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AdjusterPro vs 360training: Which texas adjuster licensing course is right for you

You’ve decided to get your Texas insurance adjusting license? Excellent choice! You can get licensed with minimal costs (compared to a degree), and the career offers great financial opportunities while you make a difference for your claimants. 

Choosing your course might feel like a small detail; after all, every state-approved provider covers the same material, right?

But here’s the reality: A 40-hour course requires real commitment, and the provider you choose can be the difference between finishing with confidence and acing the exam, or getting bogged down in a confusing course and stalling out.

In this article, we’ll explore the strengths, weaknesses, and differences between the Texas Adjuster Pre-Licensing Courses offered by two of the most established Texas providers: 360training and AdjusterPro. This side-by-side comparison breaks down cost, access, support, and user experience to help you choose the best Texas Adjuster Licensing Course.

Both companies are legitimate, well-regarded, and will qualify you to obtain a license. So which course best fits your specific needs and goals?

While we’re proud of our courses, we genuinely want you to find the best fit for you. 360training is an established provider with an impressive catalog of industrial training. We respect them and their courses, and our goal here is to give you a clear, objective comparison so you can discern which path best suits your needs. Let’s dive in. 

AdjusterPro was founded in 2005 by two insurance adjusters to provide new adjusters with an efficient, coherent training experience that the founders wished they had when starting their own careers. The company has remained founder-owned, niche, and adjuster-specific, building its reputation within the claims industry over nearly two decades. AdjusterPro is a leading name in adjuster licensing and continuing education, and is frequently referenced and used by employers, independent adjusting firms, and state agencies.

(Read more about AdjusterPro and meet our Founders on our About Page)

360training’s Background

Founded in 1997 in Austin, Texas, 360training has grown into one of the largest online compliance training providers in the U.S. Today, the company offers more than 6,000 courses across industries such as real estate, food safety, and environmental health. It is currently owned by a strategic equity partnership with GreyLion Partners and Vestar Capital Partners.

(Read more about 360training on their About Page.)

How Do Both Options Compare?

Both companies are well-renowned, albeit for different content. AdjusterPro is a specialized provider focused exclusively on insurance adjuster education, known for its depth, industry alignment, and long-standing credibility within the claims profession. In contrast, 360training is a broad, multi-industry compliance training platform backed by private equity and built for scale. 

AdjusterPro

For Texas adjusters, AdjusterPro offers a state-approved 40-hour pre-licensing course priced at $299. 

The course is delivered through text-based slides with narration that reads and elaborates on the concepts, interspersed with quizzes, and a final exam. It comes with lifetime access and support from our Customer Engagement team. 

360training

For Texas adjusters, 360training provides a state-approved 40-hour pre-licensing course priced at $169–$249. The base package ($169) includes access to the required course content with 30 days of standard help desk support. The premium package ($249) adds instructor support and exam remediation. 

The course is delivered through text-based, narrated slides that students progress through at their own pace, with quizzes interspersed throughout and a final exam at the end.

How Do Both Options Compare?

Ultimately, the best choice depends on your learning style, support needs, and budget. If you’re looking for a premium course experience, AdjusterPro might be worth the higher price. If cost or support flexibility is your priority, 360training offers a solid alternative.

AdjusterPro Course Access & Student Support

A unique feature of AdjusterPro’s course is lifetime access with live support, including technical help, exam preparation guidance, and state-specific licensing assistance.

360training Course Access & Student Support

Course access is limited to 90 days, with instructor support available only during the first 30 days. Access is tied to the enrollment period and closes once the course is completed.

How Do Both Options Compare?

With lifetime course access and ongoing live support, AdjusterPro is better suited for adjuster candidates who want lasting support and the ability to revisit course materials any time, even beyond the exam.

360training, while more limited in access (90 days) and instructor support (30 days), appeals to self-starters who plan to complete the course quickly and don’t feel the need for ongoing help as a safety net.

AdjusterPro vs. 360training: Reputation & Reviews 

While researching student feedback for this comparison, we found that no single review platform offered a consistent, side-by-side look at both AdjusterPro and 360training TX courses. To provide a well-rounded perspective, we reviewed feedback across multiple sources (including Reddit, Facebook, Google, and Trustpilot) and summarized the most common themes and takeaways.

We encourage you to do your own research as well, as student experiences can vary, and no single platform offers a fully apples-to-apples comparison.

AdjusterPro

AdjusterPro rates 4.8 out of 5 on AdjusterPro’s platform, and 4.7 out of 5 on Google. It is praised for clarity, strong support, and real-world preparation. Students note that the course tends to be longer and more thorough than comparable courses, and the trick to success and low stress on the actual exam is to take and retake the AdjusterPro practice exam ahead of time, focusing on vocabulary and concepts. Some students complain about the length of the course.

360Training

360training rates 3.6 out of 5 on Trustpilot (they don’t post course ratings on their own website) and 3.9 out of 5 on Google. It is a well-established compliance provider across 15+ industries. Students cite convenience and structure, but some note confusing questions, technical issues, and occasional glitches. 

Some Additional Notes on Course Reviews:

Some reviews for both AdjusterPro and 360training mention that the course material was not on the exam (or similar observations). Here’s why: 

No course provider knows exactly what content will be on the state exam. 

The state provides an “exam outline” that adjusters can use to study for the exam. Course providers use this outline to research, write, and fact-check material for you, building the course on the cited topics and providing the course content for you to study so that you don’t have to weed through the research yourself. 

Regardless of the provider you choose, if you find a topic and think more information may be helpful, we recommend doing your own supplemental research to be as prepared as possible for the exam. With that said, we aim for thorough content so that you are as prepared as possible from our courses. 

How Do Both Options Compare?

AdjusterPro is consistently praised for its depth, clarity, and support, while 360training receives recognition for accessibility and speed, though with more mixed feedback around course quality and experience.

No course is perfect for everyone, and the best choice depends on your goals, timeline, and learning style. The question comes down to: Which course gives me the tools, flexibility, and support I’ll actually need to succeed?

AdjusterPro

  • Step-by-step onboarding for an easy start. 
  • Dashboard offers reporting on progress and exam readiness
  • Narration reads and expands on the text, providing added clarity, depth, and engagement. 
  • Quizzes use scenario-based questions to reflect real-world applications. 
  • Offers illustrations, plus built-in study aids like flashcards and exam prep tools.

360training

  • Quick sign-up. 
  • Dashboard navigation works, though it is not always intuitive. 
  • Course delivery is slide-based, with exact narration. 
  • Quizzes are medium difficulty, often due to nuanced wording. 
  • Visuals complement the material.

How Do Both Options Compare?

Both courses offer a functional learning environment, but they serve different learning styles. AdjusterPro is designed for students who want a more immersive, supportive, and real-world-prepared experience, with layered content and built-in study tools. 360training offers a quicker, more streamlined path that may suit students who prefer minimal structure and are comfortable navigating independently. Your ideal fit depends on how you learn best and how much support you want along the way.

Both AdjusterPro and 360training are fully state-approved options that will qualify you for a Texas insurance adjuster license. Each offers a 40-hour online course with narrated slides, quizzes, and a final exam.

“A 40-hour course” refers to content equivalency, not a literal stopwatch. The Texas Department of Insurance approves courses using formulas that take word count and a complexity factor into account. 

This means the time it takes a student to complete a course and its exam depends on the course’s design quality and the content.

The difference comes down to the learning experience.

AdjusterPro takes a thorough, often longer approach. Our course is longer than many alternative options and results in a high state licensing exam pass rate for students who use it well. The course offers visuals and narration that reads and elaborates on the course text, scenario-based quizzes, study aids like flashcards, and lifetime access with included support. However, the length of the course can be daunting to some students. 

360training provides a straightforward, efficient, and functional path to meet the requirement. While we could not find public statistics about their students’ state licensing exam pass rate, the course offers visuals, videos, a simple structure, and a lower entry price. Students mention that this course is not designed for the type of learner who likes to go over sections multiple times for review, and say it is somewhat repetitive, contains confusing verbiage, and has occasional glitches and slow customer support responses that slow progress.

Both AdjusterPro’s and 360Training’s Texas Adjuster Pre-Licensing Courses are “40-hour” courses by TDI standards. So which one is right for you?

Why Choose 360training?

If you…

  • Are looking for a shorter, lower-cost course that is efficient and offers the basics
  • Have a sense of the information already and are hping to refresh your knowledge and get a sense of Texas requirements for this particular license
  • are looking for a short-ter, fast course and don’t need extended long-term access or support

…then 360training fits the bill!

Why Choose AdjusterPro?

If you…

  • are looking for more detailed and thorough information with context, explanations, and different types of study aids
  • prefer to bounce around in the course, revisiting material and studying in detail
  • Are the new to the information, or wait the option of help from our customer engagement team

…then AdjusterPro’s course may be the perfect option for you!

Unsure or still evaluating your options? 

If you need support, our customer service team is delighted to answer questions and help you assess your options. We want you to know what you are getting, and whether it is right for you. 

Please Contact Us if we can be of assistance. 

Ultimately, to obtain your TX Insurance Claims Adjuster License! If our course sounds like the right fit for you, take a look at our Texas Insurance Claims Pre-licensing course.

If you’re looking for a low-cost, fast-track option with basic support, 360training may be a fit.

But if you want a course that’s designed to thoroughly prepare you for the exam, with lifetime access, built-in study tools, and real human support whenever you need it, AdjusterPro is built for your success—before and after your exam.

Still researching? Check out our Complete Guide to the Texas Insurance Adjuster License.

Not a Texas resident but wanting to get licensed in Texas? Visit the Texas Department of Insurance website or read our Texas Adjuster DHS article to see details on getting a nonresident license.

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