California Real Estate Broker Exam Study Guide

Exam Format

The California broker exam consists of 200 multiple choice questions, and candidates must answer 75% of them correctly to pass. The exam fee is $150.

Because the passing threshold is fixed at 75%, prioritize the highest-tested domains — agency, contracts, finance, and fair housing — rather than spreading study time evenly across every topic.

What Is Agency?

An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties.

Fiduciary Duties: OLD CAR

Fiduciary duties are commonly summarized by the acronym OLD CAR: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care and diligence.

  • Loyalty requires the agent to place the principal's interests above the agent's own and above all others.
  • Confidentiality survives termination of the agency and forbids revealing information that would harm the principal's bargaining position.
  • Accounting requires depositing client funds in a separate trust or escrow account and never commingling them with the broker's own funds.

Types of Agency

A special agent has limited authority for a single transaction; a general agent may bind the principal in a range of matters, such as a property manager.

Dual agency, representing both buyer and seller in the same transaction, is permitted only with the informed written consent of both parties.

Duties to Customers

Agents owe third parties, including customers, honesty and fair dealing and must disclose known material latent defects in the property, but they do not owe customers fiduciary duties.

Exam questions often test whether a duty listed under OLD CAR applies to a principal only or extends to third-party customers — remembering that customers get honesty and material-defect disclosure, not full fiduciary protection, resolves most of these questions.

Turning the Passing Score Into a Study Target

The exam requires 75% correct out of 200 questions, which works out to 150 correct answers. Setting a personal practice-test goal a few points above that threshold gives you a buffer for exam-day nerves and unexpectedly worded questions.

Pacing Yourself

With 200 questions to work through, budgeting your time evenly and flagging tough questions to revisit is a practical way to avoid leaving easy points on the table. Answer every question — since scoring is based on the percentage correct, an educated guess never hurts your score relative to leaving a question blank.

Is the Fee Worth Retaking?

The $150 exam fee is a real cost of a retake, so it's worth investing in thorough preparation the first time. Consistently scoring above 75% on full-length practice exams before you sit for the real thing is a reasonable readiness signal.

Essential Elements

A valid real estate contract requires four essential elements: mutual assent (offer and acceptance), consideration, legally competent parties, and a lawful object.

Offer and Acceptance

Acceptance must be unqualified, so any material change to the terms operates as a counteroffer that rejects and extinguishes the original offer. An offer may be revoked any time before acceptance is communicated.

Statute of Frauds

The Statute of Frauds requires that contracts for the sale of real estate, and leases longer than one year, be in writing and signed by the party to be charged in order to be enforceable.

Void, Voidable, and Unenforceable

A contract lacking a required element is void, meaning it never existed legally; a contract that a party may disaffirm, such as one signed by a minor, is voidable; and one that cannot be enforced in court despite being otherwise valid, such as an unwritten land-sale agreement, is unenforceable.

Contingencies and Remedies

Contingencies are conditions that must be satisfied before a party is obligated to perform, commonly including financing, inspection, and appraisal contingencies. If a buyer breaches, a seller may pursue specific performance, which compels conveyance because land is deemed unique, or rely on a liquidated damages clause that lets the seller retain the earnest money as the agreed measure of the buyer's default.

The void/voidable/unenforceable distinction is a frequent trap on exam questions — void contracts have no legal effect from the start, while voidable contracts remain valid until the protected party elects to disaffirm.

Estates in Land

The fee simple absolute is the highest and most complete form of ownership, freely inheritable and transferable. A life estate lasts for the duration of a named person's life, after which title passes to a remainderman or reverts to the grantor.

Deeds

A deed must be in writing, name the parties, contain a legal description, include words of conveyance (the granting clause), and be signed by the grantor and delivered and accepted to be effective.

A general warranty deed offers the greatest protection because the grantor warrants title against all defects arising at any time, including the covenants of seisin, quiet enjoyment, and warranty forever. A quitclaim deed carries no warranties and conveys only whatever interest the grantor may have.

Recording and Priority

Recording the deed in the public land records gives constructive notice to the world and establishes priority. Property tax liens and special assessments generally take priority over all other liens regardless of when they were recorded.

Easements

An easement appurtenant benefits an adjoining parcel, the dominant tenement, and burdens the servient tenement, and it runs with the land.

On the exam, expect scenario questions comparing warranty and quitclaim deeds — a quitclaim's lack of warranties makes it common in transfers between family members or to clear a cloud on title, not in arm's-length sales.

The Note and Security Instrument

A mortgage loan involves a promissory note evidencing the debt and the borrower's promise to pay, and a mortgage or deed of trust that pledges the property as security. In a title-theory arrangement the lender holds legal title until the debt is paid; in a lien-theory state the borrower holds title and the lender holds only a lien.

The acceleration clause lets the lender declare the entire balance due upon default.

Points and Loan Types

One discount point equals one percent of the loan amount and is prepaid interest that buys down the interest rate. Conventional loans are not government-backed; FHA loans are insured by the Federal Housing Administration and allow low down payments, while VA loans are guaranteed for eligible veterans and can permit no down payment. Private mortgage insurance is typically required on conventional loans when the down payment is less than twenty percent.

Federal Disclosure Laws

RESPA governs federally related mortgage loans, prohibits kickbacks and unearned referral fees, and requires the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure. TILA, implemented by Regulation Z, requires disclosure of the APR and total finance charge so borrowers can compare the true cost of credit, and it grants a three-day right of rescission on certain refinances of a principal residence.

Keep RESPA and TILA straight by their focus: RESPA polices settlement-service kickbacks and disclosure timing, while TILA governs the cost-of-credit disclosures and the rescission right — a distinction the exam tests directly.

Fair Housing

The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of housing based on seven protected classes: race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Prohibited practices include steering, directing buyers toward or away from neighborhoods based on a protected class; blockbusting, inducing sales by suggesting that a protected group is moving in; and redlining, denying loans in certain areas.

Discrimination based on race, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions.

Valuation and Appraisal

Market value is the most probable price a property should bring in a competitive and open market under fair-sale conditions. The three approaches to value are the sales comparison approach, which adjusts comparable sales; the cost approach, which sums land value plus the depreciated cost of improvements; and the income approach, which capitalizes net operating income by dividing NOI by the capitalization rate.

The principle of substitution holds that a buyer will pay no more than the cost of an equally desirable substitute.

Property Management

In property management, the manager is a general agent who owes fiduciary duties to the owner while maximizing net operating income and preserving the property's value.

Because the 1866 Civil Rights Act's race protections carry no exemptions while the federal Fair Housing Act permits limited exemptions for certain owner-occupied and small transactions, race-based discrimination questions on the exam should be treated as having no safe harbor.

Frequently asked questions

How many questions are on the California real estate broker exam, and what score do I need to pass?

<h3>Exam format and passing score</h3><p>The California broker exam consists of 200 multiple choice questions, and you need to answer 75% of them correctly to pass. The exam fee is $150.</p><p>Because the passing bar is a percentage rather than a fixed number right, it pays to focus your study time on the heavily tested domains — agency law, contracts, property ownership and title, finance, fair housing, and valuation — rather than trying to memorize every obscure detail.</p>

What are the fiduciary duties a broker owes to a client, and how is that different from what's owed to a customer?

<h3>Fiduciary duties: OLD CAR</h3><p>An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties. Once that relationship exists, the agent's core fiduciary duties are commonly summarized by the acronym OLD CAR: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care and diligence.</p><p>Two of these duties trip up exam-takers most often. Loyalty requires the agent to place the principal's interests above the agent's own and above all others. Accounting requires depositing client funds in a separate trust or escrow account, never commingling them with the broker's own funds — a classic exam scenario tests whether you'll flag commingling as a violation.</p><h3>Customers get less than clients</h3><p>By contrast, agents owe third-party customers only honesty and fair dealing, plus a duty to disclose known material latent defects in the property — they do not owe customers the full fiduciary package above. Expect the exam to test this client-versus-customer distinction directly.</p>

What's the difference between a void, voidable, and unenforceable contract, and why does the Statute of Frauds matter?

<h3>Void vs. voidable vs. unenforceable</h3><p>A contract lacking a required element is void, meaning it never existed legally. A contract that a party may disaffirm — such as one signed by a minor — is voidable. And a contract that cannot be enforced in court despite being otherwise valid, such as an unwritten land-sale agreement, is unenforceable.</p><p>That last category is where the Statute of Frauds comes in: it requires contracts for the sale of real estate, and leases longer than one year, to be in writing and signed by the party to be charged in order to be enforceable.</p><h3>Why this shows up on the exam</h3><p>A valid real estate contract requires four essential elements: mutual assent (offer and acceptance), consideration, legally competent parties, and a lawful object. Missing element questions are commonly tested by asking you to sort a fact pattern into void, voidable, or unenforceable — knowing the definitions cold is more useful than memorizing examples, since the exam will vary the scenario.</p>

What financing and fair housing rules come up most on the broker exam?

<h3>Financing essentials</h3><p>Every mortgage loan involves a promissory note evidencing the debt and the borrower's promise to pay, plus a mortgage or deed of trust that pledges the property as security. Know your loan types: conventional loans are not government-backed; FHA loans are insured by the Federal Housing Administration and allow low down payments; VA loans are guaranteed for eligible veterans and can permit no down payment. Private mortgage insurance is typically required on conventional loans when the down payment is less than twenty percent.</p><p>Two federal disclosure laws are frequently tested together: RESPA governs federally related mortgage loans, prohibits kickbacks and unearned referral fees, and requires the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure, while TILA (Regulation Z) requires disclosure of the APR and total finance charge and grants a three-day right of rescission on certain refinances of a principal residence.</p><h3>Fair housing basics</h3><p>The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of housing based on seven protected classes: race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Watch for scenario questions testing steering (directing buyers toward or away from neighborhoods based on a protected class), blockbusting (inducing sales by suggesting a protected group is moving in), and redlining (denying loans in certain areas). Race-based discrimination, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions — unlike some Fair Housing Act exemptions for other classes.</p>