Insurance Services Listings
The insurance services listings on this directory cover licensed providers, service categories, and organizational types operating across all 50 US states and the District of Columbia. Entries are organized by service type, geographic availability, and licensing status, drawing on public regulatory data maintained by state insurance departments and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC). Understanding how these listings are structured helps consumers, small business owners, and researchers locate appropriate insurance resources without misreading scope or authorization. For background on why this directory exists and what it is designed to accomplish, see Insurance Services Directory Purpose and Scope.
Geographic Distribution
Insurance regulation in the United States is state-based, not federally unified. Each state maintains its own Department of Insurance (DOI), which licenses producers, adjusters, consultants, and companies operating within that jurisdiction. The NAIC serves as a coordinating body, publishing the State Based Systems (SBS) database that aggregates producer licensing data across participating states.
Listings in this directory are organized into 4 primary geographic tiers:
- National carriers — Companies licensed in 40 or more states, typically holding certificates of authority in every contiguous US state plus DC.
- Regional carriers — Companies licensed in a defined multi-state footprint, often 10–25 states, concentrated in a geographic corridor (e.g., Mid-Atlantic, Mountain West).
- Single-state carriers — Companies holding a certificate of authority in exactly 1 jurisdiction, often domiciled there.
- Surplus lines carriers — Non-admitted insurers authorized to cover risks that admitted markets decline, regulated under state surplus lines laws and tracked through the Surplus Lines Stamping Offices in states that require stamping.
Entries do not represent every carrier licensed in a given state. The State Insurance Department Directory provides direct links to each state DOI's own licensee lookup tools for exhaustive carrier searches.
Producer entries — covering agents, brokers, and consultants — are similarly tagged with state license information where publicly available. Licensing requirements differ by line of authority (life, health, property, casualty, and surplus lines each carry distinct exam and continuing education mandates under state law). The Insurance Licensing Requirements by State page maps those distinctions in detail.
How to Read an Entry
Each listing entry contains a structured set of fields. Not every field is populated for every entry; gaps reflect data that is either unavailable in public records or not yet verified.
A standard entry includes:
- Entity name — The legal or trade name as registered with the state DOI or the NAIC.
- NAIC company code (for carriers) — A 5-digit identifier assigned by the NAIC and used in the NAIC's Company Search tool.
- License type — Distinguishes between admitted carrier, non-admitted/surplus lines carrier, licensed producer (agent or broker), and registered consultant. See Insurance Agent vs Broker Differences and Independent vs Captive Insurance Agents for classification guidance.
- Lines of authority — The specific insurance lines the entity is licensed or authorized to transact (e.g., Life, Accident & Health, Property, Casualty, Personal Lines).
- State availability — A list or count of states where the entity holds active licensure or authorization.
- Financial strength rating (carriers only) — Where publicly available, the AM Best, Moody's, or S&P Global rating as of the most recent published rating action. Ratings are not calculated or assigned by this directory. See Insurance Company Financial Ratings Explained.
- Verification status — Whether the entry's core credentials have been cross-referenced against a named public source (see the Verification Status section below).
Entries do not include pricing, premium estimates, or coverage recommendations. Those variables depend on individual underwriting factors explained at Insurance Premium Factors Explained.
What Listings Include and Exclude
Included:
- Licensed insurance producers (agents and brokers) holding an active license in at least 1 US state
- Admitted carriers holding a certificate of authority from at least 1 state DOI
- Surplus lines carriers listed on at least 1 state's approved or eligible surplus lines list
- Registered insurance consultants where state law creates a distinct consultant license class (approximately 30 states maintain this category under their insurance codes)
- Third-party administrators (TPAs) registered with at least 1 state DOI
Excluded:
- Unlicensed or expired licensees
- Entities operating solely as managing general agents (MGAs) without a direct producer or carrier license
- Financial advisors, attorneys, or accountants who discuss insurance incidentally but do not hold producer licenses
- Captive insurance companies unless they are licensed as admitted carriers for third-party risks
- Medicare Advantage or Part D plan sponsors not holding a state certificate of authority in their own right
This directory does not adjudicate disputes, process claims, or verify coverage terms. Consumers with active disputes should consult How to File a Complaint Against an Insurance Company for the appropriate state DOI process.
Verification Status
Entries carry one of 3 verification designations:
- Verified — Core credentials (license number, license type, state availability) have been cross-referenced against the NAIC's producer database, a state DOI licensee lookup, or an AM Best company record within the preceding 12-month review cycle.
- Unverified — Entry data was submitted or compiled from secondary sources but has not yet been cross-checked against a primary public record.
- Flagged — A discrepancy exists between submitted information and the corresponding public record, or the entity has an open disciplinary action recorded in the NAIC's Regulatory Information Retrieval System (RIRS).
The NAIC's Producer Database (PDB) is the primary reference for producer license verification. For carrier solvency and financial condition, the NAIC's Financial Data Repository and individual state DOI records serve as authoritative sources. Consumers observing discrepancies between a listing and official state records should treat the state DOI record as controlling. For indicators that may signal problematic service arrangements, Insurance Service Red Flags to Avoid outlines patterns documented in state enforcement actions.