Real Estate License 2026: How to Get Licensed, Pass the Exam & Start Your Career
Real estate license guide for 2026. Get licensed in your state, pass the exam, understand real estate law, and launch your agent career.

What It Actually Takes to Get a Real Estate License
Real estate licensing is state-controlled. That's the first thing to understand. There's no federal license, no single national standard — each of the 50 states sets its own education requirements, exam format, fees, and renewal schedule. What qualifies you in California doesn't automatically qualify you in Texas. Know the difference.
Most states require 40 to 180 hours of pre-licensing education before you can sit for the exam. That's a wide range. New York requires 77 hours; California requires 135 hours; Colorado requires 168 hours. Some states let you complete the coursework entirely online. Others require classroom attendance for a portion of it. Your state's real estate commission website is the only reliable source for current requirements — not third-party prep companies. Not old forum posts. The official site.
Once you've completed pre-licensing education, you apply to take the state licensing exam. Most states use a two-part test — a national portion covering general real estate principles and a state portion covering local laws and regulations. Both must be passed. The national portion covers contracts, financing, property ownership, real estate law, and agency relationships. The state portion tests your knowledge of your specific state's statutes, license laws, and disclosure requirements. Pass rates for first-time takers average around 50–55% nationally. Not everyone passes on the first try. That's normal.
After passing, you need to affiliate with a licensed broker to activate your license. New agents can't practice independently — state law requires you to work under a supervising broker during your first years in the business. Choosing the right broker matters more than most new agents realize. Compensation structures, training quality, transaction support, and split percentages vary dramatically between brokerages. A real estate agent working under the wrong broker can spend years earning far less than their market peers simply due to a bad split arrangement.
The total upfront cost is real. Pre-licensing courses run $200–$500 depending on the provider and state. Exam fees are typically $50–$100 per attempt (and you may need more than one attempt). License application fees are $50–$200. Background check fees add $20–$100. Total out-of-pocket before your first commission: $400–$900 in most states. Not steep relative to potential earnings — but not trivial either. Budget for it. One wrong assumption about costs can derail your timeline.
The real estate license exam is harder than most people expect. Pass rates are low. The national portion is passable with solid preparation. The state portion trips up candidates who treated the state material as an afterthought. It's not. State-specific disclosure requirements, agency law differences, and license renewal rules account for a large share of failing answers. Study both portions equally.
A few things worth knowing before you start. First, the pre-licensing coursework doesn't teach you how to sell. It teaches you what you need to know to be legally licensed. Negotiation skills, client acquisition, and market knowledge come later — on the job, through mentorship, and through experience. Second, some states have reciprocity agreements, meaning a license in one state can transfer to another with reduced requirements. Not all states. Check before assuming your existing license transfers. Third, license maintenance requires continuing education every renewal cycle — typically every two years. That's required. Not optional.
Meet Basic Eligibility Requirements
Complete Pre-Licensing Education
Submit Exam Application
Pass the State Licensing Exam
Affiliate with a Licensed Broker
Activate Your License & Start Working

Real Estate License Costs by Stage
Upfront costs vary by state. These are typical ranges — verify current fees on your state's real estate commission website before budgeting.

What You Need to Get Licensed

Real Estate Agent vs. Independent Broker
- +Agents get immediate mentorship, transaction support, and leads from established brokerages — faster learning curve in the first 1–2 years
- +No management overhead — agents focus on sales, not running a business or supervising other agents
- +Top national franchises (Keller Williams, RE/MAX, Coldwell Banker) offer strong brand recognition for client trust and referrals
- +Lower startup costs — agents don't need to fund a brokerage office, liability coverage at the firm level, or state broker licensing fees
- −Commission splits mean agents earn only 50–80% of their gross commission — the rest goes to the broker as desk fees or split
- −Agents can't legally operate independently, recruit other agents, or manage a team without a broker license
- −Becoming a broker requires 1–3 additional years of active experience plus another exam — not a fast path
- −Independent brokers take 100% of commissions but carry all E&O insurance costs, office overhead, and compliance responsibilities
Passing the Real Estate Exam: What the Test Actually Covers
The real estate licensing exam is two parts. National. State. Both matter. You need a passing score on each section, and they're graded independently — a strong national score doesn't offset a weak state score. Most first-time test-takers spend all their prep time on the national portion and underestimate the state section. That's the trap.
The national portion covers eight content areas: property ownership, land use controls, valuation and market analysis, financing, agency relationships, property disclosures, contracts, and transfer of title. Questions are scenario-based — not pure memorization. "Which of the following actions by an agent would constitute misrepresentation?" — that's an agency question, not a definitions question. Understand the logic of each area, not just the terms.
The state portion is where first-time failures concentrate. State-specific rules on disclosure requirements, agency law, license law violations, and property transfer differ significantly from national standards. California's disclosure requirements are far more extensive than Wyoming's. Texas has agency relationships that differ from the standard national model. Read your state's statute summaries in the course material — don't skip them. Not optional. That's the section most people fail.
The best preparation tool is a quality real estate exam practice test that mirrors your state's current format. Not a generic prep book from 2020. State exam formats and content weighting update regularly — use a current resource. Take at least 5–7 full practice exams before test day. Track which content areas generate the most wrong answers. Focus your final week of prep on those areas specifically, not on reviewing material you already know.
Want to know which prep courses consistently produce passing candidates? champions school of real estate (Texas-focused) and colibri real estate are two nationally recognized providers. Both offer practice exams that closely mirror state exam formats. Both offer practice exams that closely mirror state exam formats. Read reviews from candidates in your specific state — preparation quality varies by state, and national ratings don't always reflect local exam difficulty.
On exam day, bring two forms of ID. Arrive 30 minutes early. Testing centers are strict about time — late arrivals lose their slot and their fee. You'll have 2–4 hours depending on your state. Don't rush. Flag questions you're unsure about and return to them. The exam isn't designed to trick you — most wrong answers come from misreading the question, not from not knowing the material.
Exam fees are paid per attempt. If you fail, you wait a mandatory period (usually 24–72 hours) before rescheduling. Additional fees apply. Most states allow unlimited retakes within a set window (usually 2 years from course completion). Don't let that encourage complacency. Pass the first time if possible. Each retake costs time, money, and momentum.
After passing, the clock starts. Most states require you to submit your license application within a specific window — often 1 year from the exam date. Miss that window and you retake the exam. Start your broker search before you pass the exam, not after. That sequence matters. Most new agents rush to get licensed and then scramble to find a broker. Reverse it. Interview 2–3 brokerages. Ask specifically about their split structure, transaction support, lead generation, and training for new agents. The brokerage decision shapes your first two years of income more than almost anything else.
Looking for real estate agents near me for mentorship or team opportunities? Many experienced agents actively recruit new licensees into their teams. A team structure gives you leads and training in exchange for a larger split of your commissions — often 30–40% going to the team leader. For most new agents with zero client base, it's a worthwhile tradeoff in year one. Worth investigating before you commit to an independent position.
The path from zero to licensed takes 2–6 months. The path from licensed to earning a living income takes 6–24 months of active prospecting. These are different timelines. The exam is the gate. Getting clients is the job. Know the difference before you start.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.