Quick take: Thrivent Financial is the largest fraternal benefit society. A++/AA+/Aaa rating. SPIA payouts conservative but absolute carrier safety.
| Rating Agency | Grade |
|---|---|
| AM Best | A++ |
| S&P | AA+ |
| Moody's | Aaa |
| COMDEX (composite, 0-100) | 100 |
Hans is independently licensed. Reviews based on publicly available rate sheets, prospectuses, AnnuityRateWatch listings, and carrier filings.
Membership: Christian + faith-affirming.
About Hans Goldstein: Independent retirement income specialist. CA Life License #4163961. NPN #20602398. Phone: 213-414-2808. Email: hans@goldsteinco.net.
A core part of every Goldstein review. The more complex an annuity, the worse the rating in this dimension — because complexity is where buyers get burned (confusing riders, fee structures hidden in plain sight, surrender penalties that surprise people, separate "benefit bases" they thought were cash). Simple products (SPIAs, MYGAs) score low; products with stacked bonuses + income riders + MVA + multiple crediting strategies score high.
Easy to understand. Few moving parts. The buyer can fully explain the product to a friend after one read of the contract.
| Dimension | Score (1–10) | What this measures |
|---|---|---|
| Riders | 1/10 | Number of optional/required riders (income, death benefit, LTC, etc.). More riders = more fees + more confusion. |
| Crediting strategies | 1/10 | Number of index-linked strategies (cap, spread, participation rate, step rate, volatility-controlled indices). More options = harder to understand. |
| Surrender complexity | 1/10 | Length of surrender period + MVA + bonus recapture interaction. Longer + MVA + recapture = more confusion. |
| Benefit-base separation | 1/10 | If the product has a separate "PIV" or income-base that is NOT cash but feels like cash. This is the single biggest source of buyer confusion in the industry. |
| Bonus structure | 1/10 | Premium bonus with recapture schedule. The bonus is real, but the recapture is complex. |
Why complexity matters more than people think: Carriers don't get sued for complexity. Agents don't get sued for it either (in most states). But buyers regret it constantly. The annuity that wins your money in year one and confuses you for the next 14 is worse than a simpler product that you understood perfectly. Simple ≠ inferior. Simple = audit-able.
A SPIA (Single Premium Immediate Annuity) is the simplest annuity product in the market. You hand the carrier a single lump sum. The carrier promises to send you a check every month for the rest of your life. That's it. No caps, no riders, no surrender charges, no growth potential.
The math:
- You give the carrier $200,000
- The carrier promises you ~$1,300/month for life
- You die at 75 (life-only): the carrier keeps the unused money (mortality pooling)
- You die at 95 (life-only): the carrier has paid you $312,000 — far more than you put in
- You die at 105: even more
The SPIA is mortality pooling at scale. Some buyers die early, some late. The carrier balances out the risk and pays everyone a consistent monthly amount.
Payout options change the math:
- Life only = max monthly income, heirs get nothing if you die early
- Life + 10-year period certain = ~5% less monthly, but heirs guaranteed minimum 10 years of payments
- Life + cash refund = ~10% less monthly, but heirs get the unpaid principal as a refund
- Joint life = ~18% less monthly, but spouse continues to receive after first death
The only "fee" is built into the payout calculation — there's no separate annual fee like FIA or variable annuity. What you see is what you get.
Q: Can I get my principal back if I change my mind?
A: No. SPIA is irrevocable. Once you sign, your principal becomes the carrier's; you receive only the promised income stream.
Q: What happens if the carrier goes bankrupt?
A: State guaranty fund covers typically $250,000-$300,000 per owner per carrier. Always check your state's limit.
Q: Is SPIA income taxable?
A: Non-qualified SPIA: each payment is split into excluded portion (return of principal, not taxable) and included portion (interest, taxable). Qualified SPIA (in IRA): 100% of each payment is taxable as ordinary income.
Q: Can I add inflation protection?
A: Yes, via the Cost-of-Living (COL) rider. Starting payment is ~25% lower in exchange for annual increases. Most SPIA buyers skip it to maximize starting income.
Q: What age should I buy a SPIA?
A: 65-85 typically. Younger than 65 = mortality pooling math is weaker. Older than 85 = limited horizon to collect.
Q: How does SPIA compare to bond ladder?
A: SPIA pays more lifetime income per dollar because of mortality pooling — bond ladders can't replicate this. But SPIA eliminates principal access; bond ladders don't.
Q: Can I do a partial SPIA?
A: Yes — put part of your nest egg into SPIA for income floor, keep the rest for growth and liquidity. Most planners recommend partial SPIA, not 100%.
Q: Should I get joint life with my spouse?
A: If you both need the income and want it to continue after first death — yes. Costs ~18% lower monthly payment. If your spouse has their own pension or SS that's adequate — life-only with a smaller secondary policy may make more sense.
Talk to a licensed independent expert. Hans.
SPIAs are irrevocable — once you sign, your principal is gone. Before you commit, is this carrier's payout actually top-of-market? Are you choosing the right payout option (life only vs. cash refund vs. joint)? 5 minutes of comparison shopping can mean $300-1,000/year of additional lifetime income.
Drop your info — within 24 hours, you'll get a written independent review of your quote, side-by-side comparisons vs. 2 alternatives, and a no-pressure 15-minute call if you want one.
📞 Hans Goldstein · 213-414-2808 · NPN 20602398, independent licensed insurance producer appointed with multiple A-rated carriers
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This review reflects publicly available product materials and approximate rates as of the date stated above. Annuity rates, caps, participation rates, payout factors, crediting methods, and long-term care benefit structures change frequently — typically monthly. Always confirm current values against the most recent carrier disclosure document and the actual contract before purchasing. This article is general information for educational purposes; it is not a personalized recommendation, solicitation, or offer of any specific product. Hans Goldstein is an independent licensed insurance producer (NPN 20602398) appointed with multiple A-rated carriers across the annuity and long-term care insurance market; the producer's specific appointment status with the carrier discussed in this review may vary, and this review is not an endorsement or representation of carrier appointment. No compensation has been received from any carrier in connection with the publication of this review. Always read the actual contract and consult a licensed advisor before purchasing any annuity or long-term care insurance product. Past index performance does not predict future credited interest. Annuities and hybrid life+LTC policies are long-term contracts with surrender charges; they are not suitable for funds you may need before the end of the surrender period. AM Best ratings and tax treatment are subject to change. Tax discussion of IRC §7702B, §1035, and the Pension Protection Act of 2006 reflects law as of 2026 and is subject to change.