Today’s MYGA Rates Available in Illinois
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 Illinois
Filter by term, carrier rating, and minimum premium — then connect with a licensed Illinois agent about any rate you see.
See Today’s Rates →How Illinois taxes annuity income
Illinois applies a flat income tax of 4.95% — but for most retirement savers, that headline rate doesn't apply to annuity income at all. The treatment depends on annuity type:
- Qualified annuities (distributions from 401(k)s, 403(b)s, IRAs, and similar employer-sponsored plans): fully exempt from Illinois income tax under 35 ILCS 5/203(a)(2)(F), with no dollar cap. The exemption covers the full federally taxable amount, including both principal and earnings.
- Non-qualified annuities (purchased with after-tax dollars outside a retirement plan): the earnings portion is taxable at 4.95%. The return-of-basis portion remains non-taxable, consistent with federal exclusion-ratio treatment.
Illinois also exempts Social Security benefits. The practical takeaway: if your annuity is funded through an IRA rollover or employer plan, you owe zero Illinois state tax on distributions, regardless of amount. Non-qualified annuities are the exception to watch.
Source: 35 ILCS 5/203 — Illinois Income Tax Act (Illinois General Assembly)
Illinois Annuity Regulations
Free Look Period: 10 days
Illinois 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 Illinois Department of Insurance.
Source: Illinois Department of Insurance — consumer resources
Best Interest Standard: Adopted — effective August 1, 2023
Effective August 1, 2023, Illinois holds producers to the NAIC best-interest standard of conduct when recommending an annuity. 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: Illinois Department of Insurance
Replacement Rules
Illinois 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 for the recommendation — replacements driven primarily by producer compensation violate Illinois's standard of conduct.
Source: Illinois Department of Insurance — consumer resources








