Key Takeaways
- Nevada producers must act in good faith and with reasonable care when transacting insurance
- Producers have a fiduciary duty to properly handle premiums and other funds
- All advertising and marketing must comply with Nevada unfair trade practice laws
- Producers must disclose their role and compensation when selling insurance
- Failure to maintain license status or complete CE can result in suspension or revocation
Producer Responsibilities & Duties
Nevada law imposes significant responsibilities on P&C producers to protect consumers and maintain industry integrity.
Fiduciary Responsibilities
Handling of Funds
Producers have a fiduciary duty when handling client funds:
Fiduciary Obligations:
- Premiums: Hold in trust for insurers and insureds
- Return Premiums: Promptly return unearned premiums to policyholders
- Claims Payments: Promptly deliver claim proceeds to insureds
- Separate Accounts: Maintain separate premium trust account (if required)
- No Commingling: Don't mix insurance funds with personal funds
Prohibited Actions:
- Using premium funds for personal purposes (misappropriation)
- Delaying premium payment to insurers to earn interest
- Retaining claim payments intended for insureds
- Mixing insurance funds with operating or personal funds
Exam Tip: Misappropriation of premiums is called "conversion" and is a serious violation that can result in license revocation and criminal prosecution.
Premium Payment Handling
Proper Premium Handling:
-
Receipt of Premium:
- Provide receipt if requested
- Document payment method and amount
- Note effective date of coverage
-
Premium Trust Account:
- Deposit premiums in separate trust account (if maintaining one)
- Account must be clearly identified as trust account
- No commingling with personal or business operating funds
-
Remittance to Insurer:
- Forward premiums to insurer per agency agreement
- Typically within 30 days or per contract terms
- Maintain records of remittances
-
Return of Premiums:
- Promptly return unearned premium to insured
- Typically within 30 days of cancellation or policy change
- Include any refund due
Disclosure Requirements
Required Disclosures
Producers must disclose certain information to consumers:
| Disclosure Type | Requirement | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Producer Status | Disclose you are an insurance producer/agent | At first contact |
| Company Representation | Identify which company/companies you represent | Before application |
| Compensation | Disclose if you receive commission (if asked) | Upon request |
| Producer vs. Company | Clarify you are not the insurance company | Before binding coverage |
| Policy Terms | Explain coverage, exclusions, limitations | During sale process |
| Material Changes | Inform of policy changes affecting coverage | Before renewal/change |
Misrepresentation Prohibitions
Prohibited Misrepresentations:
About Policies:
- ✗ Falsely describing policy benefits or coverage
- ✗ Omitting material exclusions or limitations
- ✗ Misrepresenting policy terms or conditions
- ✗ Exaggerating benefits beyond actual provisions
About Companies:
- ✗ Falsely representing insurer's financial condition
- ✗ Misrepresenting insurer's licensing status
- ✗ Making false comparisons with other insurers
- ✗ Implying state or government endorsement
About Premiums:
- ✗ Misrepresenting premium amounts or payment terms
- ✗ Falsely promising future dividends or refunds
- ✗ Misrepresenting the tax treatment of premiums
- ✗ Hiding fees or additional charges
Exam Tip: Misrepresentation—knowingly making false statements to induce someone to buy insurance—is one of the most serious producer violations.
Advertising Requirements
Nevada Advertising Standards
All advertising must comply with NRS 686A (Unfair Practices):
Required in Advertising:
- Producer's legal name or agency name
- Nevada license number (if required by format)
- Clear identification as insurance advertising
- Truthful and not misleading statements
- Accurate representations of coverage and cost
Prohibited in Advertising:
- False or misleading statements
- Unfair comparisons with competitors
- Deceptive headlines or teasers
- Ambiguous language designed to confuse
- Exaggerated benefits or minimized exclusions
Digital and Social Media
Online Advertising Requirements:
Websites:
- Display producer name and license number
- Clearly identify as insurance professional
- Accurate coverage descriptions
- Disclaimer if representing multiple companies
- Privacy policy for data collection
Social Media:
- Same rules as traditional advertising apply
- Disclose producer status in profile
- Don't make exaggerated claims
- Properly disclose material connections
- Monitor and respond to comments professionally
Email Marketing:
- Identify sender as insurance producer
- Honor opt-out requests promptly
- Comply with CAN-SPAM Act
- Don't use deceptive subject lines
- Include physical address
Exam Tip: Nevada treats social media posts as advertising. Producers are responsible for all advertising content, including posts, tweets, and online reviews they create or sponsor.
Unfair Trade Practices
Nevada NRS 686A prohibits specific unfair practices:
Prohibited Practices
Rebating:
- Offering premium rebates or valuable inducements not specified in policy
- Giving special favors or advantages not available to all insureds in same class
- Exception: Promotional items of minimal value (under $25) are typically allowed
Twisting:
- Using misrepresentation to induce insured to lapse, forfeit, or change policies
- Making false comparisons between existing and proposed coverage
- Convincing client to replace coverage to earn new commission without client benefit
Churning:
- Excessive replacement of policies for producer's benefit (commission generation)
- Replacing policies frequently without valid insurance reason
- Pattern of unnecessary policy changes
Discrimination:
- Unfairly discriminating between individuals of same class and risk
- Charging different rates without actuarial justification
- Denying coverage based on prohibited factors (race, religion, etc.)
Defamation:
- Making false or malicious statements about competitors
- Injuring reputation of other insurers or producers
- Spreading false rumors about financial condition
Exam Tip: Rebating is offering valuable inducements not specified in the policy. Small promotional items (pens, calendars under $25) are typically permissible. Large inducements (cash back, gift cards, electronics) are prohibited rebating.
Record Keeping Requirements
Required Records
Producers must maintain adequate records:
Required Documentation:
- Applications and policy documents
- Correspondence with insureds
- Premium payment records
- Commission statements
- Client disclosure forms
- Complaint records
- Continuing education certificates
Retention Period:
- Minimum: 5 years for most insurance records
- Longer for Claims: Until final disposition plus 5 years
- CE Records: At least through next renewal cycle
- Electronic Storage: Acceptable if readily accessible
Division Access to Records
Commissioner Authority:
- Division of Insurance may examine producer records at any time
- Producers must make records available upon request
- Failure to produce records can result in license suspension
- Records must be maintained in Nevada or readily accessible
Reporting Requirements
Change of Information
Must Report Within 30 Days:
| Change Type | Reporting Method |
|---|---|
| Address | Update in Sircon portal |
| Phone/Email | Update in Sircon portal |
| Legal Name | Update with supporting documents |
| Criminal Conviction | Report immediately to Division |
| Regulatory Action | Report immediately to Division |
| Business Location | Update principal place of business |
Criminal Convictions and Regulatory Actions
Immediate Reporting Required:
- Criminal conviction of felony
- Criminal conviction of misdemeanor involving dishonesty or breach of trust
- Administrative action by any insurance regulatory authority
- License suspension or revocation in another state
Failure to Report:
- Can result in license suspension or revocation
- May be treated as separate violation
- "Failure to report" is a commonly tested violation
Exam Tip: Address changes must be reported within 30 days. Criminal convictions and regulatory actions must be reported immediately. These are commonly tested timeframes.
License Suspension and Revocation
Grounds for Discipline
The Commissioner may suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew a license for:
Violations:
- Providing false information on license application
- Misappropriation or conversion of premiums or other funds
- Demonstrating lack of trustworthiness or competence
- Misrepresenting terms of insurance policies
- Failing to comply with Nevada insurance laws
- Failing to complete continuing education requirements
- Allowing license to be used by unlicensed person
Criminal Issues:
- Conviction of felony
- Conviction of crime involving dishonesty or breach of trust
- Pleading guilty or nolo contendere to serious crime
Regulatory Issues:
- License suspended or revoked in another state
- Disciplinary action by another insurance regulator
- Failure to respond to Division inquiries
- Refusal to provide records for examination
Penalties and Disciplinary Actions
Available Penalties:
| Penalty | Description |
|---|---|
| Warning Letter | Written notice of violation without formal discipline |
| Fine | Civil penalty up to $10,000 per violation |
| Probation | Conditional license with restrictions and monitoring |
| Suspension | Temporary revocation (typically 30 days to 1 year) |
| Revocation | Permanent termination of license |
| Refusal to Renew | Denial of renewal application |
| Cease and Desist | Order to stop specific violations |
Aggravating Factors:
- Prior violations or disciplinary history
- Harm to consumers
- Pattern of misconduct
- Intentional violations
- Failure to cooperate with investigation
Exam Tip: The Commissioner can fine up to $10,000 PER VIOLATION. Multiple violations can result in substantial cumulative fines.
Producer Protection: Errors & Omissions Insurance
E&O Insurance
While Nevada does not mandate E&O insurance, it is highly recommended:
Why Carry E&O:
- Protects against claims of negligence or mistakes
- Covers legal defense costs
- Common appointing company requirement
- Professional protection for producer's assets
What E&O Covers:
- Errors in coverage advice
- Omissions in policy placement
- Failure to obtain requested coverage
- Mistakes in policy servicing
- Negligent misrepresentation claims
What E&O Doesn't Cover:
- Intentional misconduct or fraud
- Criminal acts
- Premium misappropriation
- Violations of law (unfair practices, etc.)
Exam Tip: Nevada does not mandate E&O insurance for P&C producers, but many appointing companies require it as a condition of appointment.
What is the term for a producer using client premiums for personal purposes?
How soon must a producer report a change of address to the Nevada Division of Insurance?
What is "twisting" in insurance?