Washington insurance licensing exam

Prepare for the Washington PSI Exam the Smart Way

Washington no longer requires producer candidates to complete state-mandated prelicensing education before taking the insurance exam. That may sound like good news, and in some ways it is. You have more flexibility. You can choose your own study path. You are not locked into a classroom schedule before test day.

But there is a sneaky little exam gremlin hiding inside that freedom.

The Washington insurance licensing exam still decides whether you can move forward with your license. The Washington State Office of the Insurance Commissioner says candidates must pass the appropriate exam, apply online, and complete fingerprints for a resident individual producer license. Washington also explains that the health line of authority is called disability, and that “health,” “disability,” and “accident/sickness” mean the same thing in this licensing context.

Washington uses PSI for insurance licensing exams. Candidates may test at PSI test centers or check whether they qualify for remote testing, and the OIC directs candidates to the PSI candidate information bulletin for exam fees, license eligibility, content outlines, and testing center rules.

The most important thing to understand is this: not required does not mean not necessary. Washington may not require prelicensing education, but the PSI exam still tests Washington law, producer responsibilities, policy provisions, insurance concepts, and line-specific details. The OIC confirms that prelicensing education is no longer required to take the exam, effective July 23, 2023, but candidates must still pass the exam.

That is where TESTivity comes in.

TESTivity’s Washington insurance exam prep tools are built from the ground up with Washington in mind. They are not the same old generic material other providers keep selling with a different state name on the wrapper. Washington uses PSI, and PSI has its own question style, pacing, wording, and testing rhythm. Over 20+ years of insurance exam prep experience, TESTivity has learned that Prometric, Pearson VUE, and PSI do not feel the same on exam day.

The worst thing you can do is study with material that does not resemble what you are actually going to see on the screen in the testing center.

Washington Insurance Exam Quick Facts

Exam ItemWashington Detail
State regulatorWashington State Office of the Insurance Commissioner
Testing vendorPSI
Prelicensing educationNot required for producer exams as of July 23, 2023
Passing score70%
Exam deliveryPSI test center or possible remote testing
Remote testing device ruleLaptop or desktop required, no smartphones or tablets
Application method after passingOnline application
FingerprintingRequired for resident applicants
Health terminology in WashingtonHealth, disability, and accident/sickness mean the same thing
CE after licensing24 hours, including 3 ethics hours, for resident full-lines producers

The OIC states that candidates must score at least 70% to pass the Washington state insurance license exam. The same OIC exam scheduling page also notes that remote testing requires a laptop or desktop computer and that smartphones and tablets are not allowed.

After licensing, Washington resident individual producers with life, disability, property, casualty, or personal lines authority must complete 24 credit hours of continuing education, including 3 ethics credits, before renewal or reinstatement.


Washington Insurance Exam Content Weighting

The best way to study for the Washington insurance licensing exam is to start with the content outline. The outline tells you what PSI is allowed to test and how much weight each major area receives.

Washington candidates should pay special attention to one major pattern:

Washington law is heavily tested.

On both the Washington Property and Casualty Producer exam and the Washington Life and Disability Producer exam, Washington laws, rules, and regulations account for 45 items. That is not a tiny state-law garnish. That is a major plateful.


Washington Property and Casualty Producer Exam Content

The Washington Property and Casualty Producer exam contains 150 items and allows 195 minutes. The PSI outline begins with Federal Laws and Regulations at 2 items, then Washington Laws, Rules, and Regulations at 45 items.

Content AreaItems
Federal Laws and Regulations2
Washington Laws, Rules, and Regulations45
General Insurance Concepts17
Property and Casualty Insurance Basics21
Dwelling Policy Concepts2
Homeowners Policy Concepts14
Personal Automobile Policy14
Commercial Automobile Policy5
Commercial Property Policies10
Commercial General Liability10
Businessowners Policy6
Other Types of Property and Casualty Insurance4
Total150

The P&C outline also shows how broad the exam really is. It includes general insurance concepts such as risk, contracts, agency, indemnity, good faith, fraud, warranties, representations, misrepresentations, and concealment. It then moves into P&C basics such as insurable interest, damages, liability, underwriting, hazards, perils, loss valuation, negligence, policy structure, exclusions, endorsements, coinsurance, deductibles, subrogation, and duty to defend.

That means the Washington P&C exam is not just “auto and homeowners.” It reaches into policy mechanics, commercial coverage, liability concepts, producer responsibilities, and Washington-specific rules.


Washington Life and Disability Producer Exam Content

Most students search for this as the Washington Life and Health exam, but Washington’s official licensing language uses Life and Disability. The Washington Life and Disability Producer exam contains 150 items and allows 195 minutes. The PSI outline lists Washington Laws, Rules, and Regulations at 45 items, just like the P&C exam.

Content AreaItems
Federal Laws and Regulations2
Washington Laws, Rules, and Regulations45
General Insurance Concepts10
Life, Accident and Health Insurance Basics16
Types of Life Insurance Policies12
Life Insurance Policy Provisions, Options, and Riders17
Annuities9
Individual Accident and Health Insurance Policy Provisions10
Disability Income and Related Insurance8
Medical Plans6
Group Health Insurance4
Health Insurance for Senior Citizens and Special Needs Individuals5
Federal Tax Considerations for Life and Health Insurance6
Total150

The Life and Disability outline includes life policy types, provisions, settlement options, nonforfeiture options, riders, annuities, accident and health provisions, disability income, medical plans, group health, Medicare-related concepts, and tax treatment.

This is exactly why generic study material can betray students. The Washington exam is not just asking whether you can define “annuity” or “deductible.” It may ask you to recognize how a provision works, how a producer should act, how Washington rules apply, or how a policy feature changes the answer.


Why Students Fail the Washington Insurance Exam

Students usually do not fail because they are incapable. They fail because they studied the wrong way, studied the wrong material, or underestimated what PSI was going to do.

1. They Assume No Prelicensing Requirement Means No Serious Study Is Needed

Washington removed the producer prelicensing education requirement, but the exam did not evaporate into meadow mist. The OIC says prelicensing education is no longer required to take the exam, but candidates still need to schedule and pass their exam through PSI.

Some students see “no prelicensing required” and hear “easy exam.”

That is a dangerous translation.

2. They Use Generic National Study Material

Generic material often teaches broad concepts, but Washington candidates need more than national definitions. Both major combo outlines place 45 items on Washington laws, rules, and regulations.

That means a study plan that treats Washington law as an afterthought is building a house with a cardboard staircase.

3. They Memorize Terms Without Understanding Application

Insurance exams often test how concepts work, not just what words mean. You may know the definition of “insurable interest,” but can you recognize when it must exist? You may know what a rider is, but can you spot what it changes? You may know “misrepresentation,” but can you apply it in a Washington producer conduct scenario?

The exam rewards applied understanding.

4. They Ignore Washington’s Terminology

Washington calls the health-related line disability. The OIC explains that in Washington, health, disability, and accident/sickness mean the same thing for full-lines producer licensing.

Students who only study “life and health” wording may be surprised when state materials and PSI content use “Life and Disability.”

5. They Do Not Practice PSI-Style Questions

PSI questions have their own rhythm. They are not always written like Pearson VUE questions, Prometric questions, textbook quizzes, or free internet practice tests.

Over 20+ years, TESTivity has learned that testing providers develop patterns in wording, structure, topic emphasis, and distractor style. A practice question that is technically about insurance is not automatically good preparation for the Washington PSI exam.

The goal is not just to “know insurance.”

The goal is to recognize what PSI is asking before the clock starts chewing.


How to Study for the Washington Insurance Licensing Exam

A strong Washington study plan should have three goals:

  1. Build the knowledge foundation.
  2. Practice active recall.
  3. Simulate the actual PSI exam experience.

Here is the study strategy TESTivity recommends for Washington candidates.


Step 1: Start With the PSI Content Outline

Do not begin by wandering randomly through chapters. Start with the exam outline.

For P&C candidates, Washington law, P&C basics, general insurance concepts, homeowners, personal auto, commercial property, and commercial general liability deserve serious attention. The P&C outline shows Washington law at 45 items, P&C basics at 21 items, general concepts at 17 items, homeowners at 14 items, and personal auto at 14 items.

For Life and Disability candidates, Washington law, life policy provisions, life/accident/health basics, life policy types, accident and health provisions, annuities, disability income, and federal tax treatment should be built into your study schedule. The Life and Disability outline lists Washington law at 45 items, life policy provisions at 17 items, life/accident/health basics at 16 items, and types of life policies at 12 items.

The outline is not decoration. It is the exam’s blueprint.


Step 2: Study Washington Law Early

Do not save Washington law for the final night.

Washington laws, rules, and regulations represent a huge portion of both major combo exams. These topics include producer licensing, commissioner authority, unfair practices, advertising, compensation, premium accountability, policy delivery, appointments, renewals, reporting actions, and state-specific marketing rules.

State law is where many students lose points because the rules feel less familiar than everyday insurance vocabulary. Study it early, revisit it often, and practice it in question form.


Step 3: Learn Concepts Before You Chase Practice Scores

Practice exams are powerful, but they work best after you understand the material. If you jump straight into questions without learning the concepts, you may memorize fragments without building the logic behind them.

Start with a structured study guide. Learn the major policy systems. Then use practice questions to test whether the knowledge sticks.

A good sequence looks like this:

Study PhaseGoal
First pass through the study manualLearn the major concepts
Flashcard reviewBuild recall for definitions and rules
Topic quizzesCheck understanding by section
Full exam simulatorPractice timing and test rhythm
Weak-area reviewRepair low-scoring topics
Final exam simulationsBuild readiness and stamina

This keeps practice questions from becoming a slot machine of guesses.


Step 4: Practice With Washington PSI-Style Questions

The worst kind of confidence is practice-test confidence built on the wrong style of questions.

Washington uses PSI, and PSI exams have a particular feel. TESTivity’s Washington exam simulator is designed to mimic the structure and rhythm of the Washington PSI exam so students are not blindsided on test day.

That means the exam simulator should help you practice:

  • Reading the whole question carefully
  • Spotting qualifiers such as “except,” “unless,” “best,” or “most likely”
  • Applying Washington-specific rules
  • Distinguishing similar policy provisions
  • Recognizing distractor answers
  • Managing time across a long exam
  • Reviewing explanations after each missed question

You do not want your first real PSI-style exam experience to happen when your license is on the line.


Step 5: Review Weak Areas Until They Improve

A practice exam score is not just a number. It is a diagnostic report.

If you are weak in Washington law, do not simply take another full exam and hope the score floats upward like a balloon. Go back to Washington law. Read the section. Drill flashcards. Answer targeted questions. Ask the AI tutor to explain confusing concepts. Then retest.

The most efficient study plan is not “study everything equally.”

It is “find the leaks and patch them.”


Step 6: Use the Final 24 Hours Wisely

The day before the exam is not the time to learn half the course. It is the time to sharpen, review, and stabilize.

Your final 24-hour plan should include:

  • Reviewing your weakest Washington law topics
  • Taking one final simulated exam
  • Reviewing missed questions carefully
  • Skimming your cheat sheet
  • Repeating high-value flashcards
  • Checking your PSI test-day requirements
  • Getting enough sleep

The last day should feel like tightening bolts, not building the bridge.


Why TESTivity Works for the Washington Insurance Licensing Exam

TESTivity is built around a simple idea:

Students should study for the exam they are actually going to take.

Washington candidates are taking a Washington PSI exam. That means study material should reflect Washington law, Washington terminology, Washington licensing requirements, and PSI-style question patterns.

Generic exam prep often tries to teach one big national insurance blob. That can help with broad concepts, but it can miss the state-specific details and testing-provider style that matter on exam day.

TESTivity’s Washington study tools and packages are state specific, built from the ground up with Washington in mind. They are designed to help students prepare for the actual exam experience, not a generic insurance trivia contest.


The TESTivity Platinum Study Package for Washington Candidates

The TESTivity Platinum Study Package is the complete Washington insurance exam prep system. It combines multiple learning tools so students can study in the way their brain actually absorbs information.

Some students learn best by reading. Some need audio. Some need repetition. Some need visual organization. Some need practice questions. Most students need all of it, layered together like a good study lasagna.

What’s Included in TESTivity Platinum

TESTivity ToolHow It Helps Washington Candidates
Washington Study ManualBuilds the foundation with Washington-specific exam content
PSI-Style Exam SimulatorHelps you practice the structure, pacing, and question style of the Washington PSI exam
Audio CourseReinforces concepts while driving, walking, exercising, or working around your schedule
FlashcardsBuilds fast recall for terms, provisions, Washington rules, and exam facts
Expert Video InstructionExplains difficult topics visually and conversationally
Mind MapsConnects policy concepts, rules, and coverage systems visually
Learning GamesMakes repetition less dry with interactive review
Test Day Cheat SheetGives you a focused final review tool
AI TutorHelps explain confusing concepts and weak areas

The Platinum package is designed for students who want more than a stack of notes. It gives you a full study system: learn, reinforce, practice, diagnose, review, and walk into the exam with a plan.

Why Exam Prep Matters in Washington

Washington gives candidates flexibility by not requiring mandatory prelicensing hours. But flexibility can become a trap if it leads to scattered studying.

The Washington insurance 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:

Tool-by-Tool Study Method for Washington

Washington Insurance Exam Study Guide / Study Manual

Start here. The study manual gives you the structure you need before you begin chasing practice scores. For Washington candidates, the study manual should help you understand:

  • Washington insurance law
  • Producer licensing and conduct
  • Commissioner authority
  • Unfair trade practices
  • General insurance concepts
  • Policy structure
  • Line-specific policy provisions
  • Washington terminology, including “disability” for health-related licensing

The manual is your map. Without it, practice questions can become a fog machine.

Click for Sample

Insurance Exam Flashcards

Flashcards are ideal for active recall. They help you pull information out of memory instead of just recognizing it when it is sitting in front of you. Use flashcards for:

  • Washington law terms
  • Producer responsibilities
  • Policy provisions
  • Life insurance riders
  • Annuity concepts
  • P&C coverage forms
  • Auto and homeowners concepts
  • Disability and health terminology
  • Federal law basics

Flashcards are small, but they punch above their weight.

Click for Sample

Insurance Exam Audio Course

The audio course turns unused time into reinforcement time. Use it while:

  • Driving
  • Walking
  • Exercising
  • Doing chores
  • Reviewing before bed
  • Replaying difficult topics

Audio works especially well for repetition. You may not master a topic from one listen, but repeated exposure helps concepts become familiar enough that the exam feels less alien.

Click for Sample

Insurance Exam Video Course

Some topics are easier when someone explains them visually. Video instruction is especially useful for:

  • Policy structures
  • Annuity payout options
  • Disability income concepts
  • Homeowners forms
  • Auto coverage parts
  • Commercial policy components
  • Liability triggers
  • Policy provisions and riders

When a paragraph feels like mud, a good video can turn the ligh

Click for Sample

Insurance Exam Mind Maps

Mind maps help students see how exam topics connect.

This is especially useful for insurance because the exam is full of relationships:

  • Risk leads to underwriting
  • Underwriting leads to classification
  • Classification affects premium
  • Policy provisions affect claims
  • State law affects producer conduct
  • Coverage forms affect exclusions and conditions

Mind maps help prevent “loose fact syndrome,” where you know a lot of pieces but cannot see how they fit.

Click for Sample

Insurance Exam Learning Games

Insurance exam prep requires repetition. Repetition can be boring. Boring study gets abandoned.

Learning games help keep review moving, especially for vocabulary-heavy sections. Crossword-style tools and interactive review can reinforce terms, definitions, and relationships without making every study session feel like chewing printer paper.

Click for Sample

Washington Insurance Exam Practice Questions / Exam Simulator

The exam simulator is where knowledge becomes exam readiness.

TESTivity’s Washington exam simulator is built to mimic PSI-style question logic, pacing, and structure. That matters because the real exam is not just testing whether you recognize vocabulary. It tests whether you can apply ideas under time pressure. Use the simulator to:

  • Build test stamina
  • Practice timing
  • Learn how PSI words questions
  • Identify weak areas
  • Review explanations
  • Track readiness
  • Practice full-length exam conditions

This is the tool that helps convert “I studied” into “I can handle the screen.”

Click for Sample

Insurance Exam Cheat Sheet

The cheat sheet is for final review, not first learning. Use it in the final stretch to review:

  • High-value Washington rules
  • Commonly tested definitions
  • Policy provisions
  • Exam traps
  • Key formulas or comparisons
  • Last-minute reminders

A good cheat sheet is a compass, not a textbook.

Click for Sample

AI Insurance Exam Tutor

The AI tutor helps when you get stuck.

Use it to ask:

  • “Why is this answer wrong?”
  • “Explain this like I’m new to insurance.”
  • “What is the difference between these two policy provisions?”
  • “Give me another example of this concept.”
  • “Quiz me on Washington law.”
  • “Help me understand disability income insurance.”

Instead of getting trapped in confusion, you can turn weak areas into study sessions.

Click for Sample

Washington Test-Day Tips

1. Confirm Your PSI Appointment Details

The OIC says candidates can take the exam at PSI test centers or check whether they qualify for remote testing. The OIC also points candidates to PSI’s candidate information bulletin for exam fees, content outlines, and testing rules.

Before exam day, confirm:

  • Date
  • Time
  • Testing method
  • Test center address or remote testing link
  • Required identification
  • Check-in time
  • PSI rules
  • Cancellation or rescheduling policies

Do not wait until the morning of the exam to discover you are missing something.


2. If Testing Remotely, Check Your Equipment Early

Washington’s OIC notes that remote tests require a laptop or desktop computer. Smartphones and tablets are not allowed. PSI will test device compatibility, and candidates whose device or internet connection does not meet requirements must schedule at a PSI testing center.

Test your setup before exam day. Remote testing is convenient until your laptop, camera, Wi-Fi, or room setup decides to become the villain.


3. Know the Passing Score

Washington requires at least 70% to pass the insurance licensing exam.

That means your goal in practice should not be barely scraping by once. You want to build a cushion before test day.


4. Do Not Rush the First 20 Questions

Many students burn too much energy early because they panic when the first few questions feel harder than expected.

Stay calm. Read carefully. Mark questions if the system allows. Keep moving. The exam is a long hike, not a hallway sprint.


5. Watch for Wording Traps

Pay attention to words such as:

  • Except
  • Not
  • Always
  • Never
  • Most likely
  • Best
  • Primary
  • Unless
  • Required
  • Prohibited

These tiny words can flip an answer. Treat them like little exam landmines wearing polite shoes.


6. Answer Every Question

Do not leave questions blank. If you are unsure, eliminate obviously wrong answers, choose the best remaining option, and keep moving.

The exam rewards completed answers, not dramatic uncertainty.


Official Washington Exam and Licensing Resources

Use these official and practical resources as your final authority before scheduling, applying, or fingerprinting:

ResourceWhy It Matters
Washington Office of the Insurance CommissionerState licensing authority for Washington insurance producers
OIC exam scheduling pageExplains PSI scheduling, remote testing notes, and passing score
PSI Candidate Information BulletinExam fees, content outlines, eligibility, and testing rules
Washington PSI Content OutlinesShows what each exam can test
NIPROnline license application platform
IdentoGOFingerprinting vendor for resident applicants
OIC producer license pageExplains full-lines producer steps and Washington terminology
OIC CE pageExplains continuing education requirements after licensing

The OIC’s producer license page explains that full-lines resident applicants generally schedule and pass the exam, apply online, and then complete fingerprints. It also notes that in Washington, health, disability, and accident/sickness refer to the same health-related line.


Related Washington Insurance Licensing Pages

Use the full Washington cluster to move from licensing basics to exam readiness:

  • Insurance Exam Prep Course: TESTivity Platinum Study Package
    Use this page if you want the complete TESTivity study system.
  • Insurance Exam Practice Questions / Exam Simulator
    Use this page if you want PSI-style practice and readiness tracking.
  • Insurance Exam Study Guide / Study Manual
    Use this page if you need the structured content foundation.
  • Insurance Exam Flashcards
    Use this page if you want active recall and fast repetition.
  • Insurance Exam Audio Course
    Use this page if you want to reinforce concepts while listening.
  • Insurance Exam Video Course
    Use this page if you want visual instruction for difficult topics.
  • AI Insurance Exam Tutor
    Use this page if you want help understanding weak areas.
  • Insurance Exam Cheat Sheet
    Use this page for final review before test day.
  • Insurance Exam Mind Maps
    Use this page if you want visual concept connections.
  • Insurance Exam Learning Games
    Use this page if you want interactive repetition.

Washington Insurance Licensing Exam FAQ

No. Washington no longer requires producer prelicensing education before taking the insurance exam, effective July 23, 2023. Candidates still need to pass the proper PSI licensing exam.

Washington uses PSI for insurance licensing exams. The OIC directs candidates to PSI’s candidate information bulletin for exam fees, license eligibility, content outlines, and testing center rules.

You must score at least 70% to pass the Washington state insurance license exam.

Washington candidates may check whether they qualify for remote testing. The OIC says remote testing requires a laptop or desktop computer, and smartphones and tablets are not allowed.

The Washington Property and Casualty Producer exam has 150 items and allows 195 minutes.

The Washington Life and Disability Producer exam has 150 items and allows 195 minutes.

Most students search for “life and health,” but Washington officially uses the term disability for the health-related line. The OIC states that health, disability, and accident/sickness mean the same thing in Washington full-lines licensing.

For many students, the hardest part is Washington state law. Both the Washington Property and Casualty Producer outline and the Washington Life and Disability Producer outline list 45 items for Washington laws, rules, and regulations.

Use Washington-specific material built around PSI-style testing. A strong plan should combine a study manual, exam simulator, flashcards, audio, video, mind maps, learning games, a cheat sheet, and weak-area review. TESTivity’s Washington tools are built for Washington candidates and the PSI exam.

After passing, resident applicants generally apply online, then complete fingerprints. The OIC states that resident individual applicants cannot schedule the fingerprint appointment before submitting the license application and will need an OIC or NIPR transaction number to schedule.

About This Washington Guide to Insurance Exam Prep

This guide was created for GetTheLicense.org by the TESTivity insurance education team. TESTivity has spent more than 20 years helping insurance licensing candidates prepare for state exams with practical, exam-focused learning tools.

Our approach is simple: students should study for the exam they are actually going to take. Washington uses PSI. Washington tests state law heavily. Washington uses “disability” where many students expect “health.” Washington has its own producer rules, exam outlines, application sequence, and fingerprinting process.

TESTivity’s Washington insurance exam prep tools are designed around that reality.

Licensing requirements, fees, exam procedures, testing vendor rules, and state requirements can change. Always confirm final requirements with the Washington State Office of the Insurance Commissioner, PSI, NIPR, and IdentoGO before scheduling your exam or submitting your 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 Washington PSI format, and a pass guarantee. Built by the people who teach the exam — used by the candidates who pass it!

Ready to Pass the Washington Insurance Licensing Exam?

Washington may not require prelicensing education anymore, but the PSI exam still stands between you and your license.

Do not walk into the exam with generic material that only sort of matches Washington. Do not rely on practice questions that were not written with PSI in mind. Do not treat Washington law as a side quest when it makes up a major part of the exam.

TESTivity’s Washington insurance exam prep tools are built for Washington candidates, Washington rules, Washington terminology, and PSI-style testing.

Start with the TESTivity Platinum Study Package for the complete system, or choose the individual Washington study tools that match your learning style.

Study the right material. Practice the right way. Walk into your Washington PSI exam ready.

How to pass the Washington insurance licensing exam

📋 Official Washington 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 Washington Office of the Insurance Commissioner (OIC) 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.