Real Estate Salesperson Exam Study Guide

Before you can sit for the salesperson exam, you must complete the required pre-licensing education hours — the exact hour count varies by state, so confirm your state's requirement before scheduling. Once you're in the testing seat, a passing score of 70% is commonly required.

That 70% threshold shapes smart study strategy: you don't need perfection, you need consistent competence across every content area. Missing an entire domain (say, all the math questions) can sink an otherwise strong performance, so spread your preparation across agency, contracts, deeds, financing, fair housing, and math rather than over-polishing your strongest topic.

  • Prioritize breadth over depth. A question you can eliminate down to two choices is worth more than an hour spent memorizing edge cases in a topic you already know.
  • Learn the vocabulary precisely. Exam questions frequently turn on one-word distinctions — client vs. customer, exclusive right to sell vs. exclusive agency, insured vs. guaranteed.

What this exam is

The Real Estate Salesperson Exam is the licensing test you must pass to work as a real estate salesperson (agent) under a supervising broker. It measures whether you can apply core real estate concepts — agency, contracts, property ownership, finance, disclosures, and license law — safely and lawfully in day-to-day practice.

The exam is typically split into two parts: a national portion covering principles and practices that apply everywhere, and a state portion covering the specific statutes and regulations of the jurisdiction where you intend to be licensed. Because the state portion is jurisdiction-specific, always confirm the exact content outline and rules with your state's real estate commission before you sit.

How agency is created

An agency relationship arises when a principal (the client) authorizes an agent (the licensee) to act on their behalf in dealings with third parties. This client/principal relationship triggers the full set of fiduciary duties — and the exam loves to test who gets those duties and who doesn't.

Client vs. customer — a favorite exam trap

Customers are owed only honesty, fair dealing, and disclosure of known material defects — not fiduciary duties. If a question describes a buyer working with the seller's agent without any representation agreement, that buyer is a customer, and the agent's fiduciary loyalty still belongs to the seller.

The OLD CAR duties

  • O — Obedience
  • L — Loyalty: place the principal's interests above the agent's own and avoid conflicts of interest such as undisclosed self-dealing.
  • D — Disclosure
  • C — Confidentiality: this duty survives termination of the agency. Revealing the seller's lowest acceptable price is the classic violation — even after the listing ends.
  • A — Accounting: safeguard all entrusted funds; commingling client money with the agent's own funds is prohibited.
  • R — Reasonable care

Dual agency

Representing both buyer and seller in the same transaction is dual agency. It is legal only with the informed written consent of both parties, and a dual agent cannot advocate for one party against the other. Watch for answer choices where a dual agent "negotiates the best price" for one side — that's a violation.

How agency ends

Agency terminates by completion, expiration, mutual agreement, revocation, renunciation, or operation of law such as death or incapacity of either party. Remember: even after termination, confidentiality continues.

The passing threshold

A passing score of 70% is commonly required to pass the real estate salesperson exam. Plan your preparation around clearing this bar comfortably rather than just scraping by — aiming for practice-test scores in the low-to-mid 80s builds a margin for exam-day nerves and unexpectedly worded questions.

What 70% means for your study plan

Because the threshold is a percentage of questions answered correctly, you cannot afford large blind spots. Missing an entire topic area (for example, financing or fair-housing rules) can pull your overall score below the line even if you are strong elsewhere. Distribute your review across every content domain instead of over-investing in your favorites.

The three listing types

A listing agreement is an employment contract between a seller and a broker authorizing the broker to market the property and find a ready, willing, and able buyer. The exam tests the three types by asking who gets paid in a given scenario:

  • Exclusive right to sell: the broker earns a commission if the property sells during the term regardless of who procures the buyer — even if the seller finds the buyer personally.
  • Exclusive agency: the broker earns no commission if the seller personally finds the buyer.
  • Open listing: non-exclusive; the seller may list with multiple brokers, and only the broker who procures the buyer is paid.

Quick test: if the scenario says "the seller found the buyer" and asks whether commission is owed, the answer hinges entirely on which listing type is named.

What makes a contract valid

A valid real estate contract requires competent parties, mutual assent (offer and acceptance), consideration, a lawful object, and — because of the Statute of Frauds — a written and signed agreement.

Offers, counteroffers, and deposits

  • Counteroffers: any change to the terms of an offer is a counteroffer that rejects and terminates the original offer. The original offer cannot later be "accepted" — it's dead.
  • Earnest money: a good-faith deposit held in the broker's trust account.
  • Contingencies: financing, inspection, and appraisal contingencies let a buyer cancel and recover the deposit if a condition is not met.
  • Time is of the essence: stated deadlines become strictly enforceable, and missing the date is a breach.

You must complete coursework first

Completion of pre-licensing education hours is required prior to sitting for the exam. This means you cannot simply register and test cold — you must first finish an approved pre-licensing course and, typically, obtain a certificate or course-completion record that you present when scheduling or checking in for the exam.

Plan your timeline around it

Because coursework is a gate that comes before testing, build it into your schedule early. Enroll in a state-approved provider, complete the required hours, and keep your completion documentation handy. The specific number of hours and the list of approved providers are set by your state, so verify those details with your real estate commission.

What a deed is and when it works

A deed is the written instrument that conveys title to real property from a grantor to a grantee. A valid deed needs competent parties, words of conveyance, an adequate legal description, and the grantor's signature — and critically, it must be delivered to and accepted by the grantee to transfer title. A signed deed sitting in the grantor's desk drawer transfers nothing; delivery is a frequent exam angle.

The deed hierarchy — most to least protection

  • General warranty deed: the greatest protection. The grantor warrants against all title defects arising at any time, even before the grantor owned the property, through covenants such as seisin, quiet enjoyment, and warranty forever.
  • Special warranty deed: warrants only against defects that arose during the grantor's period of ownership.
  • Quitclaim deed: conveys only whatever interest the grantor may have, with no warranties. Its classic use is clearing clouds on title — if a question mentions removing an ex-spouse's possible interest or fixing a title defect, quitclaim is usually the answer.

Recording, title insurance, and marketability

  • Recording a deed in the county land records provides constructive notice to the world and establishes priority, generally protecting the first party to record.
  • Title insurance protects the insured against losses from covered title defects that existed but were unknown when the policy issued — it looks backward at existing defects, not forward at future ones.
  • Marketable title is title free from reasonable doubt or serious defects that a prudent buyer would accept.

Sequence your preparation

  1. Finish pre-licensing coursework first. It is a required prerequisite, so complete it before you set an exam date.
  2. Map the content outline. Pull the official national and state content outlines and turn each topic into a checklist.
  3. Learn, then drill. Study each domain, then reinforce it with practice questions that mimic exam wording.
  4. Simulate the test. Take full-length, timed practice exams and treat 70% as the floor, not the goal.

Focus on high-yield concepts

Concentrate on the ideas that show up repeatedly and carry legal weight: agency relationships and fiduciary duties, contract essentials, fair-housing protections, financing basics, property ownership and transfer, and required disclosures. Weak areas cost you the most because a single percentage line separates pass from fail.

The two-document structure

Most purchases are financed with a mortgage or deed of trust that pledges the property as security for repayment of a promissory note. Keep the roles straight: the note is the promise to pay; the mortgage or deed of trust is the security instrument.

In lien-theory states, the borrower keeps title and the lender holds a lien. In title-theory states, the lender or a trustee holds legal title until the debt is repaid.

Loan types — memorize the verbs

  • Conventional: not insured or guaranteed by the federal government.
  • FHA: insured by the Federal Housing Administration.
  • VA: guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs for eligible veterans.

The insured/guaranteed distinction is a standard trap answer — an option calling an FHA loan "guaranteed" is wrong.

Rules and clauses that get tested

  • PMI: generally required on conventional loans when the down payment is less than 20 percent of the purchase price.
  • Fixed vs. ARM: a fixed-rate mortgage keeps one rate for the entire term; an adjustable-rate mortgage changes periodically based on an index plus a margin.
  • Amortization: scheduled payments repay principal and interest, with early payments mostly interest and later payments mostly principal.
  • Due-on-sale clause: lets the lender demand full repayment on sale, blocking loan assumption without lender approval.
  • Discount points: prepaid interest paid at closing to lower the note rate; one point equals one percent of the loan amount.

The two federal statutes

The federal Fair Housing Act — part of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, amended in 1988 — bans discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of housing. Separately, the Civil Rights Act of 1866 prohibits all racial discrimination in property transactions with no exemptions. That "no exemptions" point matters: even where a Fair Housing Act exemption might apply, race discrimination is never permitted under the 1866 Act.

The seven protected classes

Race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Familial status protects households with children under eighteen and pregnant persons.

The three named violations — know them by definition

  • Steering: channeling buyers toward or away from neighborhoods based on a protected class.
  • Blockbusting: inducing owners to sell by suggesting people of a protected class are moving into the area.
  • Redlining: denying loans or insurance in certain areas based on protected characteristics.

A memory hook: steering moves buyers, blockbusting pressures sellers, redlining involves lenders and insurers.

Advertising and the Mrs. Murphy exemption

Advertising that indicates a preference or limitation based on a protected class is illegal even if the underlying transaction would be exempt. The narrow "Mrs. Murphy" exemption for owner-occupied buildings of four or fewer units never applies to race and cannot be used with discriminatory advertising or a real estate licensee — so once a licensee is involved, the exemption is off the table.

Commission

Commission = sale price × commission rate. Example straight from the standard formula: a property selling for $300,000 at a six percent rate generates an $18,000 commission, which is then split between the listing and selling brokers per their agreement. On split questions, work outward: total commission first, then apply each split in order.

Loan-to-value (LTV)

LTV = loan amount ÷ the lesser of appraised value or purchase price. A $240,000 loan on a $300,000 property is an 80 percent LTV, and the down payment equals the remaining 20 percent. The "lesser of" rule is the tested detail — when the appraisal and price differ, use the lower number.

Proration

Proration divides shared expenses like taxes, rent, or interest between buyer and seller based on each party's ownership portion, using the closing date as the dividing point. Two rules cover nearly every question:

  • Many exams use a 360-day banker's year with 30-day months, so the daily rate is the annual amount ÷ 360.
  • Direction of the credit: for prepaid expenses, the buyer reimburses the seller for the unused portion; for expenses paid in arrears, the seller credits the buyer for the seller's share.

Investment formulas

  • Gross rent multiplier (GRM): sale price ÷ monthly gross rent — a quick comparison tool for investors.
  • Income capitalization: net operating income ÷ capitalization rate = estimated value of an income property.

These two are easy to confuse under time pressure: GRM uses rent and yields a multiplier; capitalization uses NOI and yields a value.

Frequently asked questions

What score do I need to pass the Real Estate Salesperson Exam, and what must I do before I can sit for it?

<p>A passing score of 70% is commonly required on the Real Estate Salesperson Exam. Before you can even sit for the test, you must complete your state's required pre-licensing education hours.</p><p>Because 70% is the typical bar, you can miss roughly 3 in 10 questions and still pass — so a smart strategy is to lock down the high-volume topics (agency, contracts, and fair housing) rather than trying to memorize every edge case.</p>

What are the fiduciary duties I need to memorize, and how do exam questions test them?

<p>Memorize the acronym <strong>OLD CAR</strong>: Obedience, Loyalty, Disclosure, Confidentiality, Accounting, and Reasonable care. These are the duties an agent owes a client — a principal who has authorized the agent to act on their behalf with third parties.</p><p>Exam questions love the tricky edges of these duties:</p><ul><li><strong>Loyalty</strong> means putting the principal's interests above the agent's own and avoiding conflicts of interest.</li><li><strong>Confidentiality survives termination</strong> of the agency — you can never reveal the seller's lowest acceptable price, even after the listing ends.</li><li><strong>Accounting</strong> prohibits commingling client funds with the agent's own money.</li><li>A <strong>customer</strong> (unlike a client) is owed only honesty, fair dealing, and disclosure of known material defects — not fiduciary duties. Questions frequently test this customer-vs-client distinction.</li></ul>

What's the difference between the three types of listing agreements?

<p>A listing agreement is an employment contract that authorizes a broker to market a property and find a ready, willing, and able buyer. The exam tests three types, and the whole game is <em>who gets paid when</em>:</p><ul><li><strong>Exclusive right to sell:</strong> the broker earns a commission if the property sells during the term — no matter who finds the buyer, including the seller.</li><li><strong>Exclusive agency:</strong> the broker earns a commission unless the seller personally finds the buyer, in which case no commission is owed.</li><li><strong>Open listing:</strong> non-exclusive — the seller may list with multiple brokers, and only the broker who actually procures the buyer gets paid.</li></ul><p>A reliable way to keep these straight: ask "does the seller finding their own buyer cut out the broker?" No under exclusive right to sell, yes under exclusive agency, and under an open listing every broker is competing to be the one who procures the buyer.</p>

What math formulas show up on the exam, and is there a trick for proration problems?

<p>The core formulas are simpler than most test-takers fear:</p><ul><li><strong>Commission</strong> = sale price × commission rate. Example: a $300,000 sale at 6% yields an $18,000 commission.</li><li><strong>Loan-to-value (LTV)</strong> = loan amount ÷ the <em>lesser</em> of appraised value or purchase price. A $240,000 loan on a $300,000 property is 80% LTV. Related: PMI is generally required on conventional loans when the down payment is under 20%.</li><li><strong>Gross rent multiplier</strong> = sale price ÷ monthly gross rent.</li><li><strong>Income capitalization</strong>: net operating income ÷ cap rate = estimated property value.</li></ul><p>For <strong>proration</strong> — splitting shared expenses like taxes, rent, or interest between buyer and seller at the closing date — the key trick is the <strong>360-day banker's year</strong>: many exams use 30-day months, so the daily rate is simply the annual amount ÷ 360. Then remember the direction of the credit: if the seller <em>prepaid</em> the expense, the buyer reimburses the seller for the unused portion; if it's paid <em>in arrears</em>, the seller credits the buyer for the seller's share.</p>