Directory • Insurance Agents • 2026
Insurance Agents Directory: Find Licensed Agents by State and City or Register Your Agency at the Top of the Page
This Insurance Agents Directory is built for two audiences at the same time: shoppers who want to find a licensed insurance professional quickly, and agencies that want a straightforward way to register a listing without hunting through the page first. The easiest improvement to the user experience is simple: place the registration action at the top, where agencies and producers can see it immediately, while still keeping search access visible for shoppers.
That accessibility change matters because directory pages often serve mixed intent. One visitor may be looking for a Medicare agent in North Carolina, another may need a commercial agent in Texas, and another may be an agency owner trying to submit a listing right away. A cleaner page should respect all three use cases without making anyone scroll through dense content before taking the next step.
Register your agency first — then let shoppers find you faster
Move the listing submission path to the top so agents, brokers, and agencies can submit immediately while clients still have a clear search path below.
Looking for an insurance agent near me? Start with state first, then city, then specialty. Looking to join the directory? Use the registration button above before you do anything else.
How to use the directory without wasting time
Directory users usually get the best results when they search in the right order. Instead of starting with a broad keyword only, start with your state, then narrow to your city or metro, then match the product line. That is the fastest path to finding a producer who can legally assist in your state and actually works in the kind of insurance you need.
Why the registration page should be placed right on top
If the page is also meant to attract agent and agency submissions, the registration path should never be buried below long copy. From an accessibility and conversion standpoint, the best layout is a page where the primary submit action is visible immediately, with clear text, large tap targets, strong contrast, and a secondary path for shoppers who want to search instead.
The simplest structure is this: registration first, search second, explanation third. That reduces friction for both audience types and makes the page feel intentional instead of overloaded.
Licensed states and directory footprint
| Region group | States emphasized | Common reason shoppers use the directory |
|---|---|---|
| Southwest and West | AZ, CA, NM | Auto and homeowners bundles, renters, relocation support, and regional servicing |
| South and Southeast | AL, FL, GA, NC, SC, TX | Family coverage planning, health and Medicare guidance, small-business coverage, and coastal deductible questions |
| Midwest and Plains | IA, KS, MI, NE, OH, SD | Home and auto bundling, commercial needs, contractor coverage, and policy servicing |
| East and Mid-Atlantic | NY, VA, WV, OK | City-based agent matching, life insurance planning, Medicare support, and commercial placement reviews |
State-first browsing makes the directory more useful for real shoppers and helps agencies present their service footprint more clearly.
Popular agent specialties people actually search for
| Specialty | Typical use case | What shoppers should ask | Why specialty matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Auto and home | Multi-policy households looking to save and improve servicing | Liability limits, deductibles, claims workflow, and bundling logic | Bundling works better when the producer actually understands both lines |
| Health and Medicare | ACA, dental, vision, Medicare Advantage, Medigap, and review needs | Doctor and pharmacy checks, enrollment timing, and ongoing service support | Health plan mistakes usually come from poor network and timing advice |
| Life and income protection | Term, whole life, final expense, disability, and income replacement | Length of term, rider needs, and policy purpose | Life insurance should fit debts, income, and long-term goals, not generic formulas |
| Commercial lines | BOP, general liability, commercial auto, workers’ comp, and certificates | Additional insureds, contract limits, vehicle use, and servicing speed | Commercial buyers often need operational accuracy more than a fast quote only |
How to choose the right agent from a directory listing
A strong listing should do more than show a name and phone number. It should tell the shopper what the agent actually does, where the agent is licensed, what lines of business are handled, and how the policy will be serviced after the sale. Directory pages become more accessible and more useful when listings are written in plain language instead of vague marketing phrases.
Service areas snapshot for directory browsing
| Popular cities and metros | States emphasized | Common browsing intent |
|---|---|---|
| Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Scottsdale, Glendale | AZ | Personal lines, Medicare, and business policy support |
| Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Austin | TX | Family coverage, commercial auto, and business liability |
| Miami, Orlando, Tampa, Fort Lauderdale | FL | Health, home, and specialty local guidance |
| Atlanta, Charlotte, Richmond, Albuquerque, Las Cruces | GA, NC, VA, NM | Relocation-friendly agent matching and multi-state service questions |
For best results, use the directory search to narrow from state to city to specialty instead of starting broad.
Insurance agents directory FAQs
How do I find a licensed agent in my city?
Start with your state first, then narrow to your city or metro, and finally choose the coverage type you need. That prevents mismatches and speeds up the search.
Why put the registration page right at the top?
It makes the page easier to use for agencies that already know they want to submit a listing and reduces unnecessary scrolling for mobile, keyboard, and screen-reader users.
Can agencies update their listings later?
Yes. Directory listings work best when agency details, states served, specialties, and contact paths are kept accurate and current.
What should an accessible listing include?
Readable text, clear specialty descriptions, licensed states, easy contact details, strong contrast, and straightforward instructions for what the shopper should do next.
Does being listed mean endorsement?
No. Directory listings should be informational and should not imply that every listed producer is endorsed equally for every line of business.
Related topics
Independent agency: Blake Insurance Group LLC is an independent insurance agency. Directory listings are informational and do not imply sponsorship or endorsement.
Licensing: Licensed insurance producer (NPN 16944666).
Important: Agencies and producers should keep licensing, states served, specialties, and contact details current. Shoppers should verify state licensing before binding coverage.
Brand note: All trademarks and service marks belong to their respective owners.