What Is an Annuity Rider?
A rider is an optional add-on to an annuity contract that provides a specific benefit or protection beyond the base contract. Riders are elected at purchase (some can be added later) and almost always carry an additional cost — typically 0.25% to 1.25% of the account value or benefit base per year.
Understanding riders is critical because they can either add significant value or become expensive features you pay for but never use. The right rider depends on your specific retirement income needs, health, and risk tolerance.
Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) Rider
A COLA rider (Cost-of-Living Adjustment rider) increases your annuity payout each year by a fixed percentage — typically 1%, 2%, or 3% — or by the actual Consumer Price Index (CPI), to help your income keep pace with inflation.
How COLA Works
If you elect a 3% COLA and your initial SPIA payment is $2,000/month, year 2 pays $2,060/month, year 3 pays $2,122/month, and so on — compounding annually. Over 20 years, a 3% COLA nearly doubles your monthly payment.
The Cost of COLA
Adding a COLA rider requires accepting a meaningfully lower starting payment. A 65-year-old receiving $2,000/month with no COLA might receive only $1,450–$1,550/month with a 3% COLA — a 25–28% reduction in initial income. The breakeven point (when cumulative COLA payments surpass cumulative level payments) is typically 12–15 years out. If you live beyond breakeven, COLA wins. If not, you received less income throughout.
COLA Rate: 1% | Starting Payment Reduction: ~8–10% | Approx. Breakeven: ~18–20 years
COLA Rate: 2% | Starting Payment Reduction: ~15–18% | Approx. Breakeven: ~14–16 years
COLA Rate: 3% | Starting Payment Reduction: ~25–28% | Approx. Breakeven: ~12–14 years
COLA Rate: CPI-linked | Starting Payment Reduction: ~20–25% | Approx. Breakeven: Variable
Illustrative figures. Actual reductions depend on age, gender, current payout rates, and carrier.
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit (GLWB) Rider
A GLWB rider (Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit) guarantees you can withdraw a specified percentage of a "benefit base" each year for life — even if your actual account value drops to zero. It is the most commonly purchased rider on fixed-indexed and variable annuities.
- Benefit base: A separate accounting value (not your actual account value) used to calculate your guaranteed withdrawal amount. It often rolls up at a guaranteed rate (e.g., 6–8% per year) during a deferral period.
- Withdrawal rate: Typically 4–6% of the benefit base per year, depending on your age when withdrawals begin.
- Cost: Usually 0.75–1.25% of the benefit base per year.
GLWB riders are most valuable when: (a) you defer income for many years allowing the benefit base to roll up, and (b) you live a long time — since the guarantee only pays off if you outlive your account value.
Enhanced Death Benefit Rider
An enhanced death benefit rider guarantees that your beneficiaries receive at least a specified amount — often the greater of your original premium, account value, or the highest anniversary value — regardless of market performance at the time of death.
Most relevant for variable annuities, where market declines could reduce account value below what you paid in. For fixed and indexed annuities (which already have principal protection), this rider adds less value and may not be worth the cost.
Return of Premium (ROP) Rider
A return of premium rider guarantees that if you die before collecting all of your original premium, your beneficiaries receive the unpaid balance. This eliminates one objection to SPIAs — the fear of dying early and "losing" your premium.
Adding a ROP rider to a SPIA reduces monthly payments by roughly 10–20%, depending on your age. An alternative: purchase a smaller SPIA and buy a term life policy — sometimes more cost-effective than the ROP rider cost embedded in the annuity.
Long-Term Care (LTC) Rider
Some annuities offer a long-term care rider that doubles or triples your monthly payout if you are confined to a nursing home or require home health care. Requirements typically mirror traditional LTC insurance: inability to perform 2 of 6 Activities of Daily Living (ADLs).
These riders can provide meaningful protection without the "use it or lose it" problem of standalone LTC insurance — if you never need care, the annuity still pays lifetime income. However, they are not a substitute for comprehensive LTC coverage for those with significant LTC risk.
Rider Comparison at a Glance
Rider: COLA | Typical Cost: Lower starting payout | Best For: Long life expectancy, inflation concern | Watch Out For: Breakeven takes 12–15 years
Rider: GLWB | Typical Cost: 0.75–1.25%/yr | Best For: Deferred annuity, long deferral period | Watch Out For: Cost drag reduces accumulation
Rider: Enhanced Death Benefit | Typical Cost: 0.25–0.60%/yr | Best For: Variable annuities, legacy goals | Watch Out For: Limited value in fixed/indexed products
Rider: Return of Premium | Typical Cost: 10–20% payment reduction | Best For: SPIA buyers with heirs | Watch Out For: May be cheaper via term life insurance
Rider: LTC Rider | Typical Cost: Varies widely | Best For: Moderate LTC risk, want one product | Watch Out For: Not a replacement for full LTC coverage
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a COLA rider on an annuity?
A COLA rider increases your annuity payout each year by a fixed percentage (e.g., 1–3%) or by the CPI to protect against inflation. The tradeoff is a lower starting payment — typically 8–28% less depending on the COLA rate selected.
Is a GLWB rider worth it?
A GLWB rider is most valuable when you defer income for many years (allowing the benefit base to grow) and have a long life expectancy. If you start income quickly or live an average lifespan, the ongoing rider fee may outweigh the benefit.
What does a return of premium rider do?
It guarantees that if you die before collecting your full premium, your beneficiaries receive the remaining balance. It eliminates the risk of 'losing' your premium if you die early, but reduces your monthly payments by approximately 10–20%.
Do annuity riders add cost?
Yes — nearly all riders add cost either as an annual fee (typically 0.25–1.25% of the benefit base or account value) or as a reduction in your starting payout. Always ask for the rider cost in dollar terms, not just percentages.
Can I add a rider after I buy an annuity?
Most riders must be elected at the time of purchase. A few carriers allow certain riders to be added within a limited window after issue. Once the contract is issued and that window closes, riders generally cannot be added.
Reviewed for Accuracy
This article was reviewed by Bart Catmull, CPA, NACD.DC, Advisory Board Chairman at Annuity.com. All annuity guarantees are subject to the claims-paying ability of the issuing insurance company. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice.
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