Vermont Insurance CE Courses (2026)

To renew your Insurance license in Vermont you need to satisfy the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR), Insurance Division's continuing education (CE) requirement — about 24 hours per 2-year cycle. Below is what the board requires and a comparison of course providers that offer qualifying CE. This is an unofficial guide — confirm any course is board-approved before you buy.

What Vermont requires for Insurance renewal

CE hours required24 hours per cycle
Renewal cycle24 months
CE tracking systemPrometric (CE administration), with Sircon/State Based Systems for online CE credit lookup; renewals filed via NIPR
Governing bodyVermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR), Insurance Division

Resident producers must complete 24 CE credit hours per two-year renewal cycle, of which at least 3 hours must be in ethics. Property and casualty producers must also satisfy a one-time 3-hour flood insurance course; the flood and ethics hours count toward (not in addition to) the 24-hour total. Producers who sell long-term care (LTC) insurance must additionally complete a one-time 8-hour LTC training (at least 2 hours Vermont-specific) plus no less than 4 hours of ongoing LTC training every 24 months; resident LTC training can count toward the 24-hour CE requirement if it meets CE course-approval rules. The CE review period coincides with the license term and ends March 31 of odd years.

Full Insurance renewal guide for Vermont (deadlines, fees & CE) →

Vermont Insurance CE course providers

Heads-up: These are independent, third-party CE providers — we are not affiliated with them and don't guarantee approval. Always confirm a course is accepted by the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR), Insurance Division before purchasing.

Vermont Insurance CE courses: frequently asked questions

How many CE hours do I need to renew my Insurance license in Vermont?

Vermont requires about 24 continuing-education hours per renewal cycle. Resident producers must complete 24 CE credit hours per two-year renewal cycle, of which at least 3 hours must be in ethics. Property and casualty producers must also satisfy a one-time 3-hour flood insurance course; the flood and ethics hours count toward (not in addition to) the 24-hour total. Producers who sell long-term care (LTC) insurance must additionally complete a one-time 8-hour LTC training (at least 2 hours Vermont-specific) plus no less than 4 hours of ongoing LTC training every 24 months; resident LTC training can count toward the 24-hour CE requirement if it meets CE course-approval rules. The CE review period coincides with the license term and ends March 31 of odd years.

Do online Insurance CE courses count in Vermont?

Online courses generally count when the provider is approved by or recognized by the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR), Insurance Division and the completion is reported through Prometric (CE administration), with Sircon/State Based Systems for online CE credit lookup; renewals filed via NIPR. Always confirm a course is accepted before you buy it.

Where do I report my Vermont Insurance CE?

Vermont uses Prometric (CE administration), with Sircon/State Based Systems for online CE credit lookup; renewals filed via NIPR to track Insurance continuing education. Make sure your completions post there before you renew.

Requirement last verified 2026-06-01 from the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR), Insurance Division. Always confirm current rules with the board before relying on this.

Official Vermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR), Insurance Division site →