Today’s MYGA Rates Available in New York
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 New York
Filter by term, carrier rating, and minimum premium — then connect with a licensed New York agent about any rate you see.
See Today’s Rates →How New York taxes annuity income
New York applies graduated income tax rates (4%–10.9%) to the taxable portion of annuity distributions — but New York's $20,000 pension and annuity income exclusion takes the edge off. Taxpayers age 59½ and older may exclude up to $20,000 per person per year of pension and annuity income (including IRA distributions) from New York taxable income. A married couple where both spouses qualify can exclude up to $40,000 combined. Government pension income (NYS, local, federal) is fully exempt.
New York does not tax Social Security benefits. New York City and Yonkers residents also owe local income taxes on taxable annuity income. Federal income tax and the 10% federal early-withdrawal penalty (before age 59½) apply as usual.
Source: NYS Department of Taxation and Finance — pension and annuity exclusion
New York Annuity Regulations
Free Look Period: 10 to 30 days, depending on the contract
New York gives annuity purchasers a free look period of 10 to 30 days (the period is set by the contract within statutory limits; contracts sold by mail must provide 30 days). During this window the contract may be returned for a full refund.
The exact period is stated on your contract's cover page. Confirm current requirements with the New York Department of Financial Services.
Source: New York Department of Financial Services — annuity consumer resources
Best Interest Standard: New York's own best-interest rule (Reg 187) — effective February 1, 2020
New York is the notable exception on the national map: it did not adopt the NAIC's Model #275 revisions. Instead, New York enforces its own standard — DFS Insurance Regulation 187, "Suitability and Best Interests in Life Insurance and Annuity Transactions" — which took full effect for annuities on February 1, 2020, before the NAIC's national framework. Reg 187 requires that any recommendation be in the consumer's best interest, that only the consumer's interests be considered in making it, and that producer compensation not influence the recommendation. In several respects New York's rule is regarded as stricter than the NAIC model, and it applies to life insurance as well as annuities.
Source: NY DFS Insurance Regulation 187 — Department of Financial Services
Replacement Rules
New York's replacement framework (DFS Regulation 60) is among the most rigorous in the country. When a new annuity would replace an existing policy or contract:
- The producer must complete a detailed Disclosure Statement comparing the existing and proposed contracts — values, surrender charges, benefits, and features — signed by the applicant.
- The existing insurer must be notified and given the opportunity to provide policy information.
- Under Reg 187, the replacement must also satisfy the best-interest standard — New York examiners actively review replacement activity.
Source: NY DFS Regulation 60 — replacement of life insurance and annuities




