Free Insurance Regulation Practice Questions

Tennessee Accident & Health exam — 26 practice questions.

Subtopics: Regulatory authority, Commissioner status, Producer licensing, Exam requirement, Continuing education, Free look, Replacement, Unfair claims practices, Appointments, Consumer complaints, Guaranty association, Fiduciary duty, Misrepresentation, License discipline, Recordkeeping, Admitted insurers, Fair Credit Reporting Act, Fraud and false statements, Privacy GLBA, Affordable Care Act, Do Not Call, McCarran-Ferguson Act, HIPAA administrative simplification, Mental Health Parity, Newborns and Mothers Health Protection, Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act

Read the Insurance Regulation study guide

Sample questions & answers

1. Tennessee accident and health insurance is regulated primarily by which agency?

The Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance (TDCI)

Accident and health insurance in Tennessee is regulated by the TDCI; CMS administers federal Medicare/Medicaid, not state insurance regulation.

2. The official who heads insurance regulation in Tennessee is:

Appointed by the Governor

The Commissioner of Commerce & Insurance is appointed by the Governor rather than elected.

3. To sell accident and health insurance in Tennessee, a producer generally must:

Hold a Tennessee producer license with accident and health authority

Selling accident and health products requires a Tennessee producer license carrying the accident and health line of authority.

4. A resident accident and health license applicant in Tennessee generally must:

Pass the licensing examination for the line

Resident applicants must generally pass the licensing examination for the line of authority unless exempt.

All Accident & Health topics

Practice: Insurance Regulation

Take a randomized, timed-style practice test. Answer choices are shuffled and your results are scored instantly with an explanation for every question.

Practice questions are study aids generated for exam preparation and are not actual exam questions. Content is provided for educational purposes and is not legal advice. Verify current statutes, rules, and exam specifications with the Insurance Department and the exam administrator before relying on it.