LOUISIANA PROPERTY AND CASUALTY
INSURANCE Actual Exam 2026/2027:
Comprehensive Multiple Choice Questions with
Verified & Revised Answers for Licensing Success –
Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
SECTION 1: INSURANCE BASICS & PRINCIPLES (15 Questions)
Q1: Which principle of insurance requires that the insured must demonstrate a legitimate
financial interest in the property or life being insured at the time of loss?
A. Indemnity
B. Subrogation
C. Insurable Interest [CORRECT]
D. Utmost Good Faith
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Insurable interest is the legal principle requiring that the insured have a legitimate
financial stake in the preservation of the insured property or life. In Louisiana, property
insurance requires insurable interest at the time of loss (LA R.S. 22:1310.3). Without insurable
interest, the insured suffers no economic loss and cannot recover. Option A (indemnity) prevents
profit from insurance. Option B (subrogation) allows insurer recovery from third parties. Option
D (utmost good faith) requires full disclosure.
Q2: Under Louisiana law, an insurance contract is considered a contract of:
A. Adhesion
B. Aleatory [CORRECT]
C. Bilateral
D. Executory
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: An insurance contract is aleatory—values exchanged are unequal and depend on an
uncertain event. The insured pays premiums with certainty, but the insurer's payment depends on
whether a loss occurs. This distinguishes insurance from commutative contracts where values are
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roughly equal. Option A (adhesion) describes the "take it or leave it" nature of policy forms.
Option C describes mutual promises. Option D describes contracts not yet fully performed.
Q3: Which of the following is NOT an element of an insurable risk?
A. The loss must be definite and measurable
B. The loss must be catastrophic to the entire community [CORRECT]
C. The loss must be accidental
D. There must be a large number of homogeneous exposure units
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: For a risk to be insurable, losses must NOT be catastrophic (community-wide), as this
prevents the law of large numbers from operating and could bankrupt insurers. Insurable risks
require: definite/measurable losses (A), accidental/fortuitous nature (C), and large homogeneous
pools (D). Catastrophic community-wide losses (flood, earthquake) require government
backstops or residual markets (Louisiana Citizens).
Q4: [Scenario] An applicant for homeowners insurance fails to disclose a previous fire claim on
the application. The insurer issues the policy. Six months later, the insurer discovers the
concealment after a lightning loss. Under Louisiana law, what is the insurer's remedy?
A. No remedy; the policy is incontestable after 60 days
B. Rescission of the policy and denial of the claim for material misrepresentation [CORRECT]
C. Claim must be paid but policy non-renewed
D. Reduce the claim payment by the premium amount
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Under Louisiana R.S. 22:1964 and general contract law, material misrepresentations
or concealments entitle the insurer to rescind the policy ab initio (from inception) and deny
claims. A previous fire claim is material to underwriting. Louisiana does not have a strict
incontestability period for property insurance (unlike life insurance). The insurer must prove the
misrepresentation was material and intentional or negligent.
Q5: The doctrine of indemnity in property insurance means that:
A. The insured may recover more than the actual loss to gain a profit
B. The insured is restored to the same financial position after loss as before, without profit
[CORRECT]
C. The insurer assumes all liability of the insured to third parties
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D. The insured must accept replacement cost valuation regardless of actual cash value
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Indemnity is the fundamental principle that insurance should restore the insured to the
pre-loss financial position, neither better nor worse. This prevents moral hazard and gambling.
Options A violates indemnity. Option C describes liability insurance, not indemnity principle.
Option D is incorrect—Louisiana policies often offer ACV unless replacement cost endorsement
is purchased and conditions met.
Q6: Which peril is classified as a "morale hazard" rather than a physical or moral hazard?
A. A wooden roof in a fire-prone area
B. Carelessness in locking doors due to having insurance [CORRECT]
C. Arson committed by the insured to collect insurance proceeds
D. Living in a coastal flood zone
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Morale hazards are psychological attitudes created by insurance that increase risk—
carelessness, indifference to loss prevention because "insurance will cover it." Option A is a
physical hazard (tangible condition). Option C is a moral hazard (intentional dishonesty/crime).
Option D is a physical hazard (location exposure).
Q7: Under Louisiana law, a representation in an insurance application is considered:
A. A guarantee of absolute truth
B. A statement believed to be true to the best of the applicant's knowledge [CORRECT]
C. A warranty that must be literally true in every detail
D. A promise to maintain the condition indefinitely
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Representations are statements made to the best of the applicant's knowledge/belief at
the time of application. They need not be literally true (that's a warranty), but must be
substantially accurate. Louisiana follows the substantial truth rule for representations. Material
misrepresentations void the contract. Option A describes warranties. Option C describes strict
warranties (rare in modern policies). Option D describes a continuing promise.
Q8: [Calculation] A commercial building is insured for $400,000 under a policy with an 80%
coinsurance clause. The building's replacement cost is $600,000. A fire causes $240,000 in
damage. What is the insurer's payment?
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A. $160,000
B. $200,000 [CORRECT]
C. $240,000 (full amount)
D. $300,000
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Coinsurance formula: (Amount of Insurance Carried / Amount Required) × Loss =
Payment. Required = 80% of $600,000 = $480,000. Carried = $400,000. $400,000/$480,000 =
0.833. 0.833 × $240,000 = $200,000. The insured is a coinsurer for the deficiency. Option A
miscalculates the percentage. Option C ignores coinsurance. Option D exceeds the loss.
Q9: Subrogation rights in Louisiana property insurance:
A. Are prohibited by Louisiana law
B. Allow the insurer to step into the shoes of the insured after payment to recover from negligent
third parties [CORRECT]
C. Apply only to auto insurance claims
D. Must be waived in all homeowners policies
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Subrogation (LA R.S. 22:1310.3) allows insurers who pay claims to inherit the
insured's rights against negligent third parties who caused the loss. This prevents double recovery
and holds tortfeasors accountable. Option A is incorrect—subrogation is permitted. Option C is
incorrect—subrogation applies to all property lines. Option D is incorrect—subrogation is
standard, not waived.
Q10: Which of the following is a "named perils" policy form?
A. HO-3 (Special Form)
B. HO-5 (Comprehensive Form)
C. HO-2 (Broad Form) [CORRECT]
D. HO-3 with open perils endorsement
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: HO-2 (Broad Form) is a named perils policy covering 16 specific perils (fire,
lightning, windstorm, hail, explosion, riot, aircraft, vehicles, smoke, vandalism, theft, falling
objects, weight of ice/snow, freezing plumbing, electrical damage). HO-3 and HO-5 are open