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The Hidden Fee Trap: Why Variable Annuities Can Drain Your Savings

Sagewise Editorial

Writer & Blogger

Not all annuities are created equal. While Fixed Annuities are simple, safe, and transparent, there is another product that dominates the sales world but often devastates senior budgets: The Variable Annuity.

Variable annuities are essentially “Mutual Funds wrapped in an insurance contract.” They promise the upside of the stock market combined with “guaranteed” death benefits. However, the price for these promises is often an annual fee stack ranging from 3% to 4%.

If you have a $200,000 variable annuity and the fees are 4%, you are paying the insurance company **$8,000 every year**—regardless of whether the market goes up or down. If the market is flat, your account balance is actually shrinking by $8,000. As your trusted advocate, we are here to pull back the curtain on these complex products and help you find a safer path.

Key Takeaways

  • The Stacked Fees: Variable annuities charge M&E fees, Administrative fees, Investment fees, and Rider fees that often exceed 3% annually.
  • Principal Risk: Unlike Fixed Index Annuities, you can lose principal in a variable annuity if the underlying sub-accounts (stocks) drop.
  • Complexity Risk: These contracts are often 100+ pages long, designed to hide the true cost of the “guarantees” in the fine print.
  • The Rescue: You can often use a 1035 Exchange to move to a low-fee Fixed Annuity without paying taxes or penalties.

Stop paying high fees and start earning guaranteed income.

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Should I Sell My Variable Annuity?

If your primary goal is Principal Safety or Guaranteed Income, a Variable Annuity is likely the wrong tool for your retirement. It is an aggressive growth product disguised as a safe retirement shield. If you are over age 65, you are usually better off in a Fixed Index Annuity (FIA) which has 0% market risk and often 0% annual fees. However, before you cancel, you must check your “Surrender Schedule”—if you are in the first 5 years of the contract, the penalty to leave might be higher than the cost of staying.

Fee Comparison: Variable vs. Fixed Index Annuity

Use this table to see how much of your retirement is being “taxed” by the insurance company.

Fee Type
Variable Annuity (Risky)
Fixed Index Annuity (Safe)
Management Fee
1.25% - 1.50%
0%
Sub-Account/Fund Fee
0.50% - 1.50%
0%
Income Rider Fee
1.00% - 1.25%
0.95% - 1.10%
Principal Risk
Market Downside Risk
$0 Loss Guarantee
Average Total Fee
3.5% +
1.0% or Less

Your Question “Right Policy” Finder

Are you confused by your current statement? Use our “Right Policy” Finder to answer a few questions about your current annuity. We will help you determine if you have a “Safe” fixed plan or a “Risky” variable plan.

The "Fee Stack": What You are Actually Paying

Most seniors only see the “Investment Fee,” but there are actually four layers of costs hidden in a Variable Annuity. This is often referred to as the “Fee Stack.”

  1. M&E (Mortality & Expense): This covers the insurance company’s risk and profit. According to FINRA, this is a standard charge that pays for the “guarantee” that your heirs get your original investment back if you die while the market is down.
  2. Administrative Fees: These cover the cost of mailing statements and record-keeping.
  3. Sub-Account Fees: These are the internal costs of the mutual funds inside the annuity.
  4. Income Rider Fees: This is the most expensive layer. It is the fee you pay for the promise of a future check, regardless of market performance.

The Result: When you stack these together, your portfolio has to earn at least 4% just to “break even” after fees. In a down year, you lose the market percentage PLUS the 4% fee.

The "Income Rider" Illusion: Why it's Not Real Cash

This is the most common SEO-driven question: “Is my annuity value the same as my income base?” In a variable annuity, you often have two distinct numbers on your statement:

  1. Contract Value: This is your actual cash. If you wanted to close the account today, this is the amount (minus penalties) you would receive.
  2. Income Base (Benefit Base): This number might show a “guaranteed 6% growth.”

The Trap: That 6% growth is not real money. You cannot withdraw it as a lump sum, and you cannot leave it to your children. You can only use it to calculate your future monthly check. If your Contract Value is $150,000 but your Income Base is $200,000, you are still “underwater.” The high fees often prevent the real cash (Contract Value) from ever catching up to the illusionary Income Base.

The Surrender Charge: The "Lock and Key"

If you search for “how to get out of a bad annuity,” you will find that the Surrender Charge is your biggest obstacle. Insurance companies pay agents high commissions (up to 7%) to sell variable annuities. To recover that money, they lock you in for 5 to 10 years.

  • The Penalty: If you try to take your money back in Year 1, they may take 7% or 8% of your total balance.
  • The Strategy: Check your statement for your “Surrender Date.” If you are within 12 months of the date, it is often better to wait. If your surrender charge is already 0%, you are a “Free Agent” and should look for a MYGA or FIA immediately to protect your remaining principal.

The 1035 Exchange: Your Legal Escape Route

The IRS provides a special provision under Section 1035 that allows you to move your money from one annuity to another without any tax consequences.

  • How it works: You instruct a new, low-fee company to “pull” the money from the old company.
  • The Benefit: You keep your tax-deferred status. You can move from a high-fee, risky variable plan into an Immediate Annuity (SPIA) for a guaranteed pension or a Fixed Index Annuity for growth without risk.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

They can be useful for very high-income earners who have already maxed out their 401(k) and IRA and want unlimited tax-deferred growth. However, for retirees who are focused on protecting what they have, the risk and fees are usually too high.

Sometimes. You can call the insurance company and ask to “Remove the Riders.” By canceling the “Guaranteed Minimum Income Benefit” or “Enhanced Death Benefit” riders, you can often lower your annual fees by 1-2% instantly. Note that this usually makes the riders permanently gone.

In many variable annuities, yes. There is often an “Asset-Based” commission where the agent receives a small percentage of your balance every year. This is why some advisors are hesitant to suggest moving into a CD or Fixed Annuity that doesn’t pay them an ongoing fee.

Some plans offer a “10% Premium Bonus” on Day 1. Be extremely careful. This is a marketing hook. To pay for that 10% bonus, the company usually charges higher annual fees and has a much longer surrender period (e.g., 12 to 15 years). You are essentially borrowing your own money at a high interest rate.

It is almost never on the first page of your statement. You must look for a section called “Fee Disclosure” or search for the “Summary Prospectus” on the company’s website. If you are unsure, call the customer service line and ask: “What is my total combined annual expense ratio including M&E, Admin, and all Riders?”

Find a Safer Annuity Option (Compare low-fee fixed alternatives and protect your retirement savings today.)

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