Pass the Alabama Insurance Licensing Exam with a Smarter Study Plan
The Alabama insurance licensing exam is the gate between “I want to become an insurance producer” and “I can apply for my license.” Alabama no longer requires a prelicensing certificate, but you still need to pass the state exam before applying for a producer license.
That means your study plan matters.
Whether you are preparing for Life & Health, Property & Casualty, Life Only, Health Only, Property Only, Casualty Only, or Personal Lines, this guide explains what to expect on the Alabama exam, what to study, why students fail, and how TESTivity can help you prepare.
Passing the Alabama insurance licensing exam is one of the most important steps in becoming a licensed insurance producer in Alabama. The state’s producer exams are administered through the University of Alabama insurance testing program, and Alabama uses a 70% passing standard. Your exam is graded immediately after submission, and passing results are reported electronically to the Alabama Department of Insurance.
Alabama has an important rule that every candidate should understand: as of January 1, 2024, Alabama no longer requires a prelicensing certificate before the insurance exam. That makes the licensing path more flexible, but it does not make the exam optional or easy. Candidates are still responsible for knowing the material well enough to pass.
This page focuses on exam preparation: what is on the test, how the exams are structured, why candidates struggle, how to study, and how TESTivity’s tools help Alabama candidates prepare with more confidence.
For the full licensing-process overview, see Insurance Licensing in Alabama: Complete Guide to License Types and Requirements. For license-specific guidance, see How to Get a Property and Casualty Insurance License in Alabama or How to Get a Life and Health Insurance License in Alabama.
Alabama Insurance Licensing Exam Quick Facts
| Exam Detail | Alabama Requirement |
|---|---|
| Exam vendor | University of Alabama Insurance Testing |
| State regulator | Alabama Department of Insurance |
| Exam format | Computer-based, multiple choice |
| Passing score | 70% |
| Combined Life & Health exam | 150 questions, 3 hours |
| Combined Property & Casualty exam | 150 questions, 3 hours |
| Single-line producer exam fee | $50 |
| Combined Life & Health exam fee | $75 |
| Combined Property & Casualty exam fee | $75 |
| Prelicensing certificate | Not required as of January 1, 2024 |
| Test locations | Birmingham, Huntsville, Mobile, Tuscaloosa, Montgomery |
| Application after passing | Online through NIPR |
| Fingerprinting | Required for resident individual producer applicants |
| Fingerprint vendor | Fieldprint |
The Alabama Department of Insurance lists the University of Alabama as the exam vendor and provides testing-location links for Birmingham, Huntsville, Mobile, Tuscaloosa, and Montgomery. The DOI also lists producer exam fees, including $50 for producer exams and $75 for combined Life & Health or combined Property & Casualty exams.
Alabama Insurance Exam Options
Alabama offers several insurance producer exam paths. The exam you take should match the line of authority you want.
| Exam Path | Best For Candidates Who Want To Sell |
|---|---|
| Life & Health | Life insurance, annuities, health insurance, disability income, and related products |
| Life Only | Life insurance, annuities, and related life products |
| Health Only | Accident and health insurance, disability income, and medical expense products |
| Property & Casualty | Homeowners, auto, commercial property, liability, workers’ compensation, and related products |
| Property Only | Property-focused insurance products |
| Casualty Only | Liability-focused insurance products |
| Personal Lines | Personal auto, homeowners, renters, and other personal insurance lines |
If you are not sure which license path fits your career goal, start with Insurance Licensing in Alabama: Complete Guide to License Types and Requirements before choosing an exam.
Alabama Life & Health Exam Content Weighting
The combined Alabama Life & Health exam has 150 questions, allows 3 hours, and requires 105 correct answers to pass.
| Alabama Life & Health Exam Section | Questions |
|---|---|
| General Life & Health Insurance | 30 |
| Life Insurance | 55 |
| Health Insurance | 45 |
| Alabama Law | 20 |
| Total | 150 |
What This Means for Your Study Plan
Life insurance is the largest single section of the combined Life & Health exam, but health insurance and Alabama law matter too. A candidate who studies only life insurance concepts may feel comfortable early, then get ambushed by health policy provisions, disability income concepts, group health rules, Medicare-related content, or Alabama-specific law questions.
Your Life & Health study plan should include:
- General insurance definitions
- Insurance contracts
- Underwriting and applications
- Life insurance policy types
- Life policy provisions, options, and riders
- Annuities
- Federal tax considerations
- Health insurance basics
- Medical expense insurance
- Disability income insurance
- Health policy provisions
- Group insurance
- Alabama insurance law
- Timed exam simulation
For license-specific steps, see How to Get a Life and Health Insurance License in Alabama.
Alabama Property & Casualty Exam Content Weighting
The combined Alabama Property & Casualty exam has 150 questions, allows 3 hours, and requires 105 correct answers to pass.
| Alabama Property & Casualty Exam Section | Questions |
|---|---|
| Property & Casualty Fundamentals | 30 |
| Personal Lines | 34 |
| Commercial Lines | 66 |
| Alabama Law | 20 |
| Total | 150 |
What This Means for Your Study Plan
The Alabama P&C exam is not just a homeowners-and-auto test. Commercial Lines is the largest section of the combined Property & Casualty exam, with 66 questions. That means candidates should spend serious time on commercial property, commercial general liability, businessowners policies, workers’ compensation, commercial auto, crime, bonds, inland marine, and related commercial coverage concepts.
Your P&C study plan should include:
- Property and casualty fundamentals
- Contract law and policy structure
- Property insurance basics
- Liability insurance basics
- Homeowners policies
- Personal auto
- Commercial property
- Commercial general liability
- Businessowners policies
- Commercial auto
- Workers’ compensation
- Crime and fidelity bonds
- Alabama insurance law
- Timed exam simulation
For license-specific steps, see How to Get a Property and Casualty Insurance License in Alabama.
Alabama Single-Line Exam Options
Some candidates do not need a combined exam. Alabama also offers single-line or narrower producer exam paths.
| Exam | Questions | Time | Correct to Pass |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life & Health | 150 | 3 hours | 105 |
| Life Only | 125 | 2.5 hours | 87 |
| Health Only | 100 | 2 hours | 70 |
| Property & Casualty | 150 | 3 hours | 105 |
| Property Only | 100 | 2 hours | 70 |
| Casualty Only | 125 | 2.5 hours | 87 |
| Personal Lines | 100 | 2 hours | 70 |
Alabama uses a 70% passing standard for producer exams, and the University of Alabama testing site lists the passing score, question count, and time allowed by exam type.
Why Students Fail the Alabama Insurance Licensing Exam
Most candidates do not fail because they are incapable of learning insurance. They fail because their study plan has holes in it. The exam finds those holes with a little flashlight and a clipboard.
1. They Mistake “No Prelicensing Certificate” for “No Serious Study Needed”
Alabama no longer requires a prelicensing certificate, but the exam still tests insurance concepts, policy provisions, state law, definitions, and application-style questions. No required course does not mean no required knowledge.
2. They Memorize Terms Without Practicing Questions
Insurance exams rarely ask only, “What does this word mean?” More often, they describe a situation and expect you to choose the best answer. Definitions matter, but practice questions teach you how the exam uses those definitions.
3. They Underestimate Alabama Law
Both major combined exams include Alabama law content. Students who only study national insurance concepts can leave state-specific points sitting on the table like forgotten luggage.
4. P&C Candidates Understudy Commercial Lines
Commercial Lines is the largest section of the combined Alabama P&C exam. Candidates who over-focus on personal auto and homeowners may walk into the exam underprepared for commercial coverage questions.
5. L&H Candidates Over-Focus on Life Insurance
Life insurance is the largest individual section of the combined L&H exam, but Health Insurance and Alabama Law together account for a major portion of the test. Skipping health concepts can make the exam feel much rougher than expected.
6. They Do Not Simulate the Real Exam
The combined Alabama producer exams give you 3 hours for 150 questions. That sounds generous until the clock starts chewing quietly at the corner of the screen. Timed practice helps you build pacing, endurance, and decision discipline.
7. They Retake Too Casually
The University of Alabama testing site lists repeat-exam limitations and waiting periods after repeated failed attempts. There is no waiting period after the first failed attempt, but a 90-day wait applies after the second failed attempt, a 180-day wait applies after the fourth failed attempt, and additional 180-day waits apply every two attempts after that.
Why Exam Prep Matters in Alabama
Alabama gives candidates flexibility by not requiring mandatory prelicensing hours. But flexibility can become a trap if it leads to scattered studying.
The Alabama insurance licensing exams are content-heavy multiple-choice exams. You are not just memorizing definitions. You need to recognize policy language, understand how coverages work, identify exclusions and conditions, and apply insurance law to exam-style scenarios.
That is why TESTivity uses a multi-tool study system instead of relying on one flat textbook.
The TESTivity Platinum Study Package includes:
Best Study Strategy for the Alabama Insurance Exam
A good Alabama exam study plan should do three things:
- Build understanding
- Create memory through repetition
- Test readiness before exam day
Here is a practical study sequence.
Step 1: Start With the Official Exam Outline
Use the exam outline as your map. Alabama’s exam outlines show the major content sections and how many questions come from each area. That tells you where to spend your time.
Do not study every topic with the same intensity. A 66-question section deserves more attention than a tiny subsection. That does not mean you ignore smaller topics, but it does mean you study with a sense of proportion.
Step 2: Read the Study Manual by Section
Start with a structured study manual instead of bouncing randomly between videos, flashcards, and practice questions. You need the foundation first.
For Life & Health, move through general insurance, life insurance, health insurance, and Alabama law.
For P&C, move through fundamentals, personal lines, commercial lines, and Alabama law.
Step 3: Use Flashcards for Memory-Heavy Topics
Flashcards are especially useful for:
- Definitions
- Policy provisions
- Riders
- Exclusions
- Alabama law terms
- Commercial coverage forms
- Health insurance terms
- Life insurance policy options
- Time limits and notice requirements
Flashcards keep facts from sliding off the mental dashboard during exam week.
Step 4: Use Audio for Repetition
Audio is ideal for reinforcement. Use it while driving, walking, exercising, cleaning, or doing low-focus tasks. Audio will not replace practice questions, but it helps concepts become familiar enough that the exam feels less alien.
Step 5: Use Mind Maps for Big Concept Families
Mind maps are especially useful for Alabama candidates because both major exams include large sections with many related concepts.
Use mind maps for:
- Commercial property and casualty coverage
- Homeowners policy structure
- Commercial general liability
- Workers’ compensation
- Life insurance policy types
- Annuities
- Health policy provisions
- Disability income coverage
Mind maps help you see how the pieces fit together instead of staring at a pile of loose insurance puzzle pieces.
Step 6: Practice Questions Every Day
Practice questions are where knowledge becomes exam readiness. Do not wait until the end to start practicing.
A strong practice routine looks like this:
- Read one section
- Answer related practice questions
- Review missed questions
- Write down why the correct answer is correct
- Identify weak topics
- Re-study weak topics
- Take another quiz
The magic is not in taking questions. The magic is in reviewing why you missed them.
Step 7: Take Timed Final Exams
Before test day, take full timed exams under realistic conditions. For combined Life & Health or combined Property & Casualty, practice sitting for a 150-question exam.
Your goal is not just to pass once. Your goal is to pass consistently enough that test-day nerves do not knock you below the line.
Step 8: Use a Final 24-Hour Review Plan
The day before the exam should not be a chaotic cram festival with sticky notes flying like frightened birds.
Use the final 24 hours for:
- Weak areas
- State law
- Frequently missed questions
- Key definitions
- Policy provisions
- Cheat sheet review
- Light practice
- Sleep
Do not try to learn the entire course the night before. That is not studying. That is academic skydiving without checking the parachute.
TESTivity Platinum Study Package for Alabama Exam Prep
The TESTivity Platinum Study Package is built for candidates who want a complete exam-prep system instead of one study tool doing all the heavy lifting.
Alabama candidates are not required to submit a prelicensing certificate, so your preparation system matters even more. TESTivity helps you build knowledge, reinforce memory, practice exam-style questions, and identify weak areas before test day.
What’s Included in TESTivity Platinum
| TESTivity Tool | How It Helps Alabama Candidates |
|---|---|
| Study Manual | Gives you a structured path through the exam content |
| Exam Simulator | Helps you practice realistic multiple-choice questions |
| Audio Course | Reinforces key concepts through repeat listening |
| Video Course | Adds guided instruction for difficult topics |
| Flashcards | Builds memory for definitions, provisions, and law |
| Mind Maps | Helps organize complex topics visually |
| Learning Games | Adds active recall and variety to study sessions |
| Test Day Cheat Sheet | Helps with final review before the exam |
| AI Tutor | Gives on-demand explanations when you get stuck |
| Pass Readiness Tracking | Helps identify weak areas before test day |
Why Platinum Fits Alabama Candidates
Alabama’s exam system gives you flexibility because the state no longer requires a prelicensing certificate, but that flexibility can become a trap if your study plan is thin.
Platinum gives you multiple ways to learn the same material:
- Read it
- Hear it
- Watch it
- Practice it
- Map it
- Quiz it
- Review it
- Ask about it
- Track it
That matters because insurance exams are content-heavy, memory-heavy, and wording-sensitive. One tool is usually not enough for every type of learner or every type of topic.
Tool-by-Tool Study Method for the Alabama Exam
Use the Study Manual First
Start with the TESTivity Study Manual as your main path. Read each section in order and use the official Alabama exam content structure as your roadmap.
Do not start by hammering random questions before you understand the basics. That can turn studying into a pinball machine.
Use the manual to build your first layer of understanding. Highlight difficult sections. Write down confusing terms. Then use the other tools to reinforce what you read. Best for:
- Learning before practicing
- Building the foundation
- Understanding Alabama-specific rules
- Organizing the material

Use Flashcards for Fast Recall
Use flashcards daily for definitions and memory-heavy topics. Flashcards work best in short, repeated sessions. Good flashcard topics include:
- Insuring agreement
- Alabama-specific producer rules
- Consideration
- Adhesion
- Aleatory contract
- Indemnity
- Coinsurance
- Deductible
- Hazard
- Peril
- Misrepresentation
- Grace period
- Reinstatement
- Waiver
- Estoppel
- Replacement
- Fiduciary duties

Use Audio When You Cannot Sit and Read
Audio is perfect when you are not able to sit at a desk. It lets you keep reviewing while commuting, walking, exercising, or handling routine tasks.
The goal is familiarity. The more often you hear key concepts, the less strange they feel when they appear in exam questions.
Audio is especially helpful for busy adults who need more study time but do not have endless quiet hours available. Best for:
- Auditory learners
- Repetition
- Reinforcement
- Commuters
- Multitaskers

Video Course
Some topics are easier when they are explained visually. Video can help with:
- Policy structure
- Riders
- Annuities
- Health policy provisions
- Commercial coverage
- Liability concepts
- Workers compensation
- State regulation
- Tax treatment
Use video when a topic feels fuzzy after reading. Sometimes one clear explanation can untangle a whole knot of confusion.

Use Mind Maps for Big, Tangled Topics
Mind maps are ideal for topics that are hard to keep straight in paragraph form.
For Alabama P&C, use mind maps for:
- Commercial general liability
- Commercial property
- Businessowners policies
- Workers’ compensation
- Personal auto vs commercial auto
- Homeowners policy sections
For Alabama L&H, use mind maps for:
- Group health insurance
- Life policy types
- Life insurance riders
- Annuity classifications
- Health policy provisions
- Disability income

Use Learning Games When Your Brain Starts Throwing Furniture
Learning games are not fluff. They create another layer of active recall, especially for vocabulary-heavy topics. Use them when you need review but your brain refuses another straight reading session. Best for:
- Vocabulary
- Matching concepts
- Recall practice
- Breaking study fatigue
- Keeping momentum
The exam is serious. Your study sessions do not all have to feel like a dentist’s waiting room.

Use the Exam Simulator After Each Section
After finishing a topic, answer practice questions on that topic. Then review every missed question.
For Alabama P&C candidates, pay special attention to commercial lines and Alabama law.
For Alabama L&H candidates, pay special attention to health insurance, policy provisions, life insurance riders, annuities, and Alabama law.
That means you need to be ready to read carefully, manage time, eliminate wrong answers, and keep moving when a question feels unfamiliar. Best for:
- Exam-style practice
- Timed exams
- Weak-area diagnosis
- Scenario questions
- Test-day confidence

Use the Cheat Sheet in the Final 24 Hours
The Test Day Cheat Sheet is for final review, not first exposure. Use it after you have studied the full course and taken practice exams.
During the final 24 hours, focus on:
- Weak areas
- Alabama law
- High-frequency definitions
- Frequently missed questions
- Policy provisions
- Exam-day reminders
The final day is not the time to rebuild your entire study plan. It is the time to compress, review, and sharpen.

Use the AI Tutor When You Get Stuck
Use the AI Tutor when you miss a question and do not understand why. Ask it to explain the concept, compare two answer choices, or simplify a difficult topic. This is especially useful for concepts like:
- Medicare vs Medicaid
- Actual cash value vs replacement cost
- Named perils vs open perils
- Waiver vs estoppel
- Representation vs warranty
- Term vs whole life
- Fixed vs variable annuities
- Elimination period vs probationary period

Alabama Exam-Day Tips
Register Early
Alabama exam registration should be completed in advance through the University of Alabama testing system. The Alabama DOI directs candidates to the University of Alabama testing pages for registration by city.
Bring Valid Photo ID
The University of Alabama testing site instructs candidates to bring valid photo identification and follow testing procedures on exam day.
Arrive Early
Plan to arrive before your scheduled exam time. Give yourself enough time for traffic, parking, check-in, and nerves. Running late is not a study strategy.
Answer Every Question
Unanswered questions count against you, so answer every question before submitting. Use elimination when needed, flag difficult questions if the system allows it, and return to them before finishing.
Watch the Clock
For combined exams, you have 3 hours for 150 questions. That averages a little over one minute per question. Do not spend five minutes wrestling one question while 30 untouched questions wait in the bushes.
Use the Review Screen
If the testing system gives you a review opportunity, use it strategically. Check unanswered or flagged questions first. Then review only if you still have time.
Do Not Bring Prohibited Items Into the Testing Area
Follow the testing center’s rules carefully. Do not risk a problem over a phone, notes, smartwatch, or other prohibited item.
After You Pass the Alabama Insurance Exam
After passing, your work is not finished. You still need to complete the licensing steps.
1. Wait for Exam Results to Be Reported
Passing results are reported electronically to the Alabama Department of Insurance after the exam. The University of Alabama testing site states that results are reported electronically after testing.
2. Complete Fingerprinting Through Fieldprint
Alabama requires fingerprinting for license classes that require it, and the DOI can only use fingerprints processed through Fieldprint. Fingerprint results remain in the Alabama system for only 30 days after fingerprinting. If the application reaches the DOI after that window, you may need to be fingerprinted again and pay again.
3. Apply Online Through NIPR
Alabama resident licensing applications are submitted through NIPR. NIPR also warns that applicants applying for license classes that require fingerprinting must submit the application within 30 days after completing fingerprinting.
4. Submit Proof of Citizenship
Alabama requires proof of citizenship before issuing the license. Do not let this final paperwork step become the tiny pebble that stops the wagon.
5. Print Your License
Once your application is approved and the license is issued, print your license through the appropriate Alabama licensing system.
FAQ: Alabama Insurance Licensing Exam
About This Alabama Insurance Exam Prep Guide
This guide was created by TESTivity’s insurance exam prep team using current information from the Alabama Department of Insurance, University of Alabama Insurance Testing, NIPR, and official Alabama licensing resources. Exam details, licensing procedures, fees, and state requirements can change, so candidates should confirm final requirements with the Alabama Department of Insurance before registering or applying.
Ready to Prepare for the Alabama Insurance Licensing Exam?
TESTivity gives you the tools to study from every angle:
The Alabama insurance exam is passable, but it rewards structure. You need content review, repetition, realistic practice, weak-area tracking, and final review.
- Read the material
- Hear the material
- Watch the material
- Practice the material
- Map the material
- Quiz the material
- Review weak areas
- Ask for help when stuck
- Walk into test day with a plan
Get the TESTivity Platinum Study Package and start preparing for the Alabama insurance licensing exam with a complete, multi-tool study system.

📋 Official Alabama Insurance Licensing Resources
To ensure absolute accuracy when registering for your exam and filing your application, we recommend utilizing these official state materials alongside your TESTivity Platinum Study Package.
Instant PDF Downloads
-
Alabama L&H Insurance Licensing Exam Content Outline (PDF)
Direct mirror hosted by GetTheLicense.org -
Alabama P&C Insurance Licensing Exam Content Outline (PDF)
Official exam breakdown and topic weighting
Official Portals & Live Verification
-
Alabama Department of Insurance
For resident agent regulations and fee schedules -
University of Alabama Insurance Licensing Page
To schedule your exam, find test centers, or check live updates


