An income rider (often a Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit, or GLWB) is the feature that turns an annuity into a paycheck you cannot outlive. Because riders differ widely in payout rates, roll-up rates, and fees, comparing carriers matters more than picking a "brand." Here are seven worth evaluating in 2026.
The 7 best annuity income rider companies
1. Allianz Life — best for strong roll-up and bonus features
Known for competitive income riders with attractive roll-up rates and occasional premium bonuses that boost the income base. A frequent top choice for buyers prioritizing future guaranteed income. Rider fees apply.
2. Athene — best for high payout percentages
Consistently competitive guaranteed withdrawal rates, especially for buyers who defer before turning on income. Strong fixed indexed annuity (FIA) lineup with flexible rider options.
3. Nationwide — best for flexibility and joint income
Well-regarded riders with solid joint-life payout options for couples and flexible income-start timing. A balanced choice for households planning income for two lives.
4. Lincoln Financial — best for variable annuity income riders
A leader in VA income guarantees for buyers who want market participation alongside a lifetime income floor. Strong for those comfortable with more upside and more complexity.
5. Global Atlantic — best for low-cost rider structures
Offers competitive income riders with comparatively lean fee structures, attractive when you want guaranteed income without giving up as much to rider costs.
6. Corebridge Financial (formerly AIG) — best for established carrier scale
A large, established insurer with a broad annuity menu and competitive income-rider terms across multiple product types.
7. Fidelity & Guaranty (F&G) — best for FIA buyers seeking income certainty
Competitive FIA income riders with predictable guaranteed income, often appealing to conservative buyers focused on certainty over upside.
How an income rider actually works
Two numbers do most of the heavy lifting:
- Roll-up rate. While you defer, your "income base" (a separate accounting value used only to calculate income, not a cash value) grows at a guaranteed rate — often 5%–8% simple or compound per year. The longer you wait, the bigger the base.
- Payout/withdrawal rate. When you turn income on, the carrier multiplies your income base by a withdrawal percentage tied to your age (and whether the income is single or joint). Older start ages get higher percentages.
Guaranteed lifetime income = income base x payout rate, paid for life even if the underlying account value runs to zero.
What to compare before you buy
- Guaranteed income at your start age — request an illustration showing the actual dollar income for your age and deferral period, not just the headline roll-up.
- Single vs. joint life — joint income for a couple pays a lower percentage but covers two lives.
- Rider fee — typically 0.95%–1.50% per year, charged on the income base. A higher roll-up can be eaten up by a higher fee.
- Insurer financial strength — guarantees are only as strong as the carrier. Check A.M. Best, S&P, and Moody''s ratings.
- Flexibility — can you stop and restart income, take excess withdrawals, or access cash value if needed?
Bottom line
There is no single "best" income rider — the winner is whichever carrier shows the highest guaranteed income for your specific age, deferral period, and single-or-joint election, backed by strong financial-strength ratings. Allianz, Athene, and Nationwide are common front-runners in 2026, but always compare actual illustrations side by side.
This article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial, tax, or insurance advice. Annuities are complex products with fees, surrender charges, and guarantees subject to the issuing insurer''s claims-paying ability. Consult a licensed financial professional before purchasing.