Jackson National Life Insurance Company is rated A+ ( Superior) with Stable outlook. You can find A.M. Best Rating on their website at www.ambest.com.
They have an A rating from Demotecj
Any Insurance company that has an AM Best A+ rating. That's the highest rating a company can get and almost all of them do.
Group rating plans.
A.M. Best rating A XIII
Erie is a reputable company. The property/casualty branch of Erie has an A.M. Best Rating of A+ (superior) and their life insurance branch has a Best rating of A (excellent). I work in the insurance department of a large national mortgage servicer, we require our mortgagors to carry insurance by a company that meets a minimum Best rating, Erie is one of these companies, if that tells you anything. Hope this helps!
A
aa+
ODS Insurance is health insurance company that is based out of Portland, Oregon. The company currently has a high complaint rating as of 2011. The company also carries dental insurance.
There is not one company with the highest financial stability rating. Many companies have the rating of A+ which is the highest rating given by A. M. Best Company. There are a couple of other rating companies that do similar comparisons but A. M. Best Company is the most used. As a matter of full disclosure, I own and operate a small Independent Insurance Agency in Georgia and have for 22 years. I also was an agent for a direct writer insurance company for 3 years prior.
A.M. Best is a private company which lists and also rates insurance companies, their rating is considered a benchmark in the industry. If you want to know if a company is reliable they would be a great place to check.
An insurance "Agency" and an insurance "Company" are two wholly different things. An Insurance "Company" may have a rating depending on its domicile, but an insurance "Agency" is not expected to have a rating. People are always wanting to know the rating of an insurer, the general public seems to think that it reflects customer satisfaction when nothing could be further from the truth. An insurers rating is based on it's available cash and assets in relation to it's exposure in the market place. So, if a company pays out on few claims and over charges with high rates, then it will quite naturally have a higher rating than an insurer who does pay claims and provides the same coverage at lower rates because they are existing on a lower profit margin.