North Carolina Real Estate Broker Exam Study Guide

The numbers that matter

The North Carolina real estate broker exam includes 140 scored questions, and you must earn a score of 75 on each section — meaning you cannot let one section carry the other. The exam fee is $63, so every retake has a real cost attached.

What this means for your study plan

  • Balance your prep across both sections. Because a 75 is required on each section independently, being an ace at national topics won't rescue a weak state-law performance. Budget review time for your weaker section, not your favorite one.
  • Pace yourself for volume. With 140 scored questions, endurance matters. Practice full-length sessions so question 120 gets the same focus as question 12.
  • Treat the $63 fee as a study motivator. One thorough prep cycle is cheaper than repeated attempts.

The North Carolina Real Estate Broker Exam is the licensing test you must pass to become a provisional broker in North Carolina. It is administered by Pearson VUE on behalf of the North Carolina Real Estate Commission (NCREC), and it is split into two distinct sections: a national portion covering real estate principles and practices that apply anywhere in the United States, and a state portion covering North Carolina–specific law, rules, and Commission procedures.

Key exam facts at a glance

  • Questions: 140 scored questions.
  • Passing score: 75 on each section.
  • Exam fee: $63.

Because you must pass both sections, treat the national and state material as two separate study tracks. A strong score on one section does not offset a weak score on the other — you are scored on each independently, and both must clear the bar.

What creates an agency relationship

An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties. Exam questions often hinge on identifying who the principal is — everything else (duties, disclosure, loyalty) flows from that answer.

The OLD CAR duties

Fiduciary duties are summarized by the acronym OLD CAR: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care and diligence. Three of these carry exam-favorite nuances:

  • Loyalty requires the agent to place the principal's interests above the agent's own and above all others — including the agent's commission.
  • Confidentiality survives termination of the agency and forbids revealing information that would harm the principal's bargaining position. Watch for questions where the listing has expired: the duty of confidentiality still applies.
  • Accounting requires depositing client funds in a separate trust or escrow account and never commingling them with the broker's own funds. "Commingling" is the trigger word to watch for in answer choices.

Special vs. general agents

A special agent has limited authority for a single transaction — the typical listing agent. A general agent may bind the principal in a range of matters, such as a property manager. If a question describes ongoing, multi-matter authority, think general agent.

Dual agency and duties to customers

Dual agency — representing both buyer and seller in the same transaction — is permitted only with the informed written consent of both parties. Verbal consent or consent from only one party is not enough.

Agents owe customers (non-clients) honesty and fair dealing and must disclose known material latent defects in the property — but they do not owe customers fiduciary duties. A classic trap answer suggests an agent owes loyalty to a customer; they don't.

What creates an agency relationship

An agency relationship arises when a principal authorizes an agent to act on the principal's behalf in dealings with third parties. Understanding when this relationship begins — and what it obligates the broker to do — is one of the most heavily tested areas of the exam.

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.

  • 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, never commingling them with the broker's own funds.

Special vs. general agents

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 and customer duties

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

When a question describes a broker withholding a material latent defect from a customer, or commingling earnest money in a personal account, it is testing your recognition of a fiduciary duty violation — memorize OLD CAR cold, since exam questions frequently ask you to match a scenario to the specific duty it breaches.

The 75 threshold on each section

North Carolina requires a score of 75 on each section of the exam. This is the single most important number to internalize: it is a per-section requirement, not a combined average. Plan your preparation so that you are comfortably above 75 on practice tests for both the national and state content before you sit for the real thing.

Working through 140 questions

With 140 scored questions on the exam, budget your time so you are not rushing the final questions. A practical approach is to make a first pass answering everything you know quickly, flag anything uncertain, and return to flagged items with your remaining time.

How to build a margin of safety

  • Aim for practice-exam scores meaningfully above 75 so a few tough questions on test day don't pull you under the line.
  • Track your national vs. state scores separately, since each must independently reach 75.
  • Answer every question — leaving a question blank guarantees no credit, so make an educated guess on anything you cannot resolve.

The $63 exam fee applies each time you register, so building a comfortable margin above the 75 threshold before test day is the most cost-effective strategy.

The four essential elements

A valid real estate contract requires mutual assent (offer and acceptance), consideration, legally competent parties, and a lawful object. When a question asks whether a contract exists, check each element in turn — the missing one is usually the answer.

Offer and acceptance mechanics

  • Acceptance must be unqualified: any material change to the terms operates as a counteroffer that rejects and extinguishes the original offer. Once a buyer counters, they cannot later "accept" the seller's original offer — it no longer exists.
  • An offer may be revoked any time before acceptance is communicated. Timing scenarios (revocation letter vs. acceptance call) test exactly this rule.

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 to be enforceable. Note the flip side: a shorter lease can be oral and still enforceable.

Void, voidable, unenforceable — keep them straight

  • Void: lacking a required element — it never existed legally.
  • Voidable: one party may disaffirm it, such as a contract signed by a minor. It is valid until disaffirmed.
  • Unenforceable: otherwise valid but cannot be enforced in court — the classic example being an unwritten land-sale agreement.

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. If a contingency fails, the party is excused from performing rather than in breach.

When breach does occur, know two remedies:

  • Specific performance compels conveyance because land is deemed unique — money alone may not make the buyer whole.
  • Liquidated damages clauses let the seller retain the earnest money as the agreed measure of the buyer's default.

The exam fee

The fee to take the North Carolina Real Estate Broker Exam is $63, paid to Pearson VUE when you schedule your appointment. This is the examination fee specifically — it is separate from other costs in the licensing journey, such as your pre-licensing education course and the license application fee charged by the North Carolina Real Estate Commission.

Budgeting for a possible retake

If you do not reach the required score of 75 on a section, you will need to reschedule and pay the exam fee again. Since the $63 fee recurs with each attempt, the cheapest path to licensure is thorough preparation that gets you over the 75 line on the first try.

What the fee does — and doesn't — cover

  • The $63 covers your seat for the exam session with its 140 scored questions.
  • It does not cover pre-licensing coursework, background checks, or the separate license application.
  • Confirm current fees directly with Pearson VUE and the NCREC before registering, as ancillary costs can change.

Estates in land

The fee simple absolute is the highest and most complete form of ownership — freely inheritable and transferable. Contrast it with the life estate, which lasts for the duration of a named person's life, after which title passes to a remainderman or reverts to the grantor. Exam questions often ask what happens at the life tenant's death: trace where the title goes next.

What makes a deed valid

A deed must be:

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

Note what is not on that list — the grantee's signature is not required.

Deed types: protection spectrum

A general warranty deed offers the greatest protection because the grantor warrants title against all defects arising at any time. At the other extreme, a quitclaim deed carries no warranties and conveys only whatever interest the grantor may have — possibly nothing. If a question asks which deed a grantee should prefer, general warranty; which carries the least risk to the grantor, quitclaim.

Recording, liens, and easements

  • 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 — a frequent exception-to-the-rule question, since most lien priority follows recording order.
  • An easement appurtenant benefits the adjoining dominant tenement, burdens the servient tenement, and runs with the land — it transfers automatically with the benefited parcel.

Estates in land

The fee simple absolute is the highest and most complete form of ownership, freely inheritable and transferable. By contrast, 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.

What makes a deed valid

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.

Deed types and the warranties they carry

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. At the opposite end, a quitclaim deed carries no warranties and conveys only whatever interest the grantor may have — useful for clearing a cloud on title, but it offers the grantee no protection if the grantor actually held no interest.

Recording and lien priority

Recording the deed in the public land records gives constructive notice to the world and establishes priority. However, property tax liens and special assessments generally take priority over all other liens regardless of when they were recorded — this is an important exception to the general "first recorded, first priority" rule and a favorite exam trap.

Easements

An easement appurtenant benefits an adjoining parcel, the dominant tenement, and burdens the servient tenement, and it runs with the land, meaning it transfers automatically with the property regardless of what the deed says.

Divide your study by section

Because the exam is scored separately on its national and North Carolina–specific content, and because a score of 75 is required on each, the smartest study plan mirrors that structure. Split your preparation into two tracks and give each enough attention to clear 75 comfortably.

Practice under realistic conditions

Simulate the full experience: work through practice sets sized to the real exam's 140 questions, timed, in one sitting. This builds the stamina and pacing you'll need and reveals which topics still fall below your target.

A sample weekly rhythm

  • Learn: Read and take notes on one topic area at a time.
  • Drill: Do focused question sets on that topic until you're consistently accurate.
  • Mix: Take a mixed practice test spanning everything you've covered so far.
  • Review: Re-study every missed question until you understand why the correct answer is correct.

Keep sitting practice exams until you're scoring safely above 75 on both sections. At that point — and given the $63 fee for each attempt — you're ready to schedule with confidence.

Two documents, two jobs

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. If a question asks which document creates the debt, it's the note; which creates the security interest, the mortgage or deed of trust.

Title theory vs. lien theory

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.

Clauses and points

  • The acceleration clause lets the lender declare the entire balance due upon default — the answer whenever a question describes "calling the whole loan due."
  • One discount point equals one percent of the loan amount and is prepaid interest that buys down the interest rate. For math questions, multiply the loan amount (not the purchase price) by 1% per point.

Loan types and PMI

  • Conventional loans are not government-backed.
  • FHA loans are insured by the FHA and allow low down payments.
  • VA loans are guaranteed for eligible veterans and can permit no down payment.
  • Private mortgage insurance (PMI) is typically required on conventional loans when the down payment is less than twenty percent.

Memorize the verb pairs: FHA insures, VA guarantees — exams test that distinction directly.

RESPA and TILA

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. Match the law to its keyword: kickbacks → RESPA; APR disclosure and rescission → TILA/Reg Z.

The seven federally protected classes

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 discriminatory practices

Three practices are commonly tested by name:

  • 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.
  • Redlining — denying loans in certain areas.

Discrimination based on race, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions — unlike the federal Fair Housing Act, which contains limited exemptions for certain owner-occupied buildings and private clubs, race discrimination claims under the 1866 Act cannot rely on any such exemption.

Valuation fundamentals

Market value is the most probable price a property should bring in a competitive and open market under fair-sale conditions. The principle of substitution holds that a buyer will pay no more than the cost of an equally desirable substitute — this principle underlies all three valuation approaches.

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.

Property management as general agency

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.

Fair housing: the seven protected classes

The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits housing discrimination based on seven protected classes: race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Learn to spot the three named violations by their fact patterns, not their labels:

  • 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 rule stands apart: discrimination based on race, established under the Civil Rights Act of 1866, has no exemptions. Whenever an answer choice suggests an exemption applies to race-based discrimination, it is wrong.

Valuation essentials

Market value is the most probable price a property should bring in a competitive and open market under fair-sale conditions — "most probable price," not the highest price or the asking price.

The three approaches to value:

  • Sales comparison approach — adjusts comparable sales.
  • Cost approach — sums land value plus the depreciated cost of improvements.
  • Income approach — capitalizes net operating income by dividing NOI by the capitalization rate.

Underneath the sales comparison approach sits the principle of substitution: a buyer will pay no more than the cost of an equally desirable substitute.

Property management ties it together

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. This connects two exam topics: the special-vs-general agent distinction from agency law, and NOI from the income approach to value.

Frequently asked questions

How many questions are on the North Carolina Real Estate Broker Exam, and what score do I need to pass?

The exam contains 140 scored questions, and you need a score of 75 on each section to pass. Because passing is required on each section separately, you should prepare across all content areas rather than relying on strength in one topic to offset weakness in another.

How much does it cost to take the North Carolina Real Estate Broker Exam?

The exam fee is $63, paid through Pearson VUE. Keep in mind that if you fail either section, retaking the exam means paying again, so thorough preparation before your first attempt is the most cost-effective approach.

What are the fiduciary duties I need to know for the agency law questions?

Memorize the acronym OLD CAR: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care and diligence. Two nuances the exam loves to test: loyalty requires placing the principal's interests above the agent's own and above all others, and confidentiality survives termination of the agency — you can never reveal information that would harm the principal's bargaining position, even after the relationship ends. Also remember that these fiduciary duties are owed only to your principal; customers are owed honesty and fair dealing plus disclosure of known material latent defects, but not fiduciary duties.

What contract law concepts are most commonly tested, and what should I focus on?

Start with the four essential elements of a valid contract: mutual assent, consideration, legally competent parties, and a lawful object. Then master the offer-and-acceptance timeline: an offer may be revoked any time before acceptance is communicated, and any material change to the terms operates as a counteroffer that rejects and extinguishes the original offer — a classic trap question. Know 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 to be enforceable. Finally, be able to distinguish void (lacking a required element), voidable (a party may disaffirm, such as a contract signed by a minor), and unenforceable (valid but not enforceable in court) contracts.