Fixed annuities (MYGAs)

How a fixed annuity actually works.

A fixed annuity is a contract that pays a guaranteed rate for a fixed term — like a CD, but issued by a regulated insurer and often at higher rates. Here’s how they work, what to watch for, and who they fit.

See today’s top rates

MYGA, decoded

Three plain English words.

“Multi-Year”

How long the rate is locked. A 7-year MYGA = same rate every year for seven years.

“Guaranteed”

The rate cannot change. The carrier locks it in for the full term.

“Annuity”

An insurance company holds the money, not a bank. At maturity you take it back.

Multi-Year
Guaranteed
Annuity

A 7-year MYGA is a guaranteed rate held at an insurance company for seven years.

How a MYGA works

Three steps, end to end.

  1. 01

    Fund

    You wire a single premium

    $5,000 to $1M+, depending on the carrier. Money goes to the insurer’s general account.

  2. 02

    Grow

    Interest accrues at the guaranteed rate

    Tax-deferred until withdrawal. Free-withdrawal provisions usually allow 10% per year without penalty.

  3. 03

    Mature

    At end of term, choose

    Roll into a new MYGA (1035 exchange), take the cash, or annuitize for guaranteed income.

Run the numbers

Try it on your own deposit.

Two interactive tools for the trade-offs people get wrong most often. Move sliders, change rates, see what actually happens.

Comparing to a CD instead? Read the CD vs. fixed annuity guide →

What to watch for

The fine print that decides the outcome.

These are where most MYGA buyers regret the call. Each one’s worth understanding before you sign.

The safety layers

How a MYGA is protected.

Not FDIC-insured. Insurance carriers and state guaranty associations carry the load.

Facing a specific MYGA decision?

A carrier, a term, a rate — with the math, the alternative, and the call we’d make if it were our money.