Ethics are the foundation of public trust in the insurance profession. State laws set minimum standards for conduct, but ethical behavior goes beyond compliance. It guides how producers make decisions, manage client relationships, and handle conflicts of interest.
This chapter explains ethical standards that apply across all lines of insurance, including life, health, property, and casualty, and reflects the Colorado Division of Insurance’s expectations for professional integrity. You’ll focus on practical situations where legal duties and moral choices overlap, with an emphasis on fairness, honesty, and fiduciary responsibility.
While prior chapters explained who regulates insurance and what authority they have, this chapter explains what behavior is prohibited, what conduct is unethical, and how violations are enforced.
Colorado law, heavily influenced by NAIC model regulations, strictly prohibits practices that deceive consumers, distort competition, or undermine trust in the insurance system. Many of these rules apply not only to producers, but also to insurers, advertisers, and claims departments.
Overlaying these legal rules are ethical principles that go beyond minimum legal compliance. Insurance producers routinely operate in situations involving unequal knowledge, financial vulnerability, and sensitive personal information. As a result, producers are held to higher standards of honesty, disclosure, competence, and fairness.
After completing this chapter, you should be able to:
In day-to-day business, ethical conduct helps you build long-term trust and protects both the client and the producer. Ethical producers:
By consistently following these principles, licensed producers support a fair and reputable insurance marketplace - one that serves the best interests of Colorado consumers.
While prior chapters explained who regulates insurance and what authority they have, this chapter explains what behavior is prohibited, what conduct is unethical, and how violations are enforced.
Colorado law, heavily influenced by NAIC model regulations, strictly prohibits practices that deceive consumers, distort competition, or undermine trust in the insurance system. Many of these rules apply not only to producers, but also to insurers, advertisers, and claims departments.
Overlaying these legal rules are ethical principles that go beyond minimum legal compliance. Insurance producers routinely operate in situations involving unequal knowledge, financial vulnerability, and sensitive personal information. As a result, producers are held to higher standards of honesty, disclosure, competence, and fairness.