Florida Real Estate Broker Exam Study Guide

Before you dive into the substance, know exactly what you're walking into. The Florida Real Estate Broker Exam is a timed, multiple-choice test with a fixed passing threshold.

The essentials

  • Questions: The exam contains 100 multiple choice questions.
  • Time limit: You have 210 minutes (three and a half hours) to complete it.
  • Passing score: You need a grade of 75 points or higher to pass.

What this means for pacing

With 210 minutes for 100 questions, you have roughly two minutes per question on average. That's generous — but it also means you can afford to flag hard questions, move on, and return to them. Budget the first pass at about 90 seconds per question, leaving a reserve for review. Because the passing bar is 75, you can miss up to a quarter of the questions and still pass, so don't panic over a handful of tough items; focus on locking in the categories you know cold.

What You're Walking Into

The Florida Real Estate Broker Exam is a 100-question, multiple-choice test. You are given 210 minutes — three and a half hours — to complete it, and you need a grade of 75 points or higher to pass.

  • Questions: 100 multiple choice
  • Time limit: 210 minutes (3.5 hours)
  • Passing grade: 75 points or higher

Put those numbers together and the shape of the challenge becomes clear: with 100 questions and a passing threshold of 75 points, you are effectively aiming for 75% accuracy. That means the exam tolerates roughly a quarter of your answers being wrong — you do not need a perfect score, you need a consistently solid one. Internalizing this early changes how you should study and how you should behave on exam day: your goal is broad, reliable competence across the material, not flawless mastery of every obscure corner.

Because exam policies and requirements can change, always confirm current details directly with the Florida DBPR at myfloridalicense.com before your test date.

Agency is the backbone of real estate brokerage, and it's heavily tested. Master the definition, the duties, and the distinctions.

What agency is

An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties. Two structural distinctions matter: a special agent has limited authority for a single transaction, while a general agent may bind the principal across a range of matters — a property manager is the classic general agent.

The fiduciary duties: OLD CAR

The agent's core fiduciary duties are summarized by the acronym OLD CAR: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care and diligence. A few carry frequent exam traps:

  • 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 — so it doesn't end at closing.
  • Accounting requires depositing client funds in a separate trust or escrow account and never commingling them with the broker's own funds.

Customers vs. principals

Agents owe customers honesty and fair dealing and must disclose known material latent defects, but they do not owe customers fiduciary duties. If a question hinges on who is owed loyalty, the answer is the principal, not the customer. Note too that dual agency — representing both buyer and seller in the same transaction — is permitted only with the informed written consent of both parties.

The Math That Should Drive Your Pacing

Dividing 210 minutes across 100 questions gives you an average of 2.1 minutes per question. That is a generous budget compared with many licensing exams — but only if you actually protect it. The candidates who run out of time are almost never slow readers; they are people who spent six or seven minutes wrestling with a single hard question early on.

A Checkpoint System

Rather than watching the clock constantly, check your position at a few fixed milestones:

  • After ~50 questions: you should have roughly half your time — about 105 minutes — remaining. If you're behind, speed up on questions you're unsure about rather than rushing the ones you know.
  • After ~75 questions: around 50 minutes should remain. This is your signal to start closing out flagged questions rather than opening new deep analysis.
  • Final stretch: reserve time at the end to revisit anything you flagged and to confirm every question has an answer recorded.

The Two-Pass Method

On your first pass, answer everything you can decide within about a minute and flag the rest. On your second pass, return to the flagged questions with your remaining time. This approach banks the points you've already earned through studying before you invest time in the hardest material — and given that the passing bar is 75 points, banking sure points first is the single highest-leverage exam-day tactic.

The four essential elements

A valid real estate contract requires mutual assent (offer and acceptance), consideration, legally competent parties, and a lawful object. If any one is missing, you don't have a binding deal.

Offer and acceptance mechanics

  • An offer may be revoked any time before acceptance is communicated.
  • Acceptance must be unqualified, so any material change to the terms operates as a counteroffer that rejects and extinguishes the original offer. That's a common trap: once you counter, the original offer is gone — you can't later 'accept' it.

Void, voidable, unenforceable

These three are easy to confuse, so nail the distinctions: a contract lacking a required element is void (it never existed legally); a contract a party may disaffirm, such as one signed by a minor, is voidable; and one that is otherwise valid but cannot be enforced in court, such as an unwritten land-sale agreement, is unenforceable.

Statute of Frauds

The Statute of Frauds 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 to be enforceable. That's why an oral land-sale agreement lands in the 'unenforceable' bucket above.

Contingencies and remedies

Contingencies are conditions that must be satisfied before a party is obligated to perform — commonly financing, inspection, and appraisal contingencies. If a deal breaks down, two remedies show up repeatedly: specific performance compels conveyance because land is deemed unique, and liquidated damages clauses let the seller retain the earnest money as the agreed measure of the buyer's default.

Think in Terms of a Margin

Passing requires 75 points on a 100-question exam. Reframe that: you have a built-in margin of roughly 25 questions. Strong candidates use this margin deliberately instead of being paralyzed by questions they can't crack.

How to Spend Your Margin Wisely

  • Don't let one question cost you three. A brutal question that eats five minutes doesn't just risk one point — it steals time from later questions you could have answered correctly. Make your best selection, flag it, and move on.
  • Eliminate before you guess. On multiple-choice questions, ruling out even one or two clearly wrong options meaningfully improves your odds on the remainder. Most broker-level questions have at least one distractor that contradicts a core principle you know.
  • Watch for qualifier words. Words like "always," "never," "must," and "except" frequently determine the correct answer. Broker exams reward careful reading as much as raw knowledge — misreading "which is NOT" is one of the most common self-inflicted wounds.
  • Trust your preparation on review. When revisiting flagged answers, change a response only if you can articulate a specific reason the new choice is better. Vague second-guessing tends to convert right answers into wrong ones.

Before your exam, verify the current scoring rules and any answer-recording policies with the Florida DBPR, since administrative details can change.

Estates in land

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

Deed requirements and types

A deed must be in writing, name the parties, contain a legal description, include a granting clause, and be signed by the grantor and delivered and accepted to be effective. The type of deed controls how much protection the buyer gets:

  • A general warranty deed offers the greatest protection because the grantor warrants title against all defects arising at any time.
  • A quitclaim deed carries no warranties and conveys only whatever interest the grantor may have — so it offers the least protection.

Recording and lien priority

Recording the deed in the public land records gives constructive notice to the world and establishes priority. But priority has an important exception: property tax liens and special assessments generally take priority over all other liens regardless of when they were recorded. If a question asks which lien gets paid first, tax liens usually win.

Easements

An easement appurtenant benefits an adjoining dominant tenement, burdens the servient tenement, and runs with the land — meaning it transfers automatically to new owners.

Build Around Full-Length Simulation

The single most valuable preparation habit for this exam is taking full-length practice tests under real conditions: 100 questions, 210 minutes, no interruptions, no looking anything up. A timed 3.5-hour sitting is a genuine endurance event — mental fatigue in the final third of the exam degrades accuracy for candidates who have only ever practiced in 20-question bursts. Simulating the real format trains both your knowledge and your stamina.

Use Your Practice Scores Diagnostically

Since the passing bar is 75 points, your practice-test scores give you a direct readiness signal. Score each practice exam against that threshold, then go further: categorize every miss. Was it a knowledge gap, a misread question, a calculation slip, or a time-pressure error? Each failure type has a different fix — more study, slower reading, showing your work, or better pacing, respectively. Candidates consistently scoring comfortably above the 75-point line under timed conditions are in a strong position; candidates hovering near it should treat the gap between their weakest topic areas and their strongest as the map for their remaining study time.

Active Recall Beats Rereading

  • Practice questions over passive review. Answering questions — and studying the explanations for both right and wrong answers — builds retrieval strength that rereading notes cannot.
  • Teach it back. If you can explain a concept aloud in plain language without notes, you know it. If you stumble, you've found a gap.
  • Drill your weak areas disproportionately. Time spent re-confirming what you already know feels productive but adds few points. The margin between failing and passing usually lives in your two or three weakest topics.
  • Practice math by hand and unhurried. Calculation questions are among the most reliable points on real estate exams for prepared candidates — the setups repeat, and careful work converts them into near-guaranteed points within your 2.1-minute-per-question budget.

For the authoritative, current outline of exam content and requirements, consult the Florida DBPR at myfloridalicense.com — official sources should always anchor your study plan.

The Day Before

Do not cram. By the final day, your score is essentially set by the weeks of preparation behind you — a frantic last-night review adds anxiety, not points. Do a light pass over your summary notes, confirm your appointment details and what you're required to bring (verify current check-in requirements with the Florida DBPR and your exam provider), and prioritize sleep. Alertness across a 210-minute exam is worth more than any fact you could memorize the night before.

During the Exam

  • Start calm and controlled. The first few questions set your rhythm. Read each one fully — including every answer choice — before selecting.
  • Remember your margin. When you hit a question you can't answer, remind yourself the passing bar is 75 points, not 100. One hard question is expected, not a crisis. Flag it and keep moving.
  • Use your checkpoints. Glance at your progress around the midpoint and again in the final quarter, as covered in the pacing section above.
  • Leave nothing unresolved. Before your time expires, make sure every question has a recorded answer and revisit your flags in the time remaining.

Keep Perspective

One hundred questions, three and a half hours, and a 75-point bar: this exam rewards steady, prepared candidates who manage their time and their nerves. If you've done honest full-length practice and addressed your weak areas, exam day is simply the place where you demonstrate what you've already built. Good luck — and confirm every logistical detail with the official source at myfloridalicense.com before you go.

The two instruments

A mortgage loan involves two documents: a promissory note evidencing the debt and a mortgage or deed of trust that pledges the property as security. Who holds title during the loan depends on the state: in a title-theory state the lender holds legal title until the debt is paid, while in a lien-theory state the borrower holds title and the lender holds only a lien.

Clauses and costs

  • The acceleration clause lets the lender declare the entire balance due upon default.
  • One discount point equals one percent of the loan amount and is prepaid interest that buys down the interest rate. On a $200,000 loan, one point costs $2,000.
  • Private mortgage insurance (PMI) is typically required on conventional loans when the down payment is less than twenty percent.

Loan types

Conventional loans are not government-backed; FHA loans are insured by the FHA and allow low down payments; and VA loans are guaranteed for eligible veterans and can permit no down payment.

Federal disclosure law

Two acts dominate the exam. 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 and grants a three-day right of rescission on certain refinances of a principal residence. A memory hook: RESPA targets kickbacks and settlement costs; TILA targets the true cost of credit (APR).

Protected classes and prohibited practices

The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits housing discrimination based on seven protected classes: race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Know the named illegal practices cold:

  • Steering — directing buyers toward or away from neighborhoods based on a protected class.
  • Blockbusting — inducing sales by suggesting a protected group is moving in.
  • Redlining — denying loans in certain areas.

One critical exception rule: discrimination based on race, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions. So even where other exemptions might apply, race-based discrimination is never permitted.

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, the cost approach, and the income approach. Underpinning them is the principle of substitution, which 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 NOI drives the income approach, a manager who raises NOI also raises the property's appraised value under that approach.

Frequently asked questions

How many questions are on the Florida Real Estate Broker Exam, how long do I get, and what score do I need to pass?

The Florida Real Estate Broker Exam consists of 100 multiple-choice questions and you are given 210 minutes (three and a half hours) to complete it. You need a grade of 75 points or higher to pass. Working backward, that leaves you a little over two minutes per question, so pacing matters — you can afford to flag and return to tough questions rather than stalling on them.

What are the fiduciary duties an agent owes a principal, and how do they differ from what's owed to a customer?

An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties, and the agent's core fiduciary duties are 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, and Accounting requires depositing client funds in a separate trust or escrow account and never commingling them with the broker's own funds. By contrast, agents owe customers only honesty and fair dealing plus disclosure of known material latent defects — not fiduciary duties. A useful exam trap to remember: Confidentiality survives termination of the agency, so an agent cannot later reveal information that would harm the former principal's bargaining position.

Which real estate contracts must be in writing, and what makes a contract void, voidable, or unenforceable?

Under the Statute of Frauds, contracts for the sale of real estate — and leases longer than one year — must be in writing and signed by the party to be charged in order to be enforceable. A valid contract needs four essential elements: mutual assent (offer and acceptance), consideration, legally competent parties, and a lawful object. If a required element is missing, the contract is void (it never legally existed); if a party may disaffirm it — such as one signed by a minor — it is voidable; and if it is otherwise valid but cannot be enforced in court, such as an unwritten land-sale agreement, it is unenforceable. Because acceptance must be unqualified, any material change to the terms operates as a counteroffer that rejects and extinguishes the original offer — a distinction the exam loves to test.

What are the federal Fair Housing protected classes, and what discriminatory practices should I be able to recognize?

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. You should be able to identify three classic prohibited practices by name: 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). One important nuance for the exam: discrimination based on race, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions — so even where some Fair Housing Act exemptions might otherwise apply, race-based discrimination is never permitted.