1.1 Alaska Division of Insurance

Key Takeaways

  • The Alaska Division of Insurance regulates all insurance under Title 21 of the Alaska Statutes (the Alaska Insurance Code)
  • The Director of Insurance is APPOINTED by the Commissioner of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development — never elected and not chosen by the Governor
  • The Division sits inside the Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development (DCCED) and has offices in both Anchorage and Juneau
  • Director powers include licensing, rulemaking, financial/solvency examinations, rate and form review, and enforcement with fines, suspension, and revocation
  • Consumers and producers reach the Division at (907) 269-7900 (Anchorage) or (907) 465-2515 (Juneau); the public website is commerce.alaska.gov/web/ins
Last updated: June 2026
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What the Division Is

The Alaska Division of Insurance is the state agency that regulates every insurer, producer, and adjuster doing business in Alaska. It is a division of the Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development (DCCED), not a stand-alone cabinet department. On the exam, the correct name is Division of Insurance — distractors such as "Department of Insurance" or "Office of Insurance Regulation" describe other states and are wrong for Alaska.

The Division maintains two staffed offices, reflecting Alaska's geography: a main office in Anchorage ((907) 269-7900) and a second office in Juneau ((907) 465-2515). Producer filings, fingerprint cards, and many statutory mailings are directed to the Juneau office.

The Director of Insurance

The Director of Insurance heads the Division and is appointed by the Commissioner of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development. This is the single most-tested fact in this section.

DetailAlaska Rule
SelectionAppointed by the Commissioner of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development
Reports toThe Commissioner of DCCED
TermServes at the pleasure of the Commissioner (no fixed term)
NotNot elected by voters; not appointed directly by the Governor

Common trap: Several states elect their insurance commissioner. Alaska does not. If an option says the regulator is "elected" or "appointed by the Governor," it is the wrong answer for Alaska.

Director Powers and Duties

The Director's statutory authority under Title 21 is broad. The exam expects you to recognize each category:

PowerWhat It Means
LicensingIssue, renew, suspend, and revoke producer, adjuster, and insurer licenses
RulemakingAdopt regulations (the Alaska Administrative Code, Title 3) interpreting Title 21
ExaminationConduct financial (solvency) and market-conduct exams of insurers — at least once every 5 years for domestic insurers
Rate & Form ReviewReview policy forms and rates so they are not inadequate, excessive, or unfairly discriminatory
EnforcementInvestigate violations and impose fines, cease-and-desist orders, suspension, or revocation
ReceivershipPetition the court to take over (rehabilitate or liquidate) an insolvent insurer

The Alaska Insurance Code — Title 21

Alaska insurance law lives in Title 21 of the Alaska Statutes (AS), known as the Alaska Insurance Code. Regulations interpreting it are in Title 3 of the Alaska Administrative Code (AAC). Key chapters you may see referenced:

CitationSubject
AS 21.06Administration and the Director's office
AS 21.27Licensing of producers, adjusters, and managing general agents
AS 21.36Unfair trade practices and consumer protection
AS 21.42Life insurance contracts and required provisions
AS 21.54Health (disability) insurance contracts

Insurer Authorization and Solvency Oversight

No company may sell insurance in Alaska without a certificate of authority from the Director. The exam distinguishes among carrier classifications:

TermMeaning
Domestic insurerOrganized under Alaska law (home state is Alaska)
Foreign insurerOrganized in another U.S. state
Alien insurerOrganized outside the United States
Admitted (authorized)Holds an Alaska certificate of authority
Non-admitted (surplus lines)Not authorized; may write only hard-to-place risks through a surplus-lines broker

The Director examines the financial condition of domestic insurers and reviews annual statements so that carriers maintain required reserves and capital. If an insurer becomes financially impaired, the Director may seek a court order for rehabilitation (an attempt to restore solvency) or liquidation (winding the company down).

Funding and the Guaranty Association

The Division is funded largely through licensing fees and premium taxes collected from insurers. Separately, the Alaska Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association protects policyholders if a member insurer becomes insolvent, paying covered claims up to statutory limits (commonly $300,000 in life death benefits and $100,000 in cash surrender value). Membership is mandatory for licensed life and health insurers. Producers may not advertise or use the Guaranty Association's existence as an inducement to buy a policy — doing so is a prohibited practice.

Unfair Trade Practices the Division Enforces

Title 21 (AS 21.36) lists prohibited acts the Division polices. Recognize these on the exam:

  • Misrepresentation — false statements about policy terms, dividends, or benefits
  • Twisting — using misrepresentation to induce a client to drop one policy for another
  • Churning — replacing a policy using the existing policy's own values, to the client's detriment
  • Rebating — giving any part of the premium or other valuable consideration not stated in the policy as an inducement to buy
  • Defamation — false statements that injure another insurer
  • Unfair discrimination — different rates or terms for individuals in the same actuarial class and hazard

Violations can draw cease-and-desist orders, fines, and license action — the same enforcement toolkit listed among the Director's powers above.

Quick Reference — Contacts

  • Anchorage office: (907) 269-7900 — 550 West 7th Avenue, Suite 1560, Anchorage, AK 99501
  • Juneau office / mailing: (907) 465-2515 — P.O. Box 110805, Juneau, AK 99811-0805
  • Website: commerce.alaska.gov/web/ins
  • Email: insurance@alaska.gov

Exam Tip: When a question names a regulatory function — approving a rate, ordering a cease-and-desist, examining a carrier's books — the answer is the Director acting through the Division of Insurance, exercising authority granted by Title 21.

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Alaska Insurance Regulatory Structure
Test Your Knowledge

How is the Alaska Director of Insurance selected?

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Test Your Knowledge

Which Alaska Statutes title contains the Insurance Code?

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Test Your Knowledge

An Alaska policyholder's life insurer becomes insolvent. Which mechanism pays covered claims up to statutory limits?

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