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Accreditation
State insurance departments, as well as the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners, formally recognize the two professional designations developed and awarded by the
Insurance Regulatory Examiners Society AIE and CIE. This program demonstrates the Society's
belief that insurance regulators, like other professionals, must continually commit themselves to
education and training in order to keep them abreast of the complex issues with which they deal every day.
Note: Before seeking accreditation as an AIE, a regulator must have completed at least two years of verifiable fulltime regulatory work; the minimum for the CIE is three years.
AIE (Accredited Insurance Examiner) represents an individual who has been
extensively trained in either of the two primary fields of insurance regulation, property &
casualty or life & health, with three options under life & health: life, health or information systems. Preliminary certification requires completion of at least eight professional development courses in the selected curriculum.
CIE (Certified Insurance Examiner) is presented to an insurance regulatory
professional who has attained the AIE in one field and then cross-trains in the other field by taking four additional courses.
If you're an insurance regulator and would like to apply for AIE or CIE accreditation, perhaps now's the time to act:
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Continuing Education
IRES members who have earned the right to put AIE or CIE after their names also must take part in an ongoing program of continuing education, assuring the continuing integrity of the two designations. You can now check the status of your continuing education credits online.
Click here if you have additional questions about the Society's accreditation program.
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