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Your FREE Life and Health Insurance Practice Test 2026 – 190+ Q&A

Prepare with realistic, state-exam-style questions — take a full Life and Health Insurance practice test or drill one topic at a time.

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Click Start Test above to launch a full-length Life and Health Insurance practice test weighted like a typical state exam, or drill a single topic — life policy types, riders and provisions, applications and underwriting, annuities, health and disability, social insurance, or regulations. Every question includes a clear explanation so you learn the reasoning, not just the answer.

The Life and Health Insurance exam is the licensing test you must pass to become a life and health insurance producer. It is administered by your state insurance department, which sets the rules and contracts a testing vendor to deliver the exam.[1]

Most states deliver the exam by computer through a vendor such as PSI, Pearson VUE, or Prometric, and split it into a general (national) portion on insurance principles and a state-specific portion on state law.[2] The exam measures entry-level knowledge of insurance products, contracts, and the regulations of your state.

These practice questions follow the standard life and health content outline used across state exams, mirroring the topics and balance of the real test so you can build readiness everywhere it counts.[3] To build readiness across every topic, pair these with our free study guide, flashcards.

Question counts, fees, time limits, passing scores, and pre-licensing hours are set by each state and change over time — always verify the current details in your state’s official candidate handbook before you apply.

Life and Health Insurance Exam at a Glance

The numbers below are typical ranges for a combined life and health producer exam. Insurance licensing is state-administered, so your exact details will differ — confirm them with your state insurance department.[1]

Typical Life and Health Exam (varies by state) at a glance
DetailTypical Life and Health Exam (varies by state)
Exam structureGeneral (national) portion + state-specific portion
QuestionsAbout 100-150 scored questions on a combined exam (varies by state)
Question typeMultiple choice (computer-based)
Time limitAbout 2 to 3 hours (commonly ~2.5 hours; set by each state)
Passing scoreCommonly 70% (some states differ, e.g. California 60%); set by the state
Pre-licensing education0 to 40+ hours depending on state (e.g. TX 40, FL 60, NY 20)
Administered byState insurance departments via PSI, Pearson VUE, or Prometric
CostApproximately 40to40 to 150 per attempt (varies by state)

What Is on the Life and Health Insurance Exam?

The exam covers two broad areas — life insurance and health insurance — plus the laws and regulations of your state. Most states organize the questions into a general portion on national insurance concepts and a state-specific portion on state law.[3]

The standard life and health content outline weights the major topics roughly as shown below. Our full practice test mirrors these proportions so your reps match the real exam’s balance:

Life and Health Insurance weighting by topic
Types of Policies (Health)16% · ~16%
Types of Policies (Life)15% · ~15%
Riders, Provisions, Options, Exclusions (Life)15% · ~15%
Policy Provisions, Clauses, Riders (Health)15% · ~15%
Applications, Underwriting, Delivery12% · ~12%
Retirement and Other Concepts8% · ~8%
Field Underwriting Procedures8% · ~8%
Social Insurance6% · ~6%
Other Insurance Concepts5% · ~5%
Life and Health Insurance practice test — practice questions by topic with answer explanations

Practice Questions by Topic

Use Start Test for a full weighted Life and Health Insurance simulation, or open the hub and pick a single topic to drill your weak area. After each full exam, your results show a per-topic breakdown so you know exactly where to focus — most candidates need the most reps on policy provisions, health and disability, and their state’s regulations.

Who Is Eligible, and What Pre-Licensing Is Required?

The Life and Health Insurance exam is open to anyone seeking a producer license — there is no college-degree prerequisite, though candidates are generally adults who can pass a background check.[1]

Many states require pre-licensing education before you can sit for the exam, and the hours vary widely — for example, Texas requires 40 hours, Florida 60, and New York 20, while some states require none at all.

Because requirements are set state by state, confirm your state’s pre-licensing hours, approved course providers, and any background-check or fingerprinting steps with your state insurance department before you register.

How Do You Register for the Exam?

You complete any required pre-licensing course, then register and pay the exam fee — commonly about $40 to $150 per attempt — through your state’s testing vendor such as PSI, Pearson VUE, or Prometric.[2]

After registering you schedule your exam at a vendor test center or, in many states, via online proctoring. Verify the current fee and process in your state’s candidate handbook, as both change over time.

The name on your registration must exactly match your government-issued photo ID, and exam fees are typically non-refundable. Many states recommend scheduling early so you can secure a convenient date and location.

If you do not pass, states allow retakes — usually after a short waiting period and another fee. Check your state’s candidate handbook for its specific retake rules and any limit on attempts within a period.

How Is the Exam Scored?

Most states require 70% to pass, calculated on the scored questions — some questions are unscored pretest items that do not count.[3]

A few states use a different standard; California, for example, uses a 60% passing score. The passing standard is set by your state insurance department, not by a national body.[4]

When the exam is split into a general portion and a state-specific portion, some states score each portion separately and require you to pass both — the two scores are not averaged. Your result is usually reported immediately at the test center, with details forwarded to the state.

How Hard Is the Life and Health Insurance Exam?

The exam is challenging mainly for its breadth — it tests a large vocabulary of insurance terms across both life and health products, plus state-specific law — rather than any single difficult concept.[5] The practical challenge is recall under time pressure.

Policy provisions and riders trip up many candidates because the terminology is precise and easy to confuse, and the health and disability material adds a second large body of products and definitions on top of the life content.

The state-specific portion rewards knowing your insurance commissioner’s authority, licensing rules, and required policy provisions, while the general portion rewards solid command of contracts, underwriting, and tax treatment.

70%
Common passing score
set by each state
100-150
Scored questions
combined exam, varies
2
Exam portions
national + state

The takeaway: drill until you’re consistently scoring above your state’s passing standard on full-length, blueprint-weighted practice — especially policy provisions, health concepts, and your state’s regulations — before you book your exam date.

How Much Does the Exam Vary by State?

A lot, on the details — and very little, on the core concepts. Insurance producer licensing is regulated at the state level, so each state insurance department sets its own question count, time limit, passing score, exam fee, and pre-licensing hours.[1]

The general (national) portion covers the same fundamental insurance principles almost everywhere, so practicing those concepts prepares you no matter where you test. The state-specific portion — your state’s laws, the commissioner’s authority, and required provisions — is unique to each jurisdiction.

That is why this practice test focuses on the broadly shared content outline: it builds the foundation every candidate needs. Layer your own state’s law on top using your state insurance department’s candidate handbook and pre-licensing materials.

What to Expect on Exam Day

Arrive at your testing vendor at least 15 to 30 minutes early to check in — bring a valid, unexpired government-issued photo ID whose name matches your registration.[3] You’ll store phones and personal items in a locker; no notes are allowed, but you’re given on-screen scratch materials.

A short tutorial precedes the exam, then you work through the multiple-choice questions across the general and state-specific portions within the roughly 2 to 3 hour time limit your state sets.

Most vendors report your result immediately when you finish, and the outcome is forwarded to your state insurance department. Having simulated the full timing with practice tests makes the real clock feel routine.

How to Use This Life and Health Insurance Practice Test

  • Recreate exam conditions. Take the full test timed, with no notes.[5]
  • Diagnose, then drill. Use a full simulation to find weak topics, then drill them.
  • Prioritize provisions + health. Policy provisions and health concepts are the biggest score-movers.
  • Add your state’s law. Layer your state-specific rules on top of the national concepts.
  • Learn the why. Read every explanation — understanding beats memorizing.

Why the Life and Health Insurance License Matters

Passing the exam is the gateway to a producer license — you cannot legally sell or solicit life and health insurance without it, and the license is what opens the door to carrier appointments and a commission-based career.[1] Because each state sets its own standard, knowing both the shared national concepts and your state’s specific rules is what gets you licensed efficiently. These free practice tests are the most efficient way to get there.

Conclusion

Passing the Life and Health Insurance exam comes down to broad command of insurance products and terminology, plus your state’s specific laws — and the recall to apply it under time pressure. Use this free practice test to find your weak topics, drill them to mastery, and pair it with our free study guide, flashcards to walk in confident on test day.

Life and Health Insurance Practice Test FAQ

The Life and Health Insurance exam is the licensing test you must pass to become a life and health (or life, accident, and health) insurance producer in your state. It is administered by your state insurance department, which sets the rules and contracts a testing vendor such as PSI, Pearson VUE, or Prometric to deliver the exam. Because each state runs its own program, the exact format, fee, and passing standard vary by state.

References

  1. 1.National Association of Insurance Commissioners. “State Licensing Handbook.” NAIC.org.
  2. 2.PSI Services LLC. “Insurance Licensure: Exam Development and Testing.” PSIexams.com.
  3. 3.Pearson VUE. “Illinois Insurance Candidate Handbook.” PearsonVUE.com.
  4. 4.California Department of Insurance. “Insurance License Exam Information.” Insurance.ca.gov.
  5. 5.DCCA Insurance Division, State of Hawaii. “Examination Information for Producers.” cca.hawaii.gov.
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