Zinnia has launched new headless annuity order entry capabilities, enabling carriers, banks, broker-dealers, and independent marketing organisations (IMOs) to build customised digital experiences while connecting directly to Zinnia’s insurance infrastructure through APIs.
The move reflects growing demand across the retirement and annuity market for more flexible, digital-first distribution models that reduce reliance on legacy systems and rigid front-end interfaces.
The new capability separates the customer-facing experience from the underlying insurance infrastructure, allowing partners to embed annuity functions directly into their own applications, advisor platforms, and AI-enabled workflows.
Through Zinnia’s API-based architecture, firms can integrate processes including lead submission, quoting, suitability reviews, application submission, document generation, and policy servicing into their existing digital ecosystems.
The company said the launch is designed to help distributors maintain greater control over customer experience while accelerating digital transformation efforts in a market often constrained by legacy technology.
Unlike traditional insurance platforms, which typically require firms to operate within predefined workflows, Zinnia’s headless architecture allows insurers and distributors to create bespoke interfaces while still accessing core insurance functionality through a standardised infrastructure layer.
The launch follows recent approval by the Insured Retirement Institute of four in-force transaction APIs built on Zinnia’s Enterprise API framework. The approval is intended to improve interoperability and real-time annuity servicing between carriers and distributors, helping modernise data exchange across the retirement ecosystem.
Strategically, the launch positions Zinnia to benefit from growing insurer demand for embedded and composable insurance technology, particularly as firms increasingly seek to integrate annuity services into advisor tools, banking ecosystems, and AI-powered customer experiences.
The development also highlights broader momentum towards API-first insurance infrastructure, where carriers and distributors are prioritising interoperability, faster implementation, and more personalised digital journeys to improve customer engagement and operational efficiency.






