In this article
Welcome to the world of insurance
Whether you like people, sales, and financial security, or you want an accessible, well-paid career with strong earning potential, this guide covers what an insurance agent actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
An insurance agent advises clients on insurance and sells policies that protect them against risk. In simple terms: they help people and businesses guard against life's risks. Think of them as the protectors of what matters to clients.
- Advise clients on insurance needs
- Match policies to risks and budgets
- Sell and manage policies
- Support clients through claims
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- People skills โ insurance is built on trust
- Sales sense โ matching cover to real needs
- Communication โ explaining policies clearly
- Integrity โ putting client protection first
- Resilience โ not every pitch lands
- Reliability โ clients depend on you at claim time
Education & qualifications
No degree required โ insurance agents are trained on the job with industry certifications, and rewarded for relationship and sales skills over formal qualifications.
Typical responsibilities
- Advice โ assessing client needs
- Matching โ cover to risks
- Selling โ the right policies
- Service โ managing relationships
- Claims โ supporting clients
- Compliance โ following the rules
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior / Trainee Agent
0โ2 years
- Learns the products
- Builds a pipeline
- Serves clients
- Hitting first targets
- Toward owning clients
Insurance Agent
2โ6 years
- Own client base
- Advises and sells
- Builds relationships
- Earns commission
- Specialising
Senior / Broker / Manager
6+ years
- High-value clients
- Or becomes a broker
- Leads a team
- Strong earnings
- Toward leadership
Where insurance agents work
๐ข Insurers
Selling their own products.
๐ค Brokerages
Independent advice across insurers.
๐ Personal lines
Home, car, and life cover.
๐ญ Commercial
Business insurance.
๐ผ Specialist
Niche and high-value cover.
๐ Self-employed
Building your own book.
A day in the life
Following up with a new client, understanding their situation and the risks they need to protect against.
Matching policies to needs and budget, explaining clearly what's covered and why it matters.
Reviewing an existing client's cover, spotting gaps and making sure they're properly protected.
Supporting a client through a claim โ the moment insurance proves its worth, and trust is built or broken.
Clients protected, cover arranged, relationships strengthened. Guarding what matters to people. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Accessible, well-paid career
- People-focused work
- Strong commission potential
- No degree needed
- Helping people stay protected
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Accessible โ no degree needed
- People-focused work
- Strong commission potential
- Build your own client book
- Steady, recession-resilient demand
- Path to broking and management
- Self-employment options
โ Disadvantages
- Sales and commission pressure
- Rejection and setbacks
- Income can be variable
- Reputation depends on claims
- Heavy regulation
- Targets to hit
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Insurance Broker โ advise across many insurers
- Senior Agent โ own high-value clients
- Branch / Sales Manager โ lead a team
- Commercial specialist โ business insurance
- Agency owner โ run your own book
- Underwriting โ move into risk assessment
Insurance Agent vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance Agent You are here | Advises and sells insurance | Products, sales, service | Baseline | Accessible |
| Underwriter | Assesses and prices risk | Risk, judgement | Higher | Medium |
| Financial Advisor | Plans personal finances | Planning, advice | Higher | Medium |
| Account Manager | Grows client relationships | Relationships | Similar | Medium |
| Sales Representative | Wins new business | Pitching | Similar | Accessible |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Insurance is essential and always needed, and while simple policies go online, complex needs and trusted advice keep skilled insurance agents and brokers in steady demand.
- Insurance is essential and always needed
- Complex cover needs human advice
- Trust matters most at claim time
- Brokers add value beyond price
- Steady, recession-resilient demand
Fun facts ๐ค
A good insurance agent's value shows up in the moment a client needs to make a claim.
Insurance is one of the few careers where strong agents can earn well on commission with no degree.
It's a highly accessible route into the financial world.
Insurance is a relationship business โ loyal clients renew and refer for years.
Brokers shop the whole market, finding cover that a single insurer's website can't match.
Myths about this role
"Insurance agents just push policies."
โ Good agents match genuine needs to cover and support clients when they claim.
"It's all going online."
โ Simple policies do, but complex needs and trusted advice still need humans.
"There's no money in it."
โ Commission means strong agents and brokers earn very well.
"You need a degree."
โ No โ it's trained on the job with certifications, rewarding people skills.
"It's just sales."
โ It's advice, protection, and long-term relationships, not just selling.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Like people and relationships
- Are comfortable with sales
- Want strong earning potential
- Want an accessible career
- Are resilient and trustworthy
- Like the financial sector
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You dislike sales and targets
- You can't handle rejection
- You want guaranteed salary only
- You dislike regulation
- You're not a people person
- You want a non-client-facing role
Earning & independence
Insurance offers strong commission-driven earning potential and clear independence โ many agents build their own client book or become brokers advising across the whole market.
โ Advantages
- Strong commission earnings
- Build your own client book
- Path to independent broking
- Steady, resilient demand
- Accessible entry to finance
โ Challenges
- Sales and commission pressure
- Income can be variable
- Rejection and setbacks
- Heavy regulation
- Targets to hit
How to get started
- Get into insurance an accessible entry role โ no degree needed.
- Learn the products understand cover, risk, and clients.
- Get certified insurance and regulatory qualifications.
- Build a client base relationships drive renewals and referrals.
- Advance or specialise broking, commercial, or management.
What to know before you start
- It's advice and protection, not just selling
- Value shows up most at claim time
- No degree is needed to start
- Commission means strong earning potential
- Complex cover still needs human advice
- It's a long-term relationship business
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think we just push policies. The truth is the job is about the moment a client has a fire or a crash and needs to claim โ being there, sorting it, protecting them. That's when trust is made, and that's the real job.
Insurance agent ยท 6 years in
I came in with no degree and built a client book that renews every year. The commission means I out-earn plenty of graduate friends, and the relationships make it genuinely rewarding. It's an underrated path.
Senior insurance broker ยท 10 years in
Simple car insurance went online, sure. But businesses and people with complex needs still want someone who shops the whole market and actually advises them. Brokers who add that value are busier than ever.
Commercial broker ยท 14 years in