CA adjuster exam — property vs casualty sections, which is harder to prep for?
I'm studying for the California adjuster exam and I'm about 5 weeks in, studying around 2 hours a day. My background is entirely in auto claims so the casualty side feels more natural, but I'm nervous about the property portion. From what I've read, the property section requires familiarity with construction and estimation that I genuinely don't have.
My current practice test scores are sitting around 73% overall, but when I break it down I'm scoring around 82% on casualty questions and closer to 61% on property. That gap is big enough that I'm thinking about adding another 2–3 weeks to my timeline before scheduling. Property questions on valuation methods, depreciation, and policy provisions are where I'm losing the most points.
One specific area I'm confused about: the distinction between ACV and replacement cost valuation in California property claims feels like it should be simple, but the exam questions wrap it in scenarios that add a lot of complexity. If anyone's cleared this exam coming from an auto background, did you end up spending the majority of extra prep time on property content or were there other sections that surprised you?
ACV vs replacement cost was on my exam in multiple forms. The key distinction California tests is around how depreciation gets calculated and applied for different property types. It's not just the definition — it's applying it to specific loss scenarios involving partial damage or functional obsolescence.
The California-specific regulations questions caught me off guard. I'd prepared well on general insurance concepts but there are state-specific fair claims settlement practices and timeframe requirements that showed up more than I expected. Those aren't hard but you have to know the specific numbers.
Passed on my first attempt with an 81% overall after 8 weeks of study. Your instinct to extend your timeline is right if you're sitting at 61% on property. The passing threshold isn't forgiving enough to bank on your casualty strength compensating for a weak property section.
Coming from auto claims, property was definitely my weak side too. I added 3 weeks specifically for property content and focused almost entirely on policy provisions, coverage exclusions, and the valuation distinctions you mentioned. Went from scoring 58% to 79% on property questions in that stretch.
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