Definition
Persistency Bonus
A persistency bonus is additional compensation paid to an insurance agent or registered representative if a client maintains a policy or annuity beyond a defined threshold (typically 2-7 years). The bonus rewards long-term retention of the contract and is intended to align the agent's incentive with the client's interest in keeping the policy in force.
An insurance carrier pays a registered representative an upfront commission of 6% on a variable annuity sale plus a persistency bonus of 1% of contract value if the policy is still in force after year five. A representative who advises a client to replace that contract via a 1035 exchange in year four would lose the year-five bonus on the original contract but would start a fresh commission and surrender schedule on the new contract. The compensation pattern itself does not prove misconduct, but the supervising principal must document why the exchange is in the client's interest, not just the representative's.
Students confuse a persistency bonus with a trail commission. A trail (or 12b-1 trail) is a small, ongoing payment year over year. A persistency bonus is a single additional payment that vests once a contract has been held for a defined period. Students also miss that the persistency bonus is paid by the insurer to the agent (not to the client), so it is a representative-side compensation item that needs to be evaluated as a potential conflict of interest, especially around replacement transactions.
How is Persistency Bonus tested on the exam?
- Identifying a compensation conflict when a representative recommends a 1035 exchange or replacement that would interrupt a vesting persistency bonus and start a new commission cycle
- Distinguishing a persistency bonus from a trail commission and from a client-facing bonus credit (some annuities also credit the client; that is a different concept)
- Recognizing that FINRA Rule 2330 requires principal review and written suitability documentation for variable annuity transactions, including exchanges
- Connecting the persistency-bonus structure to the broader anti-churning rationale behind back-end surrender charges
- Spotting a churning red flag when a representative repeatedly recommends replacements right before persistency bonuses vest
Regulatory limits
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Typical persistency bonus vesting period | 2-7 years | Specific schedule varies by carrier and product |
| Replacement transaction disclosure | Required | State insurance departments require written disclosure on annuity and life insurance replacements; FINRA layers additional review for variable annuity exchanges |
| FINRA Rule 2330 (variable annuity transactions) | Principal review and written suitability documentation | Applies to sales and exchanges of deferred variable annuities; explicitly contemplates compensation conflicts in replacement scenarios |
A persistency bonus is a "stay with me" payment to the rep, not to the client. It pays once, after a multi-year vesting window. When the exam pairs it with a recommended 1035 exchange right before the vesting date, that is your cue to think conflict of interest and principal review under FINRA Rule 2330.
Practice questions
Test your understanding with the questions below. Pick an answer to reveal the explanation.
A registered representative recommends that a client surrender a four-year-old variable annuity and use a 1035 exchange to purchase a new variable annuity from a different carrier. The new contract has a higher mortality and expense charge, a new seven-year surrender schedule, and pays the representative a new upfront commission plus a persistency bonus that vests in year five. Under FINRA Rule 2330, what is the most accurate description of the supervisory principal's responsibility?
B is correct. FINRA Rule 2330 specifically addresses deferred variable annuity sales and exchanges. It requires a registered principal to review and document the suitability of the transaction, including a comparison of the existing contract to the proposed contract, the surrender charges involved, the impact on benefits or riders, and the compensation that the representative will earn. A new surrender period, a higher M&E charge, and a fresh upfront commission with a persistency bonus are exactly the factors the principal must weigh.
A is wrong because 1035 exchanges are tax-free for the client, but suitability still applies; the tax treatment does not exempt the recommendation from FINRA review. C is wrong because a generic client signature does not satisfy the documented analysis required by Rule 2330. D is wrong because additional compensation to the representative is not automatically prohibited; it is a flag that the principal must evaluate, not a per se violation.
Series 6 candidates need to know that variable annuity replacements are one of the highest-scrutiny transactions in retail securities. The compensation structure (new commission, restarted surrender schedule, future persistency bonus) is exactly what regulators look for when investigating churning, and the rep-facing persistency bonus is one of the conflicts the principal must surface in writing.
Which of the following best describes when a persistency bonus is typically paid?
C is correct. A persistency bonus is a representative-side payment that vests after the contract has been in force for a defined period (commonly somewhere in the 2-7 year range, depending on the carrier and product). It is structurally different from an upfront commission (which pays at issue) and from a trail commission (which pays every year). The bonus exists to reward agents whose business stays on the carrier's books.
A describes the upfront commission, not the persistency bonus. B describes a trail commission or a 12b-1 trail, which is a recurring annual payment, not a one-time vesting bonus. D describes a client-side credit or bonus annuity feature, which is a separate product concept and is paid to the contract owner, not to the representative.
Series 6 candidates need to keep the three compensation streams straight: upfront commission, ongoing trail, and persistency bonus. The exam often uses these to test whether you can spot a representative's conflict of interest in a recommended exchange or replacement.
What concepts relate to Persistency Bonus?
This term is part of this cluster :
Where does Persistency Bonus appear on the Series 6 exam?
This term is tested in the following FINRA Series 6 topic areas: