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Captive vs. independent agent

6 min read · Updated April 2026

The fundamental difference

A captive agent represents one insurance company. You sell State Farm, or Allstate, or Farmers — and only their products. The carrier provides your leads, your office, your technology, and often a base salary. In exchange, they own the client relationships and take the majority of the commission.

An independent agent represents multiple carriers. You can offer a client quotes from Travelers, Progressive, Erie, Hartford, and a dozen others. You find your own leads, pay for your own office, and handle your own expenses. In exchange, you keep higher commissions and you own your book of business — an asset you can sell when you retire.

Commission comparison

This is where the numbers tell the real story.

Captive Agent

Auto new business: 5-10%

Homeowners new business: 5-10%

Renewals: 2-8%

Base salary: $30K-$50K (often provided)

Benefits: Usually included

Book ownership: Carrier owns it

Independent Agent

Auto new business: 10-15%

Homeowners new business: 12-15%

Renewals: 8-12%

Base salary: None (100% commission)

Benefits: Self-funded

Book ownership: You own it

On the surface, captive looks safer — you get a salary and benefits. But the math changes dramatically once you have a book of business generating renewal income. An independent agent with $1M in managed premium earning 10% renewals collects $100,000/year in passive renewal income alone, before writing a single new policy. A captive agent with the same book walks away with nothing if they leave.

Income trajectory

Year 1: Captive agents almost always earn more in year one. The base salary provides stability while you learn the business. Independent agents may earn $20,000-$40,000 in their first year — sometimes less — while they build their book from zero.

Years 2-3: The gap narrows. Independent agents' renewal commissions start compounding. Each policy written last year pays again this year. By year 3, a productive independent agent often matches or exceeds a captive agent's total compensation.

Years 5+: Independent agents pull away. Renewal income compounds every year. A well-run independent agency generating $2-3M in premium can produce $200,000-$400,000+ in annual income. Captive agents are still capped by their salary structure and lower commission rates.

Book of business: the hidden asset

This is the biggest difference and it's the one most new agents overlook. An independent agent's book of business is a sellable asset worth 1.5-2.5x annual revenue. If you build a $2M book over 10 years, that's a $3M-$5M exit when you retire. A captive agent's book belongs to the carrier — when you leave, you leave with nothing.

Who should go captive?

Captive makes sense if you:

Have zero insurance experience and need structured training.

Can't afford 6-12 months of reduced income while building a book.

Want benefits and a base salary from day one.

Are comfortable representing one brand exclusively.

Don't plan to sell your book at retirement.

Who should go independent?

Independent makes sense if you:

Have some experience or savings to get through year one.

Want to maximize long-term income.

Value the freedom to offer clients the best option, not just one option.

Want to build an asset you can sell.

Are comfortable being a business owner, not an employee.

The hybrid path

Many successful independent agents started captive. They learned the business at State Farm or Farmers for 2-3 years, built their skills and savings, then made the jump to independent. This is a legitimate strategy — just know going in that you'll leave the book behind when you switch. The skills and relationships transfer; the clients don't.

See what independent agents actually earn

Real commission rates from 44 carriers, reported by independent agents.

Browse Carrier Commissions →