Florida insurance licensing exam

How to Pass the Insurance Licensing Exam in the Sunshine State

Passing the Florida insurance licensing exam takes more than finishing your required prelicensing course.

Florida requires approved prelicensing education for major resident licenses, and that course is important. It gives you the foundation you need before you sit for the state exam. For the required Florida course, we recommend Achievable.me.

But here is the exam-day truth: the course gets you eligible. It does not automatically make you exam-ready.

Florida insurance exams are administered by Pearson VUE, and the Florida Department of Financial Services tells candidates to review the official candidate handbook and exam content outlines before testing. Pearson VUE provides the Florida insurance candidate handbook, licensing FAQs, and examination content outlines for candidates preparing to test.

That matters because Florida is not a generic insurance exam. Florida candidates may face state-specific law, Florida-specific property issues, Florida-specific life and health rules, and the question style used by Pearson VUE.

TESTivity’s Florida-specific insurance exam study tools are built from the ground up with Florida in mind. They are not recycled national material with a Florida label slapped on top. Our Florida exam simulator, practice questions, flashcards, audio, video, mind maps, learning games, cheat sheet, and AI tutor are designed to help you train for the test you are actually going to see on the screen.

Take the required course. Then train for the exam.

Florida Insurance Exam Quick Facts

ExamScored QuestionsPretest QuestionsTime Limit
Florida Agent’s General Lines Insurance160153 hours
Florida Agent’s Health & Life, including Annuities & Variable Contracts150152.75 hours
Florida Agent’s Life, including Variable Annuity85102 hours
Florida Agent’s Health85102 hours

The current Florida insurance examination content outlines are marked Effective January 1, 2026 and list the question counts, pretest-question counts, and time limits for Florida insurance exams.

Florida insurance exams use a 70% passing score, and the Pearson VUE candidate handbook explains that pretest questions may be included on the exam but do not count toward the final score.


Florida Insurance Exam Content Weighting

The Florida insurance exam you take depends on the license you are pursuing. Most candidates who come to this page are preparing for one of two exams:

  1. Florida Agent’s General Lines Insurance
    Commonly tied to the Florida 2-20 General Lines license.
  2. Florida Agent’s Health & Life, including Annuities & Variable Contracts
    Commonly tied to the Florida 2-15 Health & Life license.

Florida’s official content outlines are where your study plan should begin. They tell you what the state expects you to know and how the test is structured.


Florida General Lines Exam Content

The Florida General Lines exam is long, broad, and Florida-heavy. It includes national property and casualty concepts, but it also includes state-specific topics that matter in Florida’s insurance market.

The official Florida outline shows the General Lines exam includes 160 scored questions plus 15 pretest questions, with a 3-hour time limit.

Key Florida General Lines Content Areas

Content AreaWhat to Study
Property policiesHomeowners, dwelling, commercial property, inland marine, flood, and other property forms
Property insurance termsRisk, hazards, valuation, loss settlement, deductibles, limits, exclusions, and policy mechanics
Property policy provisions and contract lawInsuring agreements, conditions, duties after loss, cancellation, nonrenewal, and contract principles
Casualty and liabilityNegligence, liability coverage, commercial general liability, professional liability, and related casualty concepts
Auto insurancePersonal auto, commercial auto, Florida auto rules, liability, PIP concepts, and uninsured motorist issues
Workers’ compensationCoverage structure, employer duties, benefits, and Florida workers’ compensation concepts
Florida statutes, rules, and regulationsLicensing law, unfair trade practices, appointments, ethics, consumer protections, and state-specific requirements
Florida property market topicsHurricane, windstorm, wind mitigation, sinkholes, flood, Citizens, FIGA, FAJUA, and other Florida-specific mechanisms

The Florida General Lines outline includes Florida-specific property and casualty topics such as hurricane coverage, windstorm, wind mitigation, sinkholes, flood, Citizens, FIGA, FAJUA, and Florida statutes and regulations.

Why This Matters

A candidate who only studies generic P&C material may understand “property insurance” in a broad sense but still be underprepared for Florida’s version of the exam.

Florida’s property insurance market has its own vocabulary, hazards, consumer issues, and regulatory structure. If your study material does not treat those topics seriously, you may walk into the testing center with a map of the wrong kingdom.


Florida Health & Life Exam Content

The Florida Health & Life exam is also broad. It combines life insurance, health insurance, annuities, variable contracts, policy provisions, application and underwriting issues, Medicare supplement concepts, long-term care, disability income, group health, and Florida law.

The official Florida outline shows the Health & Life exam includes 150 scored questions plus 15 pretest questions, with a 2.75-hour time limit.

Key Florida Health & Life Content Areas

Content AreaWhat to Study
Life insurance policiesTerm, whole life, universal life, variable life, policy features, and basic policy structure
Life riders and provisionsBeneficiaries, settlement options, grace periods, reinstatement, nonforfeiture options, exclusions, and riders
Applications and underwritingField underwriting, policy delivery, replacements, disclosures, insurable interest, and suitability concepts
Annuities and retirement plansFixed annuities, variable annuities, accumulation, distribution, settlement options, and retirement-related uses
Health insurance policiesMedical expense, disability income, individual health, group health, and major medical concepts
Health policy provisionsRenewability, claims, exclusions, coordination of benefits, and required health policy provisions
Medicare supplement and long-term careSuitability, replacement, consumer protections, and benefit structures
Florida statutes and regulationsLicensing, appointments, ethics, unfair trade practices, advertising, replacement, and Florida-specific rules

Why This Exam Feels So Big

The Florida 2-15 exam does not stay in one lane. You may move from life policy riders to annuity suitability, then to disability income, then to group health, then to Florida law. It is a topic-switching exam.

That is why your study plan needs more than reading. You need recall practice, mixed-topic quizzes, repeated exposure, and a way to identify weak areas before test day.


Why Florida Insurance Exam Candidates Fail

Most candidates do not fail because they are lazy. They fail because their study plan is built wrong.

Here are the most common traps.

1. They Confuse Course Completion with Exam Readiness

Florida requires approved prelicensing education for major licenses. That requirement matters.

But completing the required course does not mean the material is locked into memory. It does not mean you can answer questions under pressure. It does not mean you can spot the difference between two similar answer choices when the clock is ticking.

The course is the foundation. Exam prep is the training.

2. They Study Generic National Material

Generic material may teach basic insurance vocabulary, but the Florida exam includes Florida-specific rules and topics. Florida General Lines candidates need to understand topics such as hurricane, windstorm, sinkhole, flood, Citizens, FIGA, and Florida statutes. Florida Life & Health candidates need to understand Florida licensing rules, appointments, ethics, replacements, and other state-specific requirements.

If your study material could be used in any state without changing much, that is a warning sign.

3. They Do Not Practice Pearson VUE-Style Questions

Florida uses Pearson VUE for insurance licensing exams. Pearson VUE provides the official Florida insurance candidate handbook and content outlines.

Over 20+ years, TESTivity has learned that testing providers have different exam personalities. Prometric, Pearson VUE, PSI, and other vendors may use different phrasing patterns, question structures, and answer-choice logic.

The worst thing you can do is study with practice material that does not feel like what you will actually see at the testing center.

4. They Underestimate Pretest Questions

Florida exams include pretest questions that do not count toward the final score, but candidates do not know which questions are pretest questions. The candidate handbook explains that pretest questions may appear on the exam and do not affect the score.

That means you must treat every question as real. On exam day, you cannot safely skip a question because it seems oddly worded or suspiciously experimental.

5. They Do Not Build Testing Stamina

The Florida General Lines exam can put 175 total questions in front of you. The Florida Health & Life exam can put 165 total questions in front of you.

That is not a quick quiz. That is a mental obstacle course with fluorescent lighting.

Candidates who only do short, comfortable study sessions may run out of focus before the exam is over. Your practice should include longer mixed-question sessions so the real exam does not feel like a surprise marathon.

6. They Ignore Weak Areas Until the Final 24 Hours

Most students know what they are bad at. They just avoid it because weak areas are annoying little raccoons in the attic.

But ignored weak areas become missed points. TESTivity’s study system is designed to help candidates identify and revisit weak topics before exam day, not after a failed attempt.


Florida Insurance Exam Study Strategy

A smart Florida exam study plan should have three phases:

  1. Learn the material
  2. Reinforce the material
  3. Practice under exam-like conditions

Florida’s required prelicensing course handles the first phase. TESTivity helps with phases two and three.


Phase 1: Complete the Required Florida Prelicensing Course

Florida requires approved prelicensing education for major resident licenses. For this step, we recommend Achievable.me.

Use the course to build the foundation:

  • Read the lessons.
  • Complete the required modules.
  • Take notes on unfamiliar terms.
  • Pay attention to Florida-specific law.
  • Do not rush the course just to “unlock” the exam.

But remember: finishing the course is not the finish line. It is the starting gate.


Phase 2: Reinforce the Material with TESTivity

After your course, you need repetition. Insurance exam content is dense. It is full of similar terms, similar policy provisions, and answer choices that look like cousins at a family reunion.

TESTivity helps reinforce the material through multiple learning modes:

  • Study manual review
  • Flashcards
  • Audio lessons
  • Video instruction
  • Mind maps
  • Learning games
  • AI tutor support
  • Cheat sheet review

This matters because students do not all learn the same way. Some need to read. Some need to hear. Some need to quiz. Some need to see relationships mapped visually. Some need repeated nudges until the material finally stops sliding off the brain like rain on a windshield.


Phase 3: Practice with the Florida Exam Simulator

Practice questions are where the exam starts to become real.

TESTivity’s Florida exam simulator is built to help candidates prepare for the structure and style of Florida’s Pearson VUE exam. The goal is not merely to answer random insurance trivia. The goal is to train your brain to recognize how Florida insurance concepts are likely to be tested.

A good Florida exam simulator should help you:

  • Practice Florida-specific topics.
  • Build confidence with Pearson VUE-style wording.
  • Review missed questions.
  • Track weak areas.
  • Improve timing.
  • Build stamina.
  • Know when you are ready for test day.

This is where generic material usually cracks. Florida-specific testing requires Florida-specific training.


TESTivity Platinum Study Package for Florida Candidates

The TESTivity Platinum Study Package is designed for students who want the full exam-prep system, not just a pile of practice questions.

Florida candidates should think of Platinum as the bridge between “I completed my required course” and “I am ready to sit for the Pearson VUE exam.”

What Florida Candidates Get with TESTivity Platinum

ToolHow It Helps Florida Candidates
Florida Study ManualReviews the major topics and state-specific concepts candidates need to know
Florida Exam SimulatorHelps candidates practice with questions designed around the Florida exam experience
FlashcardsBuilds fast recall for definitions, provisions, laws, and key exam terms
Audio CourseReinforces concepts while commuting, walking, exercising, or reviewing away from the screen
Video InstructionHelps visual learners understand difficult concepts through guided explanation
Mind MapsShows how concepts connect across policies, provisions, laws, and exam categories
Learning GamesAdds repetition without making every study session feel like a gray brick
Test Day Cheat SheetHelps organize final review around high-value facts and test-day reminders
AI Insurance Exam TutorGives candidates another way to ask questions, review weak topics, and clarify confusing concepts
Weak-Area ReviewHelps students focus study time where it is most needed

TESTivity’s Florida study tools are state-specific, built from the ground up with Florida in mind, and designed to support the actual testing environment Florida candidates face.

Why Exam Prep Matters in Florida

Florida 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 Florida 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:

Tool-by-Tool Florida Study Method

Start with the Florida Study Manual

Use the TESTivity Florida Study Manual to organize the material after your required course.

Do not try to memorize everything in one heroic study sprint. Instead, move through the manual in sections:

  • Property or life concepts first.
  • Then policy provisions.
  • Then state law.
  • Then tricky topics.
  • Then final review.

The goal is structure. The Florida exam is too broad for “I’ll just study whatever feels important today.”

Click for Sample

Use Flashcards for Recall

Flashcards are for fast memory retrieval. Use them for:

  • Definitions
  • Policy provisions
  • Florida law terms
  • Licensing rules
  • Common exclusions
  • Required notices
  • Consumer protections
  • Key differences between similar concepts

Flashcards work best in short, repeated sessions. Ten minutes today, ten minutes tomorrow, ten minutes later. Little taps. Big results.

Click for Sample

Use Audio to Reinforce While Moving

The TESTivity Audio Course is useful when you cannot sit down and read but still want to review. Use audio while:

  • Driving
  • Walking
  • Exercising
  • Cleaning
  • Taking a break from screen study
  • Reviewing during the final week

Audio is not a substitute for practice questions, but it is excellent reinforcement. It helps the material stay alive between formal study sessions.

Click for Sample

Use Video for Difficult Concepts

Some insurance topics are hard to understand from text alone. Video instruction can help with:

  • Life insurance policy types
  • Annuity mechanics
  • Health policy provisions
  • Liability concepts
  • Property valuation
  • Florida-specific rules
  • Workers’ compensation
  • Auto insurance concepts

When a concept refuses to behave on the page, video can turn the lights on.

Click for Sample

Use Mind Maps to Connect the Material

Insurance exams test relationships.

Mind maps help you see how topics connect:

  • Policy types to provisions
  • Exclusions to coverage grants
  • State laws to producer duties
  • Health products to benefit structures
  • Property forms to loss settlement rules
  • Florida-specific rules to exam categories

Mind maps are especially useful when you understand individual terms but struggle to see how they fit together.

Click for Sample

Use Learning Games for Repetition

Learning games make review less stale.

Florida exam prep requires repetition. The problem is that repetition can get boring fast. Learning games add variety, which helps students stay engaged long enough for the material to stick. Use games for:

  • Key terms
  • Definitions
  • Matching concepts
  • State law reminders
  • Policy provisions
  • Final-week review

Not every study session needs to feel like sitting under a buzzing office light with a stack of index cards.

Click for Sample

Use the Exam Simulator for Readiness

The exam simulator is where you should spend serious time before test day. Use it to:

  • Take timed practice exams.
  • Review incorrect answers.
  • Track weak areas.
  • Retake missed-question sets.
  • Build stamina.
  • Practice mixed topics.
  • Simulate the pressure of the real exam.

Do not just take one practice exam and declare victory. The value is in the review. Missed questions are not failures. They are little treasure maps pointing to points you can still win.

Click for Sample

Use the Cheat Sheet in the Final 24 Hours

The TESTivity Test Day Cheat Sheet is for final review, not first learning. Use it to:

  • Review high-value reminders.
  • Refresh tricky terms.
  • Revisit Florida-specific concepts.
  • Confirm test-day strategy.
  • Avoid last-minute panic scrolling.

The night before the exam is not the time to learn the entire course. It is the time to tighten bolts.

Click for Sample

Use the AI Insurance Exam Tutor When You Get Stuck

The AI Insurance Exam Tutor can help when a concept does not click. Use it to ask:

  • “Why is this answer correct?”
  • “What is the difference between these two policy provisions?”
  • “Explain this Florida insurance law concept in plain English.”
  • “Give me another example.”
  • “Quiz me on this topic.”
  • “Help me understand why I keep missing these questions.”

This gives students another layer of support when the material starts snarling.

Click for Sample

Florida Test-Day Tips

Know Which Exam You Are Taking

Florida has multiple insurance exams. Make sure you scheduled the correct one.

Common examples:

  • Florida Agent’s General Lines Insurance
  • Florida Agent’s Health & Life, including Annuities & Variable Contracts
  • Florida Agent’s Life, including Variable Annuity
  • Florida Agent’s Health

Check your Pearson VUE confirmation carefully before test day. Pearson VUE’s Florida page is the official starting point for exam scheduling and candidate materials.


Review the Candidate Handbook Before Testing

The Florida DFS exam page says candidates interested in obtaining a Florida insurance license should obtain the candidate handbook first.

Do not skip this. The handbook is where candidates find important exam policies, reservation guidance, identification rules, and licensing-process information.


Bring the Correct Identification

Pearson VUE testing rules can be strict. Review the candidate handbook before your appointment so you know exactly what identification is required and what name must appear on your documents.

A name mismatch can derail test day before the first question appears.


Treat Every Question as Scored

Pretest questions are not labeled. Since you do not know which questions count and which do not, treat every question as if it matters.


Watch Your Time

Do not spend five minutes wrestling one question while easier points are waiting later in the exam.

A simple test-day rhythm:

  1. Answer the questions you know.
  2. Mark difficult questions if the exam interface allows.
  3. Return to harder questions after collecting the easier points.
  4. Do not leave blanks.
  5. Use the full time wisely.

Do Not Cram New Material the Morning of the Exam

The morning of the exam is for review, not discovery.

Use the TESTivity Cheat Sheet, review weak areas, warm up with a few practice questions, and preserve your focus.


Required Florida Course vs. Florida Exam Prep

Florida candidates need both:

Required Prelicensing Course

This satisfies Florida’s education requirement. For this step, we recommend Achievable.me.

The course helps you:

  • Meet Florida’s required education rules.
  • Learn the foundation.
  • Become eligible for the next licensing step.
  • Prepare for the content covered by the state exam.

TESTivity Florida Exam Prep

This helps you prepare to actually pass the exam.

TESTivity helps you:

  • Reinforce the material.
  • Practice Florida-specific questions.
  • Build recall.
  • Study in multiple formats.
  • Identify weak areas.
  • Improve timing.
  • Prepare for Pearson VUE-style testing.
  • Review strategically before test day.

The required course is the runway. TESTivity is the flight training.


Official Florida Insurance Exam Resources

Use these official resources as part of your Florida exam preparation:

ResourceWhy It Matters
Florida DFS Licensing Exams pageDirects candidates to the candidate handbook, content outlines, and Pearson VUE exam information
Pearson VUE Florida Insurance pageProvides the candidate handbook, licensing FAQs, content outlines, and exam scheduling resources
Florida Insurance Examination Content OutlinesShows exam topics, question counts, pretest questions, and time limits
Florida Insurance Licensing Candidate HandbookExplains exam policies, reservations, scoring, and licensing process details
Florida DFS Fees pageLists application, license ID, exam, and appointment fees
Florida DFS Fingerprinting Information pageExplains IdentoGO fingerprinting requirements and fees
Florida DFS MyProfile / DICE systemUsed to apply, view licenses, appointments, CE information, and application deficiencies

Florida DFS states that MyProfile allows users to view licenses, registrations, appointments, continuing education information, and deficiencies on a pending application.

DFS also lists official fees, including the $50 license application fee, $5 license ID fee, $44 state examination fee, and appointment fees.

Florida fingerprinting must be completed through IdentoGO by Idemia, and DFS lists the fingerprinting cost as $49.50 plus local Florida county sales tax.



Prepare for the Florida Insurance Exam with TESTivity

Florida requires approved prelicensing education. We recommend Achievable.me for that required course.

But once the course is complete, you still need to prepare for the actual Florida insurance licensing exam.

TESTivity’s Florida-specific study tools are designed for candidates who want to walk into the Pearson VUE testing center prepared, not just eligible. Our materials are built around Florida’s exam structure, Florida’s content outline, and Florida’s testing reality.

With TESTivity, you can study using:

  • Florida-specific Study Manual
  • Florida Exam Simulator
  • Pearson VUE-style Practice Questions
  • Flashcards
  • Audio Course
  • Video Instruction
  • Mind Maps
  • Learning Games
  • Test Day Cheat Sheet
  • AI Insurance Exam Tutor
  • Platinum Study Package

The worst thing you can do is study with material that does not look, feel, or behave like what you will see on the screen at the testing center.

Florida is specific. Pearson VUE is specific. Your study material should be specific too.

Take the required course. Then train for the exam with TESTivity.


FAQ: Florida Insurance Licensing Exam

Florida insurance licensing exams are administered by Pearson VUE. Pearson VUE provides the official Florida insurance candidate handbook, licensing FAQs, content outlines, and exam scheduling resources.

Florida DFS directs candidates to the examination content outlines for exam breakdowns, and Pearson VUE provides the official Florida insurance content outlines on its Florida insurance testing page.

Florida insurance exams use a 70% passing score. The Pearson VUE candidate handbook explains scoring and notes that pretest questions may appear on the exam but do not count toward the final score.

The Florida Agent’s General Lines Insurance exam has 160 scored questions plus 15 pretest questions, with a 3-hour time limit.

The Florida Agent’s Health & Life, including Annuities & Variable Contracts exam has 150 scored questions plus 15 pretest questions, with a 2.75-hour time limit.

Pretest questions are unscored questions used to evaluate whether they should become scored questions in the future. They may appear on the exam, but they do not affect your final score. Candidates are not told which questions are pretest questions.

Florida requires approved prelicensing education for major resident insurance licenses. For the required course, we recommend Achievable.me. TESTivity is designed to help candidates prepare after or alongside that course with Florida-specific exam reinforcement.

No. TESTivity is not positioned as the required Florida prelicensing course. Florida candidates should use an approved provider for the required education. We recommend Achievable.me for that step. TESTivity provides Florida-specific exam prep, practice questions, study tools, and exam reinforcement.

Florida exams include state-specific law, rules, and market issues. The Florida General Lines outline includes Florida-specific topics such as hurricane, windstorm, sinkholes, flood, Citizens, FIGA, FAJUA, and Florida statutes and regulations. Generic national study material may not fully prepare you for the Florida exam.

The Florida insurance exam can be challenging because it is broad, state-specific, and administered under timed conditions. General Lines candidates face 160 scored questions plus 15 pretest questions, while Health & Life candidates face 150 scored questions plus 15 pretest questions. The right study plan should include content review, practice questions, weak-area review, and timed exam simulation.

Florida DFS lists the state examination fee as $44. Other costs may include the license application fee, license ID fee, fingerprinting, appointment fee, required education, and optional exam prep.

The best study plan is to complete the required Florida-approved prelicensing course, then reinforce the material with Florida-specific study tools, practice questions, timed exams, flashcards, audio review, weak-area review, and a final test-day strategy. TESTivity is designed to help Florida candidates move from course completion to exam readiness.

About This Florida Guide to Insurance Exam Prep

This guide was prepared by the TESTivity team to help Florida insurance licensing candidates prepare for the state insurance exam with confidence.

TESTivity creates state-specific insurance exam study tools, practice questions, audio lessons, flashcards, mind maps, learning games, cheat sheets, AI tutoring support, and exam simulators. Our approach is based on a simple idea: insurance exams are not all the same.

State rules matter. Testing vendors matter. Exam structure matters.

For Florida candidates, that means preparing for the Florida DFS licensing process and the Pearson VUE exam, not just studying generic national insurance definitions.

Official licensing requirements and exam outlines can change, so candidates should always verify current requirements with the Florida Department of Financial Services and Pearson VUE before applying, scheduling an exam, or purchasing required education.

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 Florida Pearson Vue format, and a pass guarantee. Built by the people who teach the exam — used by the candidates who pass it!

Ready to Pass Your Florida Insurance Licensing Exam?

Getting licensed starts with the process. Passing the exam starts with preparation.

TESTivity helps future Florida insurance producers study with a complete system built for how people actually learn: reading, watching, listening, practicing, reviewing, and recalling.

Whether you are preparing for Property and Casualty, Life and Health, or another Florida insurance exam, TESTivity gives you the tools to study with structure instead of guesswork.

How to pass the Florida insurance licensing exam

📋 Official Florida 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 Florida Dept. of Financial Services — Div. of Insurance Agent & Agency Services 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.