Build the Insurance & Cyber Skills Your Need to Advance Your Career

ARM – Associate Risk Management

ARM – Associate in Risk Management

🧭 Overview

The Associate in Risk Management (ARM) designation is a respected credential awarded by The Institutes. It provides deep expertise in risk assessment, risk control, risk financing, and enterprise‑level risk management frameworks.

The ARM is widely recognized across insurance carriers, brokers, risk management departments, and corporate leadership teams. It is especially valuable for professionals involved in underwriting, claims, loss control, safety, and organizational risk strategy.

📚 Requirements

  • Complete the following ARM core courses:
    • ARM 400 — Risk in an Evolving World
    • ARM 401 — Holistically Assessing Risk
    • ARM 402 — Successfully Treating Risk
  • Optional elective (varies by track), such as:
    • Ethics 311 — Ethical Guidelines for Insurance Professionals
    • ERM‑related coursework
  • Pass all associated exams
  • No continuing education required to maintain the designation

🤝 Community & Recognition

The ARM designation is respected across the risk management and insurance industries. It signals advanced understanding of risk frameworks, financial exposures, mitigation strategies, and organizational resilience.

ARM holders are valued for their ability to analyze risk holistically, support underwriting decisions, collaborate with safety and claims teams, and contribute to enterprise risk management (ERM) initiatives. Many professionals pursue the ARM on the pathway to CPCU or leadership roles in corporate risk management.

📜 Quick Facts

Issuing Organization: The Institutes
Website: https://www.theinstitutes.org/
Credential Focus: Risk assessment, risk control, risk financing, ERM
Audience: Risk managers, underwriters, claims professionals, safety specialists, corporate leaders
Continuing Education: Not required
Related Designations: CPCU, AINS, AU™, AIC

Thanks for Visiting Us!
Would you mind answering 3 quick questions so we can better serve insurance professionals?

How useful have you found Insurance Designation Lookup to be as a way to explore insurance designation options?

Would anything make it more helpful to you or a colleague?

Would you recommend it to a colleague?