost certainly outperform an FIA that caps returns at 10–12%. FIAs are not designed to beat the market — they are designed to capture a portion of the market’s gains while eliminating the risk of loss. The relevant comparison is not “FIA vs. stocks” but “FIA vs. what the investor would actually do with the money” — which for many conservative investors is a savings account or CD, not an index fund.
Who Should Buy a Fixed Indexed Annuity?
Appropriate For:
- Moderately conservative investors aged 50–75
- Those with $25,000+ and a 7+ year time horizon
- People who want some market upside without any market downside
- Those planning for guaranteed lifetime income in 5–15 years (via income rider)
- Investors who feel a MYGA rate is too low but don’t want direct stock market risk
- Retirees building a protected growth bucket alongside guaranteed income
- Those comfortable with understanding caps, participation rates, and crediting methods
- IRA/401(k) rollovers seeking principal protection with growth potential
Not Suitable For:
- Aggressive investors wanting full market participation (caps limit upside)
- Anyone who prioritizes simplicity (crediting methods are complex)
- Those needing liquidity within 5 years (long surrender periods)
- Young investors with 20+ year horizons (direct equity likely outperforms)
- Anyone uncomfortable with the carrier adjusting caps and rates annually
- Those who want a guaranteed, known return (MYGAs are better for this)
- Anyone with less than $25,000 to commit
- People who have been told an FIA will “match the market” (it will not)
FIA Misconceptions & Red Flags
“You get market returns with no risk”
This is the most common and most harmful FIA misrepresentation. You do not get full market returns. You get a portion of the market’s gains, limited by caps, participation rates, and spreads. With a 10% cap, you miss every point above 10% in a bull market. Over time, the accumulated drag of capped gains is significant. FIAs provide partial market upside with complete downside protection. That is a legitimate value proposition — but it is not “market returns with no risk.”
“The 7% roll-up rate means you earn 7%”
A 7% income rider roll-up rate is not a 7% return on your money. The roll-up only applies to the benefit base (an income calculation figure), not your actual account value. You cannot withdraw the benefit base as a lump sum. If you surrender the contract, you receive the account value — which is typically much lower than the benefit base. The roll-up is a tool for determining guaranteed income, not a growth rate on your cash.
“FIAs have no fees”
The base contract has no explicit annual fees. But if you add an income rider (as 60–70% of buyers do), you pay 0.50–1.25% annually — deducted from your account value. Additionally, the cap rate, participation rate, and spread represent implicit costs: the insurer profits from the difference between what the index earns and what they credit to you. An FIA is not free — the costs are just structured differently than a mutual fund or variable annuity.
“Proprietary indices outperform the S&P 500”
Many newer FIAs feature proprietary indices designed by investment banks (e.g., volatility-controlled indices, multi-asset indices). These indices often show attractive back-tested returns but may have built-in volatility dampeners that limit real-world performance. They lack the decades of transparent history that the S&P 500 provides. Approach proprietary indices with healthy skepticism and always compare to what a simple S&P 500 annual point-to-point strategy would deliver.
Red flags when being sold an FIA: Any agent who tells you an FIA “matches the market,” shows only the benefit base (not account value) projections, cannot clearly explain the crediting method, discourages you from comparing to a simpler product like a MYGA, or pressures urgency around a “limited time” cap rate is exhibiting behavior you should question. A good FIA can be an excellent product — but only when accurately represented.
How to Evaluate and Buy an FIA
- Decide if you need an FIA or a simpler product. If you want rate certainty, a MYGA is simpler and more transparent. If you want guaranteed income now, a SPIA is more direct. Only choose an FIA if you specifically want growth potential above a fixed rate with principal protection and you are comfortable with the complexity.
- Focus on the crediting method first. Annual point-to-point on the S&P 500 is the most transparent option. Understand exactly how your credit will be calculated before comparing products.
- Compare guaranteed minimums, not current rates. The current cap may be attractive, but the guaranteed minimum cap is what protects you over a 10-year surrender period. Ask for both numbers on every product.
- If you want the income rider, evaluate it separately. Calculate the projected annual income from the rider and compare it to a SPIA or DIA quote for the same premium and time horizon. If the simpler product delivers more income, the rider may not be worth the cost.
- Request an illustration showing both account value and benefit base. If an agent only shows the benefit base projection, ask to see the account value projection as well. You need to understand both.
- Verify carrier strength. Choose A.M. Best A- (Excellent) or better. FIA surrender periods can be 10–12 years — the carrier must remain strong for the duration.
- Work with an independent agent. An agent who works with multiple carriers can compare FIA products across the market, not just the products offered by one company.
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