Today’s MYGA Rates Available in Georgia
Multi-year guaranteed annuity (MYGA) rates change frequently and availability varies by state. Rather than show a snapshot that goes stale, we maintain a live comparison of 2,400+ products from 60+ carriers, updated from industry rate feeds.
Compare live MYGA rates for Georgia
Filter by term, carrier rating, and minimum premium — then connect with a licensed Georgia agent about any rate you see.
See Today’s Rates →How Georgia taxes annuity income
Georgia applies a flat income tax (currently 5.19% for 2025, on a legislated schedule of annual reductions) to taxable income — but for most retirees, Georgia's Retirement Income Exclusion eliminates most or all state tax on annuity income:
- Age 65 and older: exclude up to $65,000 per person of eligible retirement income, including annuity distributions, pension payments, IRA and 401(k) withdrawals, and investment income.
- Age 62–64 (or permanently disabled): exclude up to $35,000 per person.
The exclusion applies per person — a married couple both age 65 can shelter up to $130,000 combined from Georgia income tax annually. Social Security benefits are exempt separately and do not count against the exclusion limit. Federal income tax still applies as usual.
Source: Georgia Department of Revenue — Retirement Income Exclusion
Georgia Annuity Regulations
Free Look Period: 10 days
Georgia provides annuity purchasers a 10-day free look period from delivery of the contract, during which the contract may be returned for a full refund with no surrender charges.
Carriers may offer longer periods than the state minimum — the exact terms are stated on your contract's cover page. Confirm current requirements with the Georgia Department of Insurance.
Best Interest Standard: Adopted — effective August 1, 2023
Effective August 1, 2023, Georgia holds producers to the NAIC best-interest standard of conduct when recommending an annuity (Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 120-2-94). The producer must act in the consumer's best interest — satisfying care, disclosure, conflict-of-interest, and documentation obligations — and may not place their own financial interest ahead of the consumer's. Producers must complete a 4-hour best-interest training course before selling annuities, and insurers must maintain supervision systems.
Source: Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 120-2-94 — Georgia Department of Insurance
Replacement Rules
Georgia requires consumer protections when an existing annuity or life insurance policy is replaced:
- A written replacement notice identifying the contracts being replaced and disclosing surrender charges, benefits, and features being given up.
- Notification to the existing insurer.
- A documented best-interest basis under Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 120-2-94 — replacements that cannot be justified as being in the consumer's best interest are sanctionable.











