An annuity is never the only option. Here is how it compares to the four alternatives people ask about most. There is no universal winner. Each tool does a different job.
Annuity vs CD
| Fixed / Indexed Annuity | CD | |
|---|---|---|
| Protection | Principal protected by the insurer, plus limited state guaranty coverage | FDIC insured up to $250,000 |
| Growth | Fixed rate, or index-linked with limits | Fixed rate |
| Taxes | Growth is tax deferred until withdrawn | Interest taxed every year |
| Access | Free withdrawals up to a limit, surrender charges beyond it | Early withdrawal penalty |
| Lifetime income option | Yes | No |
The short version: CDs win for short-term money and simplicity. Annuities can win for longer horizons, tax deferral, and income. Never compare a 7-year annuity to a 1-year CD. Match the time frames.
Annuity vs bonds
Bonds pay interest and return principal at maturity, but bond prices move with interest rates, and bond funds can lose value in ways that surprise people. A fixed indexed annuity does not lose value when rates rise. What bonds offer instead is liquidity and, in a fund, easy diversification. Many retirement plans use both, with the annuity covering the income floor and bonds providing flexible ballast.
Annuity vs dividend stocks
Dividend stocks offer growth and rising income potential, and they are fully liquid. They are also stocks. Dividends can be cut, and prices can fall 30 percent in a bad year. The comparison comes down to one question: is this money you can afford to see fluctuate? Money for essential expenses often belongs behind a guarantee. Money for growth and legacy often belongs in the market.
Annuity vs systematic withdrawal (the 4 percent rule)
The classic alternative is to keep everything invested and withdraw around 4 percent per year. Decades of history say this usually works. The catch is the word usually. Retiring into a bad market while withdrawing, known as sequence of returns risk, can permanently damage a portfolio. An annuity income floor removes that risk for essential expenses. The trade is less flexibility and less upside on the annuitized portion.
Losses early in retirement hurt far more than the same losses later, because you are withdrawing at the same time. Averages do not pay the bills. The order of returns matters.
How we actually think about it
The question is never annuity or market. It is how much of your essential income should be guaranteed, and how much of your money should stay flexible and invested. For many retirees the answer includes both. For some it includes no annuity at all. Your numbers decide, not a sales pitch.