What Is a Commission Split?
A commission split is how an insurance agency divides the commission from a sale between the agency and the producer. Sounds simple. The details are where most agencies trip up.
In this guide:
- The short definition
- Typical split percentages
- The difference between new business and renewal splits
- How splits change based on leads, servicing, and tenure
- Common split mistakes
Time to read: 6 minutes
What is a commission split?
A commission split is the percentage of the agency's commission that goes to the producer who wrote the sale.
The carrier pays the agency a commission (usually 10–15% of premium for P&C). The agency then pays the producer a split of that — usually 20–40% of the agency's cut.
Example. Customer pays $1,200 premium. Carrier pays agency 12% = $144 commission. Producer's split is 30%. Producer earns $43.20. Agency keeps $100.80.
The split is one of two pieces of producer pay (the other being bonuses). Most pay plans are split + bonus combined.
What are typical split percentages?
Ranges vary by product, new vs. renewal, and who sourced the lead.
New business splits
| Product | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal auto | 20% | 25–30% | 40% |
| Personal home | 25% | 30–35% | 45% |
| Life (first year) | 30% | 40–50% | 60% |
| Commercial | Varies | Varies | Negotiated per deal |
Renewal splits
| Product | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal auto | 10% | 15–20% | 25% |
| Personal home | 15% | 20–25% | 30% |
| Life (renewal years) | 10% | 15–25% | 40% |
| Commercial | Varies | Varies | Negotiated |
Why renewals pay less. The producer didn't do the work to re-close the sale. The service team renewed the customer. The producer gets a smaller split because they're not the ones keeping the business.
Why do new business splits differ from renewals?
New business takes more work. Renewals take less.
- New business requires prospecting, quoting, overcoming objections, and closing. High effort.
- Renewals usually renew themselves (or with help from the service team). Low effort from the producer.
Paying the same split on both would over-reward a producer for business they didn't actively close. Splitting differently matches pay to effort.
What affects the split a producer gets?
Five factors move the dial:
1. Who sourced the lead
- Producer brought the lead themselves (referral, personal network) → higher split, often 35–45%
- Agency-provided lead (internet lead, walk-in) → lower split, often 20–30%
The principle: if you give them leads, you don't pay as much of the commission. If they bring leads, you pay more.
2. Who services the policy
- Producer services their own policies → higher split, they're doing the ongoing work
- CSR services the policy → lower split for the producer, because you're paying the CSR too
3. Tenure and performance
Many agencies increase splits as producers prove themselves. Common progression:
| Years with agency | Split |
|---|---|
| Year 1 | 20% |
| Year 2 | 25% |
| Year 3+ | 30% |
| Top performers | 35–40% |
4. Product type
Life pays higher splits than P&C because the carrier commission is higher (50–80% vs 10–15%). Agencies pass along a bigger chunk because they have more to work with.
5. Book ownership
If producers "own" their book (can take it if they leave), splits are often higher — producers are running mini-agencies within your agency. If the agency owns the book, splits are lower.
What's a common producer pay structure?
A typical plan for a 2-year independent agency producer:
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Base salary | $35,000–$45,000 (years 1–2, declining) |
| New business split | 25–30% of agency commission |
| Renewal split | 15–20% of agency commission |
| Monthly bonus potential | $300–$1,000 if they hit targets |
| Annual bonus potential | $2,000–$5,000 for year milestones |
That structure targets 30–40% of generated commission as total pay — aligned with the industry benchmark.
What are common split mistakes?
Mistake 1 — Paying the same split on new and renewal
Over-rewards renewal work the producer isn't actually doing. Squeezes agency margin. Makes it hard to afford CSRs who are doing the real service work.
Mistake 2 — Never raising splits
New producers start at a lower split (fair — they're learning). If you never raise it, your best producers leave for agencies that do. Build in a tenure ladder.
Mistake 3 — Hiding the math
Producers need to see their math. If they can't reverse-engineer their pay from their sales, they don't trust the system. Show the formula. AgencyIQ shows the breakdown on every sale.
Mistake 4 — Not documenting the split in writing
Verbal agreements always come back to bite. Every producer should sign a written commission plan with the splits, bonus structure, and what happens if they leave.
Mistake 5 — Different producers on very different splits
Small differences based on tenure and role are fine. Big differences create resentment when producers compare notes (and they always compare notes). Keep splits close within the same role tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there an industry-standard split?
No single standard. The closest to "standard" is 30% of agency commission for a mid-tenure producer on agency-provided leads. That's a useful anchor point.
Can splits change mid-year?
Yes, but handle it carefully. Write up the change, explain the reasoning, and apply it prospectively — never retroactively. Retroactive changes destroy trust.
What's the difference between a split and a commission rate?
The commission rate is what the carrier pays the agency (e.g., 12% of premium). The split is what the agency pays the producer (e.g., 30% of the 12%). Two different percentages, two different audiences.
Do splits apply to bonuses?
No. Splits apply to base commission. Bonuses are separate — usually flat amounts or additional percentages on top of the base split.
How does AgencyIQ handle different splits per producer?
Each producer gets assigned a commission plan. The plan defines splits by product and new vs. renewal. AgencyIQ applies the right split to every sale automatically based on who wrote it.
Stop running commission splits in a spreadsheet
AgencyIQ is free during beta for Founding Members. Set up your splits once and every sale gets the right math — no manual calculation, no disputes.
Founding Members get grandfathered pricing when we launch paid tiers later this year.
Last updated: 2026-04-18