Texas · Insurance · State Guide

How to Get Your Insurance License in Texas

A practical walkthrough of the Texas Insurance licensing process, source links to Texas Department of Public Safety resources, and free practice tests.

Oversight: Texas Department of Insurance

Overview

An insurance producer license allows you to sell, solicit, or negotiate insurance contracts on behalf of insurers. Every state licenses producers separately, and licenses are organized by line of authority: Life, Health, Property, Casualty, and Adjuster are the most common. Many producers hold multiple lines.

Eligibility requirements

Minimum age 18 in most states. Pass a background check (some convictions are disqualifying), be appointed by an insurer (often handled through your employer), and complete pre-licensing education in your line(s) of authority.

The Texas licensing process, step by step

  1. Complete pre-licensing education. State-mandated hours of coursework per line of authority (typically 20-40 hours per line). Available in-person and online.
  2. Schedule your exam through the state-approved testing vendor. Pearson VUE, PSI, or Prometric typically administer state insurance exams. Schedule online.
  3. Take and pass the licensing exam. One exam per line of authority. Most state exams have 50-150 questions and require 70%+ correct to pass.
  4. Apply for your license. Submit application, exam scores, education completion, background check, and fees through the state insurance department or NIPR.
  5. Get appointed by an insurer. You can hold a license without an appointment, but you must be appointed by at least one insurer to actually sell their products. Most producers work for an agency that handles appointments.
Texas-Specific

Texas Insurance at a glance

  • License fee: approximately $50 exam fee (verify current amount with Texas Department of Public Safety — fees change periodically)
  • Texas-specific note: Texas uses Pearson VUE; fingerprint background check required for all applicants.

What to study

Each line of authority covers different content. Life insurance focuses on policies, riders, taxation, and senior issues. Health covers private health insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, ACA, and group plans. Property covers homeowners, renters, and commercial property policies. Casualty covers auto, general liability, and workers compensation. Adjusters cover claims handling. The state-specific portion adds licensing laws, fair practices, and unfair claim settlement statutes.

The official Texas handbook is published by the Texas Department of Public Safety. Read it cover to cover before your written exam — practice tests like ours are most useful as a check on your understanding, not a substitute for reading the source.

Free Texas Insurance practice tests

Practice with our state-specific tests until you consistently score above 70%, then schedule your exam with the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Common reasons people fail

Insurance exams are notorious for tricky question wording. Common failures: not reading questions carefully enough to catch 'EXCEPT' or 'NOT' modifiers; memorizing definitions without understanding when they apply; and not practicing under timed conditions. The state portion has a high failure rate because students under-study state law in favor of national material.

After you pass

Continuing education is required in every state to renew (typically 24 hours every 2 years). Many producers add lines of authority over time, and senior producers may pursue advanced designations (CLU, CHFC, CPCU, etc.) for specialization or to differentiate themselves in the market.

Note

State requirements change

State licensing fees, processes, and requirements change. The information here is based on publicly available materials from the Texas Department of Public Safety and our understanding of the Texas process at time of writing. Always verify current requirements directly with the Texas Department of Public Safety before scheduling your exam or paying fees.

Practice test FAQs

How do I get a Insurance license in Texas?

In general you must meet the eligibility requirements, complete any required education or training, and pass the required knowledge test (and, where applicable, a skills test) administered through the Texas Department of Insurance. The exact steps, fees, and documents are set by Texas and are covered in the guide above.

Is the Insurance exam different in Texas?

The core knowledge tested is similar across states, but Texas sets its own specific rules, procedures, passing requirements, and any state-law content. That is why it is important to study materials specific to Texas, which our Insurance practice tests are written to reflect.

Are these Texas practice tests free?

Yes. All of our Texas Insurance practice questions are completely free, with no sign-up or payment required, and every question includes a full explanation. You can start practicing immediately on desktop or mobile.

How should I prepare for the Insurance exam in Texas?

Study the official Insurance materials from the Texas Department of Insurance, focus on the most heavily tested topics, and take practice tests until you consistently score above the passing threshold. You can start with the Texas Insurance practice tests for this state.

Where can I learn more about the Insurance exam format and scoring?

Our Insurance exam guide explains the test format, scoring, what is covered, and study strategies that apply in every state, including Texas.