Carrier Release Center
A simple resource to help agents request a release from a previous agency, FMO, IMO, or upline when transferring carrier contracts. Use the copy-and-paste templates, follow the process, and keep documentation for carrier contracting review.
What Is a Carrier Release?
A carrier release is written permission from your current agency, FMO, IMO, or top-level upline allowing your carrier contract to move to a new hierarchy. Some carriers allow an immediate release, while others may require a Notice of Intent, waiting period, no-production period, or carrier-specific transfer form.
Immediate Release
Your current upline approves the release and the carrier can begin processing your transfer without the standard waiting period.
Notice of Intent
If a release is not granted, some carriers allow you to submit written notice and move after the carrier-required waiting period.
No-Production Pathway
Some carriers may allow a transfer after a certain period with no production, depending on the carrier and contract type.
Recommended Release Process
Step 1: Identify the Carriers
List every carrier you want released. Decide if you are requesting a full release from all carriers or only selected carriers.
Step 2: Send the Request by Email
Email the request to your current agency, FMO, IMO, or upline. Keep the message professional, direct, and dated.
Step 3: Save Proof
Save the sent email, any replies, screenshots, delivery confirmations, and follow-up attempts. Carriers may ask for proof.
Step 4: Follow Carrier Instructions
If the agency approves, upload the release where required. If they do not respond or deny it, ask the new contracting team about carrier-specific next steps.
What If the Previous Agency Does Not Respond?
If your previous agency or upline does not respond, do not assume the release is approved. Most carriers still need documentation or a carrier-specific process. The best approach is to create a clean paper trail and follow up professionally.
Suggested Follow-Up Timeline
- Day 1: Send the first release request by email.
- Day 3-5: Send a polite follow-up and include the original request below your message.
- Day 7-10: Send a final follow-up requesting confirmation of approval, denial, or next steps.
- After no response: Contact your new contracting team and ask if the carrier allows a Notice of Intent, self-release, transfer form, or waiting period pathway.
Important
A non-response does not always mean the carrier will automatically move the contract. Each carrier has its own hierarchy transfer rules. Some may require proof that you requested the release, while others may require you to complete a specific release or Notice of Intent form.
What If the Release Is Denied?
A denied release does not always mean you are stuck forever. Depending on the carrier, you may have options such as a Notice of Intent, self-release process, no-production requirement, or waiting period. However, the timing matters, especially before AEP and during carrier blackout periods.
| Situation | What It May Mean | Recommended Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Agency approves release | The carrier may process the hierarchy transfer faster. | Upload or forward the written release to the carrier or contracting team. |
| Agency denies release | You may need to wait or use a carrier-specific transfer pathway. | Ask the new contracting team about Notice of Intent or self-release options. |
| Agency ignores request | You need proof of your attempts before escalating. | Send follow-ups and keep screenshots or copies of all emails. |
| Carrier has blackout period | Transfers may pause during certain dates, often around AEP. | Start the process early and confirm the carrier’s current transfer calendar. |
| Carrier requires top-level release | A release from a lower-level agency may not be enough. | Ask who the carrier recognizes as the authorized release signer. |
Information to Include in Your Release Request
- Full legal name
- NPN number
- Phone number and email address
- Carrier names being requested for release
- Whether the request is for all carriers or selected carriers only
- Current agency, FMO, IMO, or upline name
- New agency/upline name, if required by the carrier
- Preferred effective date, if applicable
- Any carrier writing numbers, if available
Copy & Paste Release Letter Templates
Select the version that fits your situation, copy it, update the bracketed sections, and send it from your business email.
Option 1: Full Release From All Carriers
Use this when requesting a full release from your current hierarchy.
Option 2: Release From Specific Carriers Only
Use this when only certain carrier contracts need to be released.
Option 3: Follow-Up When There Is No Response
Use this after your first request has not received a reply.
Option 4: Final Follow-Up Before Carrier Escalation
Use this if multiple attempts have not received a response.
Option 5: Short & Direct Release Request
Use this when you want a simple message.
Agent Documentation Checklist
Before contacting the carrier or your new contracting team, make sure you have a clean file showing your release attempt.
- Copy of the original release request email
- Copy of all follow-up emails
- Any written approval or denial received
- Carrier names requested
- Date and time each request was sent
- Any carrier-specific release forms completed
- New contracting invitation or transfer instructions, if available
- Proof of no response, if applicable
Carrier Release FAQ
Can my previous agency refuse to release me?
In some cases, yes. If the release is denied, the carrier may require a waiting period, Notice of Intent, self-release process, or other carrier-specific transfer method.
Does no response mean I am automatically released?
No. A non-response does not automatically mean approval. You should keep proof of your request and ask your new contracting team what the specific carrier requires next.
Can I keep writing business while waiting?
That depends on the carrier, contract type, and transfer pathway. Some carriers allow production during the waiting period under the current hierarchy, while others may have restrictions.
Is a release from my direct manager enough?
Not always. Some carriers require approval from the top-level FMO, IMO, or authorized hierarchy signer. Always confirm who the carrier recognizes as the valid release authority.
When is the best time to request a release?
Earlier is usually better. Many agents start the process early in the year to avoid carrier processing delays, AEP timing issues, or blackout periods.
Do all carriers follow the same rules?
No. Release requirements vary by carrier. Some use immediate releases, some use Notice of Intent, some require no-production periods, and others use specific forms or portal workflows.
Important Disclaimer
This Carrier Release Center is provided as a general agent resource only. Carrier release rules, hierarchy transfer timelines, blackout periods, waiting periods, and approval requirements vary by carrier and may change. Agents should confirm current requirements with the applicable carrier, contracting department, or authorized agency support team before making business decisions.
Advantage Plus Insurance Agency provides this page to help agents stay organized during the carrier release and contracting transition process. This page does not guarantee carrier approval, immediate release, transfer acceptance, or commission changes.