Licensing · Wisconsin · 2026 Guide

How to get a life insurance license in Wisconsin

The exact step-by-step path to your Wisconsin Life & Health license — including what Frontline pays for, what you'll spend out of pocket, and how long it actually takes from application to your first commission check.

Time to license
3–5 weeks
Out-of-pocket
~$180
Pre-licensing
20 hrs
Exam vendor
Pearson VUE · $45

Who it's for

Who needs a Wisconsin life insurance license?

If you live in Wisconsin and want to earn commission selling, soliciting, or negotiating life insurance, annuities, or final expense policies — you need a resident Life (or Life & Health) license issued by the Wisconsin Department of Insurance.

You need a WI resident license if…

  • You live in Wisconsin and want to be paid commission on life insurance sales.
  • You're switching from another industry and joining Frontline as a first-time agent.
  • You want to sell annuities, IUL, or final expense — all fall under the Life line.

Live out of state?

You'll apply for a non-resident Wisconsin license once your home-state resident license is active. Broad NAIC non-resident reciprocity. The application runs through NIPR and usually clears in 3–5 business days — no exam required.

The walkthrough below is written for Wisconsin residents getting their first license.

What your license lets you sell

Life line

Term, whole life, universal life, IUL, and fixed/indexed annuities.

Final expense

Burial and simplified-issue whole life — falls under the Life line.

Annuities

Fixed and indexed annuities included; variable annuities need a Series 6/7.

Add Accident & Health

Stack the A&H line to sell Medicare Supplement, MAPD, and under-65 health.

The 4-step path

From application to a Wisconsin license number in 3–5 weeks.

Step 01

Complete the 20-hour Wisconsin pre-licensing course

Wisconsin requires 20 hours of approved Life & Health pre-licensing before you can sit for the state exam. Most Frontline agents use ExamFX or Kaplan because both are approved by the Wisconsin Department of Insurance and include the SimExam practice engine that mirrors the real Pearson VUE test. Plan on 2 hours per day — most candidates finish in 7–14 days. Frontline covers the course cost in full once your application is approved.

Step 02

Complete background self-disclosure

Wisconsin does not require fingerprinting for most new applicants. You'll answer the standard background questions on your license application — disclose anything that could appear on a background check, even old or sealed records. Non-disclosure is a faster path to denial than the underlying issue itself.

Step 03

Pass the Pearson VUE Wisconsin Life & Health exam

Book your exam at Pearson VUE's Wisconsin portal. Expect a multi-section Life & Health exam with roughly 150 scored questions across both lines, a 2.5–3 hour time limit, and a passing score around 70%. The exam fee is $45 per attempt. You can choose an in-person test center or, with most vendors, remote online proctoring. Frontline agents who hit 85%+ on SimExam practice typically pass on the first try.

Step 04

Submit your resident license application via NIPR or Sircon

Once your exam slip and background check are on file, submit your resident license application through NIPR.com or Sircon. The $75 (2-year) fee covers your license. The Wisconsin Department of Insurance issues most clean applications within 3–10 business days. As soon as your license number is live, bind E&O coverage and start carrier contracting with your Frontline manager.

Cost breakdown

What a WI life insurance license actually costs.

Frontline pays the single biggest line item — your pre-licensing course. Here's what's left for you.

ItemCostWho pays
Pre-licensing course (Life + Health bundle)~$120Frontline
Pearson VUE exam fee (per attempt)$45You
Resident license fee$75 (2-year)You
E&O insurance (monthly)~$30You
Your total out-of-pocket~$180Course on us

Fees current as of 2026. Verify with the Wisconsin Department of Insurance before applying.

Week-by-week timeline

A realistic 3–5 weeks schedule.

Week 1

Apply with Frontline + start pre-licensing

Submit your Frontline application. Once approved (24–48 hours), you'll get a login to ExamFX or Kaplan and start the 20-hour Wisconsin Life & Health course. Plan on 2 hours per day.

Week 2

Finish coursework, book no fingerprinting

Wrap pre-licensing and pass the course final. Wisconsin does not require fingerprinting — complete background self-disclosure on the application.

Week 3

Pass the Pearson VUE exam, submit NIPR application

Take the Wisconsin Life & Health exam at a Pearson VUE center or via remote proctoring ($45). Once you have your exam slip, file your resident license application through NIPR or Sircon ($75 (2-year)).

Week 4

License issues, E&O bound, contracting opens

Wisconsin issues most licenses in 3–10 business days once exam and background results are on file. Bind E&O (~$30/mo) and start carrier contracting.

Weeks 5–6

Carriers approve appointments, you go live

Each carrier takes 3–7 business days to approve. As soon as your first FE carrier appoints you, you can submit applications and go live on the dialer with Frontline-paid leads.

Exam outline

What's on the Wisconsin Life & Health exam.

Pearson VUE publishes the official content outline. Here's the typical weighting — focus your last 48 hours of study on the heaviest topics.

WI-specific quirks

What makes Wisconsin different.

20-hour pre-licensing requirement

Wisconsin requires a full 20 hours of approved Life & Health pre-licensing. Use a state-approved provider (ExamFX or Kaplan) — anything else won't satisfy the Wisconsin Department of Insurance.

Self-disclosure background check

Wisconsin does not require fingerprinting. Disclose every applicable item on your application — non-disclosure is the most common reason clean applicants get denied.

CE: 24 hrs / 2 yrs

Once licensed, you'll owe 24 hrs / 2 yrs of continuing education. Frontline tracks your CE cycle and reimburses your approved provider.

Producer appointment rule

Wisconsin requires carriers to file an appointment notice for every producer they authorize. Practically, this means you can't write a carrier until contracting is fully approved — don't pre-quote prospects on a carrier you haven't been appointed to.

FAQ

Wisconsin life insurance license — common questions.

How long does it take to get a Wisconsin life insurance license?+

Most Frontline agents are fully licensed in 3–5 weeks. The bottleneck is usually scheduling the Pearson VUE exam — once those are done, the Wisconsin Department of Insurance issues licenses in about a week.

How much does it cost out of pocket?+

Plan on about ~$180 total for your first cycle: $45 Pearson VUE exam, $75 (2-year) license fee, plus E&O at ~$30/month. Frontline pays for your pre-licensing course in full once your application is approved.

Can I take the Wisconsin life insurance exam online?+

Pearson VUE offers remote proctored testing for most state exams. You'll need a quiet room, a webcam, government photo ID, and a stable internet connection. In-person test centers are also available throughout Wisconsin.

Do I need a separate Health license to sell Medicare or final expense?+

Final expense whole life is written under the Life line — no Health license needed. Frontline agents typically license for Life & Health together so you can also sell Medicare Supplements, Medicare Advantage, and under-65 health products.

Does Wisconsin require fingerprinting?+

Wisconsin does not require fingerprinting — you'll complete a background self-disclosure on your application.

What happens if I fail the state exam?+

You can retake it. Schedule a new attempt with Pearson VUE ($45 per attempt). Frontline's SimExam practice engine targets the topic areas where most candidates miss questions — agents who hit 85%+ on practice typically pass on the first or second try.

Do I need E&O coverage before I can sell?+

Yes. Every carrier we work with requires proof of Errors & Omissions insurance before they'll appoint you. It runs around $30/month for $1M per occurrence. Your manager will send you the recommended provider during onboarding.

How do I add non-resident state licenses?+

Broad NAIC non-resident reciprocity. Once your Wisconsin resident license is active, file non-resident applications through NIPR.com. Most non-resident states issue within 1–2 weeks and don't require a separate exam. Frontline reimburses non-resident fees for any state where you plan to write meaningful volume.

How often do I renew my Wisconsin insurance license?+

Your renewal cycle is set by your Wisconsin license: $75 (2-year). You'll need 24 hrs / 2 yrs of continuing education completed before each renewal.

Does Frontline really pay for the pre-licensing course?+

Yes. Once your Frontline application is approved, we cover the full cost of the ExamFX or Kaplan Wisconsin Life + Health bundle. You're responsible for the exam fee, and license fee — but the course (the most expensive single line item) is on us.

Ready to start? Frontline covers your course.

Apply in 5 minutes. Approved candidates get pre-licensing access the same day and a manager who walks you through the exam, background check, and carrier contracting.

Course paid · A-rated carrier shelf · CA-based managers

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