In this article
Welcome to the world of insurance
Whether you like people, negotiation, and the financial world, or you want a well-paid, independent career with strong earning potential, this guide covers what an insurance broker actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
An insurance broker advises clients and arranges insurance on their behalf, sourcing cover from across the market. In simple terms: they shop the whole market to get clients the right cover and price. Think of them as the client's champion in insurance.
- Advise clients on insurance needs
- Source cover across the whole market
- Negotiate terms and price
- Support clients through claims
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- People skills โ broking is relationship-driven
- Negotiation โ getting the best terms and price
- Market knowledge โ knowing who covers what
- Commercial sense โ matching cover to real needs
- Integrity โ acting for the client's interest
- Resilience โ winning and keeping clients
Education & qualifications
No degree required โ insurance brokers train on the job with industry certifications, rewarded for relationship, negotiation, and market skills over formal qualifications.
Typical responsibilities
- Advice โ assessing client needs
- Sourcing โ cover across the market
- Negotiation โ terms and price
- Placement โ arranging the policy
- Claims โ advocating for clients
- Relationships โ retaining clients
Responsibilities by seniority
Trainee / Junior Broker
0โ2 years
- Learns the market
- Builds a pipeline
- Serves clients
- Hitting first targets
- Toward owning clients
Insurance Broker
2โ6 years
- Own client book
- Sources and negotiates
- Builds relationships
- Earns commission
- Specialising
Senior / Account Director / Owner
6+ years
- High-value clients
- Or runs a brokerage
- Leads a team
- Strong earnings
- Toward leadership
Where insurance brokers work
๐ข Brokerages
Independent broking firms.
๐ญ Commercial
Business insurance broking.
๐ Personal lines
Home, car, and life.
๐ผ Specialist
Niche and complex risks.
๐ Lloyd's / wholesale
Specialist markets.
๐ Self-employed
Building your own book.
A day in the life
Understanding a new client's business and risks โ what they need to protect and how best to do it.
Shopping the market, approaching insurers and negotiating the best cover and price on the client's behalf.
Presenting options to the client, explaining the trade-offs clearly so they can choose with confidence.
Advocating for a client at claim time โ the moment broking proves its worth, fighting their corner.
Clients protected, the market shopped, the best deal won. Standing in the client's corner. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Well-paid, independent career
- Acting for the client
- Strong commission potential
- No degree needed
- Relationship-driven work
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Well-paid and independent
- Acting for the client, not the insurer
- Strong commission potential
- No degree needed
- Build your own client book
- Steady, recession-resilient demand
- Path to brokerage ownership
โ Disadvantages
- Sales and commission pressure
- Income can be variable
- Rejection and competition
- Heavy regulation
- Reputation depends on claims
- 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
- Account Director โ own high-value clients
- Commercial Broker โ business and complex risk
- Specialist Broker โ niche markets
- Branch / Team Manager โ lead a team
- Brokerage owner โ run your own firm
- Underwriting โ move into risk assessment
Insurance Broker vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance Broker You are here | Sources cover for clients | Market, negotiation | Baseline | Medium |
| Insurance Agent | Advises and sells insurance | Products, sales | Lower-similar | Accessible |
| Underwriter | Assesses and prices risk | Risk, judgement | Similar | Medium |
| Financial Advisor | Plans personal finances | Planning, advice | Similar | Medium |
| Account Manager | Grows client relationships | Relationships | Similar | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Complex risk, new threats like cyber and climate, and the value of independent advice keep skilled insurance brokers in steady, well-paid demand even as simple cover goes online.
- Complex risk needs independent advice
- New risks (cyber, climate) need broking
- Businesses value market-wide cover
- Trust matters most at claim time
- Steady, recession-resilient demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Unlike an agent, a broker works for you โ shopping the whole market, not one insurer.
Commercial insurance brokers can earn very well, especially with their own client book.
Broking is a relationship business โ clients renew and refer for years.
New risks like cyber and climate are creating fresh broking specialisms.
At claim time, a good broker fights the client's corner with the insurer.
Myths about this role
"Brokers just sell insurance."
โ They advise clients, shop the whole market, negotiate, and advocate at claim time.
"It's the same as an agent."
โ Agents sell one insurer's products; brokers work for the client across the market.
"Everything's going online."
โ Simple cover is, but complex risk and advice still need brokers.
"There's no money in it."
โ Commercial brokers with their own book earn very well.
"You need a degree."
โ No โ it's trained on the job with certifications, rewarding people skills.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Like people and negotiation
- Want strong earning potential
- Are comfortable with sales
- Want an independent 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
Independence & earnings
Insurance broking offers strong independence and commission-driven earnings, with a clear path to building your own client book or brokerage, especially in well-paid commercial insurance.
โ Advantages
- Strong commission earnings
- Build your own client book
- Path to brokerage ownership
- Acting independently for clients
- Well-paid commercial routes
โ Challenges
- Sales and commission pressure
- Income can be variable
- Rejection and competition
- Heavy regulation
- Targets to hit
How to get started
- Get into insurance an accessible entry role โ no degree needed.
- Learn the market products, insurers, and risk.
- Get certified insurance and regulatory qualifications.
- Build a client book relationships drive renewals and referrals.
- Advance or specialise commercial, niche, or your own brokerage.
What to know before you start
- A broker works for the client, not the insurer
- It's advice, market-shopping, and advocacy
- No degree is needed to start
- Commercial broking is very well paid
- Complex and new risks still need brokers
- It's a long-term relationship business
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
The key thing people miss is that I work for the client, not the insurer. I shop the entire market to get them the best cover and price, and when they need to claim, I'm in their corner fighting the insurer. That independence is the whole value.
Insurance broker ยท 8 years in
Commercial broking is where the real earnings are. I built a book of business clients with complex risks โ cyber, property, liability โ who renew every year and refer others. No degree, just market knowledge and relationships.
Account director ยท 12 years in
Everyone says insurance is going online. Simple car cover, sure. But a business with complex, evolving risks wants a human who knows the market and will advocate for them. Brokers who add that value are busier than ever.
Brokerage owner ยท 16 years in