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Buffer

Downside protection in RILAs

πŸ“˜ Glossary ⏱️ 4 min read πŸ—“οΈ Last updated: January 2026

Quick Definition: In RILAs (Registered Index-Linked Annuities), a buffer is the percentage of market losses the insurance company absorbs. A 10% buffer means if the market drops 12%, you only lose 2%. The insurance company covers the first 10%.

How Buffers Work

Buffers are what make RILAs unique. Unlike Fixed Index Annuities (FIAs) where you can't lose money at all, RILAs let you participate in some downsideβ€”but the insurance company absorbs the first portion of losses.

Think of it as downside protection with a deductible. You're exposed to losses beyond the buffer, but the insurance company takes the hit up to that point.

πŸ“Š Real Example: 10% Buffer in Action

Scenario: Lisa has a $150,000 RILA with a 10% buffer.

Market drops 5%:
β†’ Buffer covers all of it = Lisa loses $0

Market drops 10%:
β†’ Buffer covers all of it = Lisa loses $0

Market drops 15%:
β†’ Buffer covers first 10%, Lisa takes the remaining 5%
β†’ Lisa loses 5% of $150,000 = $7,500

Market drops 30%:
β†’ Buffer covers first 10%, Lisa takes remaining 20%
β†’ Lisa loses 20% of $150,000 = $30,000

Buffer vs. Floor (Key Difference)

Floor (FIAs): 0% floor means you never lose money. Market drops 50%? You get 0%. Complete downside protection.

Buffer (RILAs): You can lose money beyond the buffer. Market drops 50% with 10% buffer? You lose 40%.

The trade-off: RILAs typically offer higher upside potential (caps around 15-20%+) compared to FIAs (caps around 10-12%) because you're taking some downside risk.

Common Buffer Levels

You typically choose your buffer level when you buy the RILAβ€”higher buffer means more safety but lower potential gains.

Who Should Consider Buffers?

Good fit if you:

Not a good fit if you:

Real-World Performance

In the 2022 market downturn (S&P 500 down ~18%), a RILA with a 10% buffer would have protected the first 10%, meaning account holders only lost about 8%. Meanwhile, stock portfolios lost the full 18%.

But in the 2020 COVID crash (S&P down ~34% at the bottom), a 10% buffer meant taking a 24% loss. The buffer helped, but didn't eliminate pain.

The Bottom Line

Buffers are middle-ground protection. They're not as safe as FIA floors (0% loss guarantee), but they offer more upside potential. You're essentially saying: "I can handle moderate losses if it means more growth potential."

Make sure you understand what happens in a severe downturn. The buffer helps, but doesn't eliminate risk.