Florida Real Estate Sales Associate Exam Study Guide

Before diving into the law, it helps to know exactly what test day looks like. The Florida Real Estate Sales Associate licensing exam is administered by Pearson VUE, and knowing the format lets you build a pacing plan.

The numbers you need to know

  • 100 multiple-choice questions. The exam consists of one hundred multiple-choice questions.
  • 210 minutes (three and a half hours). You are given three and a half hours to complete the exam.
  • Passing score: 75 points. You must earn a grade of 75 points or higher to pass.

What this means for your pacing

With 100 questions in 210 minutes, you have just over two minutes per question on average — a comfortable pace that leaves room to flag and revisit tougher items. Because 75 points is the passing threshold, aim in practice to consistently score well above that margin so that a few surprise questions on exam day don't drop you below the line.

The Florida Real Estate Sales Associate state licensing exam is a computer-based test administered by Pearson VUE. Knowing the mechanics of the exam before you sit for it removes surprises on test day and lets you budget your time with confidence.

The core numbers

  • 100 multiple-choice questions. The exam consists of one hundred multiple-choice questions.
  • 210 minutes (3.5 hours) to finish. You are given three and a half hours to complete the entire exam.
  • 75 points to pass. You must earn a grade of 75 points or higher to pass.

What this means for your pacing

With 210 minutes for 100 questions, you have an average of just over two minutes per question. In practice this is generous — most well-prepared candidates finish with time to spare. The smart strategy is to move quickly through questions you know cold, flag anything uncertain, and reserve the back half of your time budget to revisit flagged items and double-check calculation problems.

Agency relationships are the backbone of real estate practice, and they generate a large share of exam questions. An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties.

The OLD CAR fiduciary duties

The agent's core fiduciary duties are commonly summarized by the acronym OLD CAR: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care and diligence. A few of these carry nuances the exam loves to test:

  • 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.

Customers vs. clients

Agents owe customers honesty and fair dealing and must disclose known material latent defects, but they do not owe customers fiduciary duties. This distinction between a client (principal) and a customer (third party) is a frequent source of trick questions.

Even though 210 minutes for 100 questions is generous, a deliberate pacing plan keeps you from lingering too long on any single item and helps you finish with time to review.

A three-pass approach

  • First pass — the easy wins: Move through all 100 questions and answer everything you are confident about. Flag anything that requires calculation or a second look.
  • Second pass — the flagged items: Return to your flagged questions with a fresh eye. You now have the bulk of your time budget concentrated on the questions that need it.
  • Third pass — final review: Confirm you have answered all 100 questions (never leave a blank on a scored multiple-choice exam) and revisit any answers you were unsure about.

Checkpoints

A simple way to stay on track: at the halfway mark in time — around 105 minutes in — you should be at or past question 50. If you are behind that pace, start committing to answers more decisively rather than second-guessing.

Because there is no penalty framework that rewards blank answers, always record a best-guess answer for every question before time expires.

The 75-point threshold

Passing requires a grade of 75 points or higher. On a 100-question exam, this translates to answering 75 questions correctly — there is a direct one-point-per-question relationship, so every single item you get right moves you toward the line. You can miss up to 25 questions and still pass.

Answer every question

Because the exam is entirely multiple choice, there is no penalty structure that rewards leaving an item blank. If a question stumps you, eliminate the answer choices you know are wrong and make your best educated guess — an unanswered question is guaranteed to earn nothing, while a guess always carries a chance of being correct.

Guard your margin

Aiming only for exactly 75 is risky. Because the pass line sits at 75 out of 100, a study target of 85+ on your practice exams gives you a comfortable buffer against a few unexpectedly tricky questions on the real thing.

Contract law questions test whether you can recognize when an enforceable agreement exists and what happens when it fails. Start with the essentials.

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 contract to enforce.

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.

The 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.

Void, voidable, and unenforceable

These three terms are easy to confuse and heavily tested. A contract lacking a required element is void; one a party may disaffirm (such as one signed by a minor) is voidable; and one that is valid but cannot be enforced in court, such as an unwritten land-sale agreement, is unenforceable.

Contingencies and remedies for breach

Contingencies are conditions that must be satisfied before a party is obligated to perform, commonly financing, inspection, and appraisal contingencies. When a party breaches, remedies include specific performance, which compels conveyance because land is deemed unique, and liquidated damages clauses, which let the seller retain the earnest money as the agreed measure of the buyer's default.

The passing standard for the Florida Sales Associate exam is a grade of 75 points or higher. Understanding how that threshold works helps you set concrete, measurable study targets.

Reverse-engineering the passing bar

With 100 questions on the exam and a required grade of 75, the passing line sits at 75%. That leaves a margin of up to 25 questions you can miss and still pass — but treating that margin as a safety net is risky, because question difficulty and topic weighting vary from form to form.

Setting your personal target

  • Minimum to pass: 75 points.
  • Practice-test goal: Consistently score 85 or above before booking your exam. The gap between practice conditions and the real test — nerves, unfamiliar wording, fatigue over three and a half hours — tends to shave points off your true ability.
  • Weak-area rule: If any single topic pulls your practice score below 75, dedicate focused study to it rather than spreading effort evenly.

Track your practice results over time. A steady upward trend that clears 85 across several full-length attempts is a far stronger signal of readiness than a single lucky score.

You need a grade of 75 points or higher to pass. On a 100-question exam, that translates to answering at least 75 questions correctly — you can miss up to 25 and still pass.

What this means for your prep

A 75-point threshold is demanding but achievable: it leaves a margin for the handful of tricky or unfamiliar questions every test-taker encounters, but it is high enough that you cannot afford large blind spots. Rather than aiming for exactly 75, set a personal practice-test target well above the line — consistently scoring in the mid-80s or higher on realistic practice exams gives you a cushion for exam-day nerves and question phrasing you didn't anticipate.

Turn the score into a study checklist

  • Track your weakest topic areas on every practice test.
  • Prioritize the areas where missing questions would most easily push you below 75.
  • Re-test until you clear your personal buffer target repeatedly, not just once.

You have 210 minutes to answer 100 questions. Rather than watching the clock question by question, use checkpoints to stay on pace.

Checkpoint pacing

  • First 105 minutes (halfway point): aim to have reached at least question 50. This keeps you exactly on the pace implied by an even 210-minutes-for-100-questions split.
  • Flag, don't freeze: if a question takes more than about two minutes, mark it and move on. The average budget is just over two minutes per question, so lingering on one item borrows time from several others.
  • Final review pass: a candidate who maintains pace should finish the first run-through with time remaining, which can be spent revisiting flagged questions and re-checking math-based problems.

Why this works

The exam's time allotment is comfortable relative to its length, so the risk is rarely running out of time — it's spending disproportionate time on a handful of hard questions and rushing the rest. Checkpoints convert the 3.5-hour block into manageable segments.

This domain covers what you actually own and how it transfers. Focus on the hierarchy of estates and the differences between deed types.

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 and their warranties

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. The type of deed determines how much protection the buyer receives:

  • 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.

Recording, liens, and easements

Recording the deed in the public land records gives constructive notice to the world and establishes priority. Priority matters because property tax liens and special assessments generally take priority over all other liens regardless of when they were recorded. Finally, an easement appurtenant benefits an adjoining dominant tenement, burdens the servient tenement, and runs with the land.

Financing questions blend loan mechanics with the federal disclosure laws that govern them. Master the vocabulary first.

The two loan instruments

A mortgage loan involves a promissory note evidencing the debt and a mortgage or deed of trust that pledges the property as security. Who holds title while the loan is outstanding 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. If a borrower defaults, the acceleration clause lets the lender declare the entire balance due.

Points, PMI, and loan types

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

RESPA and TILA (Regulation Z)

Two federal laws dominate this topic. 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.

The final domain groups three practice areas that each generate reliable exam points: anti-discrimination law, how value is estimated, and how property is managed.

Fair housing

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 prohibited practices by name:

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

Note that discrimination based on race, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions — a favorite exam distinction from the Fair Housing Act's limited 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, 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.

Frequently asked questions

How many questions are on the Florida Real Estate Sales Associate Exam, and how long do I have?

The Florida Real Estate Sales Associate Exam consists of 100 multiple-choice questions, and you are given 210 minutes (three and a half hours) to complete it. That works out to just over two minutes per question, so pacing is comfortable if you keep moving. Because there is no penalty framework that rewards leaving items blank, plan to answer every question — mark any you're unsure of and return to them with your remaining time.

What score do I need to pass the Florida Sales Associate Exam?

You need a grade of 75 points or higher to pass. On a 100-question exam, that corresponds to answering at least 75 questions correctly, so you can miss up to 25 questions and still pass. Aim well above the minimum on your practice exams — consistently scoring in the low-to-mid 80s gives you a safety margin for exam-day nerves and the handful of tricky math or statute questions that often trip candidates up.

How should I budget my time during the 210-minute exam?

With 210 minutes for 100 questions, you have an average of about 2.1 minutes per question. A practical strategy is to make a first pass answering everything you know quickly — aiming for roughly 90 seconds on straightforward items — which banks extra time for the calculation-heavy questions (proration, commission splits, and closing statements) that take longer. Reserve the final 20 to 30 minutes to revisit flagged questions and verify your math.

Is the passing score a percentage or a raw point total?

The passing standard is a grade of 75 points or higher. Because the exam has exactly 100 questions, the point total and the percentage happen to line up: 75 points is effectively 75% correct. This one-to-one relationship makes tracking your progress simple — your percentage correct on any full-length 100-question practice test is directly comparable to the 75-point bar you'll face on the real exam.