Insurance · North Carolina

Insurance colleges in North Carolina

Insurance program coverage in North Carolina is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Insurance is a business major focused on measuring and pricing risk, teaching students to underwrite coverage, settle claims, and protect organizations from financial loss.

We're still verifying Insurance programs in North Carolina. Try a broader search at /results?q=Insurance or browse all colleges in North Carolina.

What you'll study in a Insurance program

  • Principles of risk management and risk theory
  • Property and casualty insurance and general liability coverage
  • Underwriting methods and policy pricing
  • Claims investigation, valuation, and loss adjustment
  • Life, health, and social insurance fundamentals
  • Employee benefits and pension and retirement planning
  • Probability and statistics applied to estimating loss likelihood and cost
  • Insurance law, regulation, and policy contract analysis
  • Loss control practices and a capstone exposure assessment paired with an industry internship

Where a Insurance degree can lead

  • Insurance Underwriter
  • Claims Adjuster
  • Risk Analyst
  • Actuarial Assistant
  • Insurance Agent
  • Loss Control Specialist

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 insurance underwriters median $79,880).

An Insurance major teaches you how to identify, measure, and price the financial risks that businesses, families, and institutions face, then design coverage that absorbs those losses when something goes wrong. You study how property and casualty policies, general liability, life and health coverage, employee benefits, and pension plans are structured, and you learn the reasoning behind premiums, deductibles, and policy limits. Coursework draws on probability and risk theory to estimate the likelihood and cost of events, and on underwriting principles to decide which risks an insurer should accept and on what terms. Students also practice the claims side of the business, working through how losses are investigated, valued, and adjusted, and how loss control reduces exposure before a claim ever happens. Unlike a broad finance degree that centers on investing and capital markets, or actuarial science that is built almost entirely on advanced mathematics and exam-driven credentials, the insurance major keeps risk management, policy structure, and the day-to-day operations of insurers at its core.

This field is most often pursued as a bachelor's degree, frequently offered as an insurance or risk-management concentration inside a business school, where it combines general business foundations with specialized courses in underwriting, claims, and benefits. Programs commonly include case-based projects, an internship with an insurer or brokerage, and a capstone that asks students to assess an organization's exposures and recommend a coverage strategy. Many client-facing and licensed roles, such as selling policies or adjusting claims in certain lines, require passing a state licensing examination and maintaining continuing education, and prospective students should verify both programmatic accreditation and the specific licensing rules in the state where they intend to work. Graduates go on to work at insurance carriers, brokerages and agencies, corporate risk-management departments, employee-benefits firms, and government regulatory or social-insurance agencies, in roles spanning underwriting, claims adjusting, loss control, risk analysis, and account management.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of insurance underwriters, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $79,880 and projects employment to decline about 2.6% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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