Adjuster Authority
The insurance services industry in the United States operates across a tightly regulated landscape governed by state-level departments of insurance, federal statutes, and credentialing bodies that set licensing thresholds, scope-of-practice rules, and consumer protection standards. This directory catalogs the professional services, organizations, and practitioner categories active within that framework. The entries span claim adjustment, policy analysis, loss consulting, and related technical functions — fields where credentialing errors or unlicensed practice carry defined statutory penalties under state insurance codes. Understanding the scope and structure of this resource helps practitioners, employers, and researchers navigate it accurately.
What Is Included
The directory encompasses four primary categories of insurance services and the entities that deliver them:
- Claims adjustment and investigation services — including independent adjusters, staff adjusters, public adjusters, and catastrophe adjusting firms. Public adjusters are licensed separately from company adjusters in all 50 states, a distinction enforced by each state's Department of Insurance under statutes such as California Insurance Code § 15007 and Florida Statutes § 626.854.
- Loss consulting and appraisal services — firms and credentialed individuals who assess property damage, business interruption losses, and liability exposures for insurers, policyholders, or third parties.
- Insurance education and credentialing providers — organizations offering pre-licensing courses, continuing education, and professional designations recognized by state regulators. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) maintains model licensing laws that many states adopt in whole or part, providing a consistent baseline for evaluating which education providers qualify for inclusion.
- Regulatory and industry support organizations — state departments of insurance, the NAIC, the National Association of Public Insurance Adjusters (NAPIA), and standards bodies such as the American Educational Institute (AEI) whose published frameworks define practice standards.
Entries do not include unlicensed or unaccredited entities. Services that fall outside state-regulated insurance practice — such as general legal services unrelated to insurance disputes — are excluded by scope. For a navigable overview of listed entities, see Insurance Services Listings.
How Entries Are Determined
Inclusion in this directory follows a structured evaluation framework built on three qualifying criteria:
Criterion 1 — Regulatory standing. An entity must hold an active license, accreditation, or formal recognition from at least one US state department of insurance or a nationally recognized industry body. The NAIC's State Based Systems (SBS) database is one reference point for verifying adjuster licensure across participating states. Organizations holding designations from the Institutes (formerly Insurance Institute of America) or similar credentialing bodies also meet this threshold.
Criterion 2 — Defined scope of practice. The service offered must map to a recognized insurance function with defined regulatory or professional boundaries. A catastrophe adjusting firm, for example, operates under temporary licensing provisions that at least 35 states have adopted following NAIC model rules — this constitutes a clearly bounded function distinct from permanent staff adjustment.
Criterion 3 — Verifiable public record. Contact information, licensure status, and service description must be confirmable through public-facing government or industry registries. Entries dependent solely on self-reported data without a traceable public record are not included.
This three-part threshold creates a practical contrast between two entry types: verified licensed practitioners (individuals and firms with documented state licensure) and recognized industry organizations (trade associations and standards bodies with formal governance structures but not necessarily holding individual licenses). Both types appear in the directory under clearly labeled categories. The methodology behind these classifications is detailed further on the Insurance Services Topic Context page.
Geographic Coverage
This resource covers all 50 US states and the District of Columbia. Insurance regulation in the United States is primarily state-based — there is no single federal insurance licensing authority for property and casualty claims functions. The McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945 (15 U.S.C. §§ 1011–1015) established the primacy of state regulation for insurance, a framework that remains intact.
Coverage reflects this structure. Entries are tagged by the states in which an entity holds licensure or operates, allowing state-specific filtering. States with notably distinct regulatory environments — including Texas, which operates through the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) under a separate adjuster licensing statute (Texas Insurance Code Chapter 4101) — are identified within relevant entries to signal jurisdictional boundaries that practitioners must observe.
Entities holding non-resident adjuster licenses across multiple states are categorized as multi-state providers. Reciprocal licensing agreements between states, where they exist, are noted in individual entries but are not guaranteed to be current; practitioners should verify active status directly with the relevant state department of insurance.
How to Use This Resource
This directory is structured for three distinct research tasks:
- Licensure verification research — locating state-specific licensing requirements and identifying which category of adjuster license applies to a given service type. The NAIC's consumer information resources and individual state department of insurance websites are the authoritative confirmation sources.
- Professional credentialing research — identifying education providers, designation programs, and continuing education requirements by state. Researchers should cross-reference any listed provider against the approved provider lists maintained by their state's department of insurance, as approval status changes with each renewal cycle.
- Market and industry research — identifying the range of firms and practitioners active in a defined service category or geographic market.
The directory is organized by service category first, then by geographic scope. Filters allow narrowing by state, license type, and entity classification. A full walkthrough of navigation options appears on How to Use This Insurance Services Resource. Users conducting compliance-related research should treat this directory as a secondary reference alongside primary regulatory sources — state departments of insurance publish binding licensure data that supersedes any directory entry.
References
- Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA), 46 U.S.C. §30701 — Cornell LII
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — Comparative Negligence
- U.S. Code Title 15 — Commerce and Trade, Insurance Regulation (McCarran-Ferguson Act)
- 14 C.F.R. Part 91
- 14 C.F.R. Part 91 — FAA General Operating and Flight Rules
- 15 U.S.C. § 6801
- 15 U.S.C. §§ 1011–1015
- 29 C.F.R. Part 780
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