The insurance industry in Colorado operates under a detailed system of laws, rules, and regulations designed to protect consumers and support fair competition. These laws define the authority of the Commissioner of Insurance, set licensing standards for producers, and regulate marketing, sales, and claims practices.
Understanding these statutes matters for two main reasons:
This chapter is organized to match the Colorado DOI and Pearson VUE content outline. It focuses on the most testable and practical topics, including the Commissioner’s authority, licensing procedures, fiduciary duties, and the rules governing unfair trade practices.
Throughout the chapter, you’ll see citations like:
You are not required to memorize statute numbers for the exam. However, understanding what these references mean helps you:
Under the McCarran-Ferguson Act, insurance is regulated primarily at the state level, which means Colorado has its own statutes, regulations, licensing requirements, enforcement mechanisms, and disciplinary processes. Every insurance producer doing business in Colorado is subject to these laws, regardless of where they were originally licensed.
At the center of Colorado’s insurance regulatory system is the Colorado Division of Insurance, led by the Commissioner of Insurance. The Division and the Commissioner are responsible for protecting Colorado consumers, ensuring insurer solvency, licensing and regulating producers, approving policy forms, and enforcing ethical and legal standards across the insurance marketplace.
This chapter explains:
Understanding this framework is essential because most state-law exam questions test who has authority, what actions the Commissioner may take, and what obligations producers must follow under Colorado law.