Colorado P&C License Guide

Get Your Property and Casualty Insurance License in the Centennial State

If you want to sell auto, homeowners, renters, business, commercial property, liability, or other property and casualty insurance products in Colorado, you will usually need the right producer license authority before you can begin.

The Colorado property and casualty insurance license path includes required prelicensing education, Pearson VUE licensing exams, an online license application, and ongoing continuing education after you are licensed.

This guide walks you through the Colorado P&C licensing process step by step, from choosing your license path to preparing for exam day in the Centennial State.

How Colorado P&C Licensing Works

In Colorado, Property and Casualty are separate lines of authority, but many students pursue them together because the two lines are closely connected in the real world. A property license focuses on insurance that protects property from loss, such as homeowners, dwelling, commercial property, inland marine, and related coverages. A casualty license focuses on liability and related loss exposures, including auto liability, commercial general liability, workers compensation, crime, surety, and similar coverage areas.

Colorado’s insurance exams are administered by Pearson VUE, and Pearson’s Colorado insurance page is the official testing hub for scheduling, test center information, online testing details, candidate handbook access, and Colorado insurance licensing resources.

For major resident lines such as Property and Casualty, Colorado requires approved prelicensing training before the licensing exam. Pearson VUE’s Colorado Candidate Handbook states that applicants applying for Property or Casualty authority must complete required prelicense training and must pass the Pearson VUE licensing exam.

Because Colorado requires approved prelicensing education, TESTivity should not be positioned as a replacement for the required course. If you still need the required approved prelicensing course, we recommend Achievable. Once that requirement is handled, TESTivity’s Colorado P&C study tools help you prepare for the exam itself with state-specific reinforcement, Pearson VUE-style practice, and multiple study methods.

Colorado P&C License Quick Facts

CategoryColorado P&C Requirement
State regulatorColorado Division of Insurance
Testing vendorPearson VUE
License linesProperty and Casualty
Prelicensing required?Yes, for Property and Casualty resident producer applicants
Exam required?Yes
Property exam time2 hours
Casualty exam time2 hours
Exam fee$41 for up to two exams in one exam session
Application methodOnline through Sircon or NIPR
Resident producer fee$44 per line of authority, excluding NIPR transaction fees
Exam score validity12 months
License continuationEvery 2 years, generally on the last day of the producer’s birth month
CE requirement24 credits per continuation cycle beginning with the second cycle
Ethics CE3 credits
Homeowners CE3 credits required for producers with Property or Personal Lines authority

Pearson VUE lists the Colorado insurance licensing exam fee as $41 and says candidates may take up to two examinations during one exam session for that single fee. NIPR lists the Colorado resident producer fee as $44 per line of authority for all lines except Surplus Lines, not including NIPR transaction fees.

5 Steps to Get a Property and Casualty Insurance License in Colorado

Step 1: Decide Whether You Need Property, Casualty, or Both

Before you begin the process, decide which line or lines of authority match your career goal.

You may need a Property line if you plan to sell policies such as:

  • Homeowners insurance
  • Dwelling insurance
  • Commercial property insurance
  • Inland marine insurance
  • Flood insurance
  • Business property coverage
  • Other insurance covering damage to or loss of property

You may need a Casualty line if you plan to sell policies such as:

  • Personal auto insurance
  • Commercial auto insurance
  • General liability insurance
  • Workers compensation insurance
  • Professional liability insurance
  • Crime insurance
  • Surety bonds
  • Other liability-based coverages

Many Colorado candidates take both Property and Casualty because employers, agencies, and clients often expect P&C producers to handle both sides of the risk picture. If you want to work in personal lines, commercial lines, agency sales, account management, or independent brokerage, pursuing both lines is usually the more practical path.

For a broader overview of all license types, see Insurance Licensing in Colorado: Complete Guide to License Types and Requirements. For life, health, disability, and related products, see How to Get a Life and Health Insurance License in Colorado.

Step 2: Complete Required Colorado P&C Prelicensing Education

Colorado requires approved prelicensing education for resident candidates seeking Property or Casualty authority. Pearson VUE’s Colorado Candidate Handbook says applicants applying for Property and Casualty authority must complete prelicense training before taking the licensing exam.

The handbook also states that prelicensing providers report completion information to Pearson VUE, and applicants must provide the school code when scheduling the exam. Prelicensing training is valid for one year. If you do not pass the exam within one year of completing training, you may need to retrain.

That means your first job is to complete the required approved course. If you still need a Colorado-approved prelicensing option, we recommend Achievable.

Your second job is to prepare for the exam itself. That is where TESTivity fits.

A prelicensing course helps satisfy the state requirement. TESTivity’s Colorado P&C study tools help you absorb, review, practice, and test yourself on the material in a way that resembles the Colorado Pearson VUE exam experience.

Why Exam Prep Matters in Colorado

Colorado gives candidates flexibility by not requiring where you get your mandatory prelicensing hours. But flexibility can become a trap if it leads to scattered studying.

The Colorado insurance exam is a content-heavy multiple-choice exam. 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:

Step 3: Schedule Your Colorado Property and Casualty Exams with Pearson VUE

Colorado insurance exams are administered by Pearson VUE. Candidates can schedule, reschedule, or cancel exams through the Pearson VUE Colorado Insurance page.

If you are taking both Property and Casualty, pay close attention to scheduling rules. Pearson VUE says candidates may take up to two examinations during one exam session for a single $41 fee. This can be helpful if you want to complete both P&C exams close together, but it also means you need to be prepared for a longer and more mentally demanding testing session.

Before scheduling, make sure:

  • Your prelicensing education is complete.
  • Your prelicensing provider has reported completion as required.
  • You have the correct school code.
  • Your legal name matches your government-issued ID.
  • You know whether you are taking Property, Casualty, or both.
  • You have reviewed the current Pearson VUE Colorado Candidate Handbook and content outline.

Pearson VUE emphasizes that candidates should create their account using their legal name exactly as it appears on their government-issued ID, because that information appears on exam documents and reports to the licensing agency.

Step 4: Pass the Colorado Property and Casualty Insurance Exams

Colorado’s Property and Casualty exams test more than vocabulary. You need to understand policy types, exclusions, limits, producer responsibilities, state regulations, and how insurance concepts apply to realistic scenarios.

Pearson VUE’s Colorado content outlines include separate sections for general insurance knowledge and Colorado-specific material. The Colorado content outline includes property and casualty topics such as rate regulations, summary disclosure forms, commercial policy requirements, use of credit information, homeowners cancellation and nonrenewal, availability of fire insurance, workers compensation, auto insurance, UM/UIM, financial responsibility, medical payments, transportation network company issues, claims, the Colorado Auto Insurance Plan, and bail bonds.

This is why generic study material can be risky. You are not taking a generic national insurance quiz. You are taking a Colorado insurance exam administered through Pearson VUE. The content, structure, wording, and state-specific law questions all matter.

TESTivity’s Colorado P&C exam simulator is designed around that reality. Over more than 20 years of insurance exam prep, TESTivity has learned that exam style and recurring question formats can vary from Pearson VUE to Prometric to PSI. The worst thing you can do is study with practice material that does not feel like what you will actually see on the screen at the testing center.

Step 5: Apply for Your Colorado P&C License

After you complete required prelicensing and pass the required exam, you can submit your Colorado license application online. NIPR’s Colorado licensing page says Colorado insurance exam scores are valid for 12 months. Pearson VUE’s handbook also says the license application must be received within one year of passing the exam.

Colorado applications can be submitted electronically through Sircon or NIPR. The Pearson VUE Colorado insurance page says Colorado uses electronic processing for applications, renewals, continuations, address changes, CE course banking, and related licensing services.

Before applying, confirm:

  • You passed the correct exam or exams.
  • Your exam score is still valid.
  • Your prelicensing completion has been properly reported.
  • You are applying for the correct line or lines of authority.
  • You have disclosed any required background or regulatory information accurately.
  • You understand the fees for each line of authority.

If you want both Property and Casualty authority, make sure the application reflects both lines.

Colorado Property and Casualty Exam Details

Colorado P&C candidates should prepare for both national insurance concepts and Colorado-specific laws and rules.

Property Exam

The Property exam focuses on insurance that covers loss or damage to property. Topics commonly include:

  • Insurance terms and related concepts
  • Policy structure
  • Property insurance basics
  • Dwelling policies
  • Homeowners insurance
  • Commercial property insurance
  • Inland marine
  • Businessowners policies
  • Flood insurance
  • Other property coverages
  • Policy provisions, conditions, and exclusions
  • Colorado property insurance rules

The Colorado content outline lists Property general knowledge as 50 scored questions plus 5 pretest questions.

Casualty Exam

The Casualty exam focuses on liability, injury, and legal responsibility. Topics commonly include:

  • Casualty insurance basics
  • Personal auto insurance
  • Commercial auto insurance
  • Commercial general liability
  • Workers compensation
  • Employers liability
  • Professional liability
  • Umbrella and excess liability
  • Crime insurance
  • Surety bonds
  • Policy provisions, exclusions, and conditions
  • Colorado casualty insurance rules

The Colorado content outline lists Casualty general knowledge as 50 scored questions plus 5 pretest questions.

Colorado-Specific P&C Topics

Colorado-specific P&C content is where many students get nicked by the exam’s sharper edges. You should be ready for questions involving:

  • Producer licensing responsibilities
  • Commissioner authority
  • Unfair trade practices
  • Fiduciary duties and premium handling
  • Rate and form regulation
  • Colorado homeowners insurance rules
  • Cancellation and nonrenewal
  • Colorado auto insurance requirements
  • Uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage
  • Medical payments
  • Financial responsibility
  • Workers compensation
  • Claims handling
  • Colorado-specific market conduct rules

These topics are not decorative state-law sprinkles. They are part of the exam blueprint.

Colorado P&C Licensing Fees

Here are the main fees Colorado P&C candidates should expect.

Fee TypeAmount
Pearson VUE exam session fee$41
Exams allowed per session feeUp to 2 exams
Colorado resident producer fee$44 per line of authority
NIPR transaction feeAdditional
Prelicensing courseVaries by provider
TESTivity study toolsVaries by package

NIPR lists Colorado’s resident producer licensing fee as $44 per line of authority, excluding NIPR transaction fees. Pearson VUE lists the insurance producer examination fee as $41 and allows up to two examinations in one exam session for that single fee.

Because Property and Casualty are separate lines of authority, candidates pursuing both should plan for licensing fees for both lines.

Fingerprints, Background Checks, and Disclosures

The current Colorado resident producer licensing materials emphasize accurate application disclosures, background-related screening questions, and required documentation when applicable.

NIPR lists several Colorado resident licensing business rules, including that applicants must be at least 18 years old, must not hold an active resident license in another state, and may need to contact the state in certain cases involving serious regulatory or 1033 actions.

The current Pearson VUE resident producer process materials do not present a universal fingerprint requirement in the same way some other states do. Instead, applicants should pay close attention to the application’s screening questions and supporting-document requirements.

If you have a criminal history, prior regulatory action, bankruptcy, name issue, residency complication, or previous license issue, review the current Colorado Candidate Handbook and contact Pearson VUE, Sircon, NIPR, or the Colorado Division of Insurance before assuming your application will be routine.

Colorado P&C License Application Process

Colorado’s P&C license application is submitted electronically. Pearson VUE’s Colorado insurance page says Colorado uses electronic processing for license applications and related services, including renewals, continuations, address changes, and CE course banking.

The application process generally works like this:

  1. Complete required Colorado-approved P&C prelicensing education.
  2. Confirm your provider has reported completion if required.
  3. Schedule and pass the Property and/or Casualty exam through Pearson VUE.
  4. Submit your license application through Sircon or NIPR.
  5. Pay applicable state and transaction fees.
  6. Respond promptly if Colorado requests additional documentation.

Do not let a passing score sit unused. Colorado exam scores are valid for 12 months, and Pearson VUE states that the license application must be received within one year of passing the exam.

Colorado P&C License Renewal and Continuing Education

Colorado producer licenses are continued every two years, generally on the last day of the producer’s birth month. Pearson VUE’s Colorado Candidate Handbook explains that the first expiration date may be 13 to 24 months from the date the license is issued, depending on the month of licensure and the producer’s birth date.

Colorado resident producers holding Property or Casualty authority must complete 24 continuing education credits every continuation cycle, beginning with the second cycle. The requirement includes:

  • 18 credits in the licensed line of authority
  • 3 ethics credits
  • 3 credits in a category of choice

For producers holding Property or Personal Lines authority, Colorado also requires at least 3 hours in Homeowners.

This homeowners CE requirement is especially important for P&C producers who plan to sell homeowners insurance. It is one of those details that can become a licensing headache later if ignored.

Pearson VUE also says Colorado has no grace period for license continuation, and continuation requirements must be received by 10:00 PM Mountain Time on the license expiration date.

Colorado-Specific P&C Licensing Quirks

Property and Casualty Are Separate Lines

Colorado treats Property and Casualty as separate lines of authority. Many candidates pursue both, but you should still pay attention to which exams, applications, and fees apply to each line.

Colorado Requires Prelicensing

Colorado is not a “just schedule the exam and see what happens” state. For Property and Casualty resident candidates, approved prelicensing education is required before testing.

Prelicensing Training Is Time-Sensitive

Colorado prelicensing training is valid for one year. If too much time passes before you pass the exam, you may have to retrain.

Exam Scores Expire

Colorado insurance exam scores are valid for 12 months. Submit your application before the score expires.

Pearson VUE Style Matters

Colorado uses Pearson VUE. That matters.

A student who studies with generic practice questions may understand the broad insurance concepts but still feel blindsided by Pearson VUE’s wording, answer structure, pacing, and state-law emphasis. TESTivity’s Colorado P&C exam simulator is built to mimic the feel of the Colorado Pearson VUE exam, not a generic insurance quiz from a dusty national database.

Colorado Auto and Homeowners Rules Deserve Extra Attention

Colorado P&C candidates should pay close attention to auto insurance, homeowners insurance, cancellation and nonrenewal, UM/UIM, medical payments, workers compensation, and claims-related rules. These are practical, state-specific areas that can appear in ways students do not expect.



Recommended TESTivity Study Tools for Colorado P&C Candidates

Colorado P&C candidates need two things: the required approved prelicensing education and a smart exam-prep system.

If you still need the required approved prelicensing course, we recommend Achievable.

Once that requirement is handled, TESTivity helps you prepare for the exam itself with Colorado-specific tools built around how students actually learn.

Colorado P&C Study Manual

The TESTivity Study Manual gives you an organized path through Colorado P&C material. It helps you build the foundation: insurance definitions, policy structure, major coverage forms, exclusions, conditions, state rules, and exam-relevant concepts.

Colorado P&C Exam Simulator

The Exam Simulator is the core of your final exam preparation.

The Colorado P&C exam is administered by Pearson VUE, and Pearson VUE questions do not always feel like Prometric or PSI questions. TESTivity’s simulator is built to help you practice with questions that feel more representative of the Colorado testing experience.

The goal is not just to answer questions. The goal is to learn the rhythm of the exam before the clock starts.

Flashcards

Flashcards help you memorize policy terms, state-law triggers, exclusions, definitions, and coverage distinctions. For P&C students, they are especially helpful for separating similar-sounding concepts such as cancellation vs. nonrenewal, property vs. liability coverage, and named perils vs. open perils.

Audio Course

The Audio Course turns drive time, walking time, and chore time into review time. P&C material rewards repetition, and audio review can help concepts stick without requiring another late-night wrestling match with a textbook.

Mind Maps

Mind Maps help visual learners see how P&C concepts connect. This is useful for topics such as homeowners coverage parts, auto liability, commercial property, CGL, workers compensation, and producer responsibilities.

Learning Games

Learning games give you a lower-pressure way to reinforce terms and concepts. Insurance exam prep can get heavy fast, and games create another repetition loop without making your brain file a complaint.

AI Insurance Exam Tutor

The AI Tutor can help you review weak areas, explain confusing concepts, and keep your study plan moving when you get stuck.

TESTivity Platinum Study Package

The Platinum Study Package brings the full system together: Study Manual, Exam Simulator, Audio Course, Flashcards, Mind Maps, Learning Games, Video Course, Test Day Cheat Sheet, and AI Tutor.

For Colorado P&C candidates, Platinum is the best fit if you want a complete, state-specific study system rather than a pile of disconnected tools.


FAQ: Colorado Property and Casualty Insurance License

To get a Colorado property and casualty insurance license, complete the required approved prelicensing education, pass the Pearson VUE Property and/or Casualty licensing exams, submit your application online through Sircon or NIPR, pay the required fees, and maintain your license through Colorado’s continuation and continuing education rules.

Yes. Colorado requires prelicensing education for resident applicants seeking Property or Casualty authority. Pearson VUE’s Colorado Candidate Handbook states that Property and Casualty applicants must complete prelicense training before taking the licensing exam.

Pearson VUE administers Colorado insurance licensing exams, including Property and Casualty exams. Candidates can schedule exams and access Colorado insurance resources through Pearson VUE’s Colorado Insurance page.

The Colorado insurance licensing exam fee is $41. Pearson VUE says candidates may take up to two examinations during one exam session for that single fee.

NIPR lists Colorado’s resident producer licensing fee as $44 per line of authority for all lines excluding Surplus Lines, not including NIPR transaction fees. Because Property and Casualty are separate lines, candidates applying for both should plan accordingly.

Colorado insurance exam scores are valid for 12 months. Pearson VUE also states that the license application must be received within one year of passing the exam.

It depends on what you plan to sell. If you want to sell both property coverages and liability-based coverages, you will likely need both Property and Casualty authority. Many agencies prefer candidates who hold both because personal and commercial insurance often require both sides of the license.

The Colorado Property exam covers property insurance concepts, policy types, homeowners, dwelling, commercial property, inland marine, flood, policy provisions, exclusions, and related state-specific rules. Pearson VUE’s Colorado content outline lists Property general knowledge as 50 scored questions plus 5 pretest questions.

The Colorado Casualty exam covers liability insurance concepts, auto, commercial general liability, workers compensation, professional liability, crime, surety, policy provisions, exclusions, and related Colorado-specific laws. Pearson VUE’s Colorado content outline lists Casualty general knowledge as 50 scored questions plus 5 pretest questions.

Colorado resident producers holding Property or Casualty authority must complete 24 CE credits every continuation cycle beginning with the second cycle. The requirement includes ethics credits, and Property producers must complete at least 3 hours in Homeowners.

No. Colorado requires approved prelicensing education for Property and Casualty resident candidates. TESTivity is designed to help candidates prepare for the Colorado P&C licensing exam with Colorado-specific study tools, Pearson VUE-style practice questions, flashcards, audio, mind maps, games, and exam simulation. If you still need the required course, we recommend Achievable.

Because the Colorado P&C exam includes Colorado-specific law and is administered through Pearson VUE. Generic national material may not match the format, wording, pacing, or state-law focus of the actual exam. TESTivity’s Colorado P&C tools are built from the ground up with Colorado in mind.

About This Colorado P&C Insurance License Guide

GetTheLicense.org creates insurance licensing guides for students preparing for state insurance exams across the country. Our goal is to make the licensing process easier to understand, help candidates avoid common mistakes, and connect students with study tools that match the way they learn.

This Colorado P&C guide was prepared using current information from Pearson VUE, NIPR, and Colorado insurance licensing resources. Licensing requirements, fees, exams, and procedures can change, so candidates should always confirm final requirements with the Colorado Division of Insurance, Pearson VUE, Sircon, NIPR, or their approved prelicensing provider before scheduling an exam or submitting an application.

About the author

Matt Williams

Matt Williams has been teaching insurance pre-licensing curriculum for over 20 years and has helped thousands of people pass their exams on their first attempt. Matt holds Life & Health, Property & Casualty, and Adjuster insurance licenses along with the Series 7, 8, 24, 63, and 65 FINRA/NASAA designations, and the CLU, ChFC, and CFP® professional credentials. He is a certified trainer in adult education and the founder of TESTivity.

The TESTivity Platinum Study Package is built around exactly this map: video lessons weighted to the actual exam outline, mind maps that show how coverage types relate to each other, a full-length exam simulator that mirrors the Colorado Pearson Vue format, and a pass guarantee. Built by the people who teach the exam — used by the candidates who pass it!

Ready to Prepare for the Colorado P&C Exam?

Start by completing your required Colorado-approved prelicensing education. If you still need the required course, we recommend Achievable.

Then train for the exam with TESTivity’s Colorado-specific P&C study tools.

TESTivity gives you a full learning system: a Colorado-focused Study Manual, Pearson VUE-style Exam Simulator, Flashcards, Audio Course, Mind Maps, Learning Games, AI Tutor, Video Course, and Test Day Cheat Sheet.

Do not walk into the Colorado P&C exam with generic study material and hope it fits. Prepare with tools built for Colorado, built for Pearson VUE, and built to help you know when you are truly ready.

Explore the TESTivity Colorado P&C Insurance Exam Prep tools and start building your pass-ready study plan today.

Get your Colorado property and casualty insurance license

📋 Official Colorado P&C 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

Official Portals & Live Verification

Editorial Note & Accuracy Disclaimer: The documentation above is pulled directly from the official Colorado Division of Insurance (DORA) and testing vendors. While we audit these links bi-annually, state regulations, exam fees, and testing policies can change without notice. Always cross-reference your documentation with the live portals before booking an exam date.