-
Who is typically responsible for regulating real estate licensees in each state?
- Federal government
- A state real estate commission (or department of real estate, real estate board, division of real estate — name varies) appointed under state law, with authority to issue licenses, set rules, investigate complaints, and impose disciplinary action ✓
- Local courts only
- Self-regulation by brokers
Every state has a real estate regulatory agency — exact name varies (Real Estate Commission, Department of Real Estate, Real Estate Board, Division of Real Estate). Functions: (1) ISSUE and RENEW licenses for salespersons and brokers; (2) SET RULES (administrative regulations implementing the licens…
-
What is the typical minimum education requirement before a person can take the salesperson licensing exam?
- No education required
- A specific number of hours of pre-license education from an approved provider — common minimums range from 40 hours (low) to 180+ hours (high) depending on the state; the exact requirement varies by state ✓
- A college degree
- A high school diploma only
Pre-license education is one of the most state-variable requirements. Examples (always verify current with your state's commission): Michigan ~40 hours, Pennsylvania 75 hours, Massachusetts 40 hours, New York 75 hours, Florida 63 hours, California 135 hours, Texas 180 hours, Georgia 75 hours, Arizon…
-
Under most state license laws, who can a salesperson collect a real estate commission FROM?
- Anyone they choose
- Only their sponsoring broker — salespersons may not collect compensation directly from buyers, sellers, or anyone other than their broker; the broker collects from the principal and pays the salesperson per their agreement ✓
- Only the seller directly
- Only the buyer directly
This is one of the most universal state license law rules — a salesperson works for and is paid by their sponsoring broker. CHAIN of payment: (1) PRINCIPAL (buyer or seller, depending on representation) is obligated to pay commission per the listing or buyer agency agreement; (2) Commission is paid …
-
Most states require what regarding agency disclosure to a buyer or seller?
- No disclosure required
- Written disclosure (timing varies — often at first substantive contact, before completing a contract, or both) that explains the agency relationship between the licensee and the consumer (buyer's agent, seller's agent, dual agent, transaction broker, etc.) and what duties are owed ✓
- Only verbal disclosure
- Disclosure only at closing
Agency disclosure is one of the most state-variable areas of real estate practice. Common state approaches: (1) WHEN DISCLOSED: (a) at FIRST SUBSTANTIVE CONTACT (initial meeting where confidential information might be shared); (b) before COMPLETING A CONTRACT; (c) at the time of LISTING or BUYER REP…
-
What are FIDUCIARY DUTIES that a real estate agent typically owes to their client (the party they represent)?
- Only fairness
- OLDCAR: Obedience (lawful instructions), Loyalty (act in client's best interest), Disclosure (material facts), Confidentiality (client information), Accountability (handle funds properly), Reasonable Care and skill — varies by state but these duties are widely recognized ✓
- Just to find a buyer
- No specific duties
FIDUCIARY DUTIES under traditional agency law: an agent acting for a principal owes loyalty similar to a trustee. Common mnemonics: OLDCAR or COALD or COLD-PIM (variations). COMMON DUTIES: (1) OBEDIENCE — follow lawful instructions of the principal; (2) LOYALTY — act in the principal's best interest…
-
Most state license laws require what regarding written contracts?
- No written contracts required
- Listing agreements, buyer representation agreements, and purchase contracts must typically be in writing (to comply with the Statute of Frauds and state-specific rules); copies must be provided to all parties at signing; specific forms or content may be required by state law ✓
- Only verbal agreements
- Contracts only for residential transactions
Real estate transactions almost universally require WRITTEN CONTRACTS due to the STATUTE OF FRAUDS, which is a centuries-old legal doctrine requiring certain types of contracts to be in writing to be enforceable. State applications: (1) PURCHASE CONTRACTS — must be written; verbal agreements to buy/…
-
What is a real estate trust account (also called an escrow account or client funds account)?
- The broker's personal account
- A separate bank account where client funds (earnest money deposits, security deposits, etc.) are held by the broker for the benefit of clients and third parties — must be kept separate from the broker's operating funds, with strict record-keeping requirements ✓
- A retirement account
- An account for office expenses
TRUST ACCOUNTS (or escrow accounts or client funds accounts) are separate bank accounts where brokers hold funds belonging to others — earnest money deposits, lease security deposits, rental funds, settlement funds. Strict requirements (state-specific but widely shared): (1) SEPARATE FROM PERSONAL/O…
-
If a buyer and seller dispute who is entitled to the earnest money after a failed contract, what is the BEST action for the broker?
- Give it to the buyer automatically
- Hold the earnest money in trust until the parties agree on disposition (in writing) or until a court orders disposition; many states allow interpleader (broker deposits with court for resolution) when parties cannot agree ✓
- Give it to the seller automatically
- Keep it as a commission
Earnest money disputes are common when contracts fall through. The broker holds the money in trust and must NOT unilaterally decide who gets it. PROCESS: (1) HOLD in trust account until disposition is resolved; (2) PARTIES AGREE — if buyer and seller can agree in writing (release form signed by both…
-
What is typically required when a real estate licensee advertises a property?
- Nothing specific
- The advertisement must identify the broker (firm) by name (not just the salesperson alone), must not be misleading, must not advertise a property without the seller's authorization (in most states), and must comply with state-specific rules including online and social media advertising ✓
- Only print advertising is regulated
- Salesperson's name only
Real estate advertising is heavily regulated by state license laws. COMMON RULES: (1) BROKER NAME REQUIRED — advertisements must identify the BROKER (the brokerage firm, not just the salesperson); states require this so consumers know who they're dealing with; salesperson-only ads are typically viol…
-
How is a real estate license typically renewed?
- It never expires
- Licenses must be renewed periodically (typically every 1-4 years depending on state), with completion of state-required continuing education hours, payment of renewal fee, and good standing (no unresolved disciplinary actions) ✓
- Renewed automatically with no action
- Lifetime license once issued
License renewal requirements vary by state but common elements: (1) RENEWAL CYCLE — typically every 1, 2, 3, or 4 years; specific to state (Florida 2 years, Texas 2 years, California 4 years, etc.); (2) CONTINUING EDUCATION (CE) HOURS — required hours within each renewal cycle; common ranges: 8-40 h…
-
What is 'STIGMATIZED PROPERTY' and how is it typically handled in state real estate law?
- A property in great condition
- A property with non-physical conditions that may affect buyers (deaths on property, alleged hauntings, prior criminal activity, etc.); state laws vary widely — some require disclosure of certain stigmas (recent deaths, sex offender notifications), others specifically PROTECT licensees from having to disclose certain stigmas ✓
- A property under construction
- A foreclosed property
STIGMATIZED PROPERTY: real estate that has been affected by events or conditions that don't physically alter the property but may affect buyers' perceptions or values. Examples: (1) DEATHS — natural deaths, accidents, suicides, murders, on the property; (2) ALLEGED HAUNTINGS or other paranormal clai…
-
What is a property condition disclosure (seller's disclosure)?
- Optional in all states
- A form typically required (in most states, with variations) where the seller discloses known material defects, conditions, or facts about the property to the buyer; protects buyers and limits seller liability for properly-disclosed conditions ✓
- Only required for new construction
- Only verbal
SELLER'S PROPERTY CONDITION DISCLOSURE (also called Seller's Disclosure, Property Disclosure Statement, etc.): a state-required form where the seller discloses known material conditions to the buyer. COMMON ELEMENTS: (1) STRUCTURAL — foundation, roof, walls, ceilings; (2) SYSTEMS — heating/cooling, …
-
Federal Fair Housing Act protected classes are race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Many states ADD protected classes — which of the following is commonly added by state law?
- Eye color
- Sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, age (above federal protections for familial status), source of income (e.g., Section 8 vouchers), military status, and ancestry are commonly added by various states — exact protections vary ✓
- Favorite music genre
- Hairstyle
FEDERAL FAIR HOUSING ACT (1968, amended 1988) protected classes: (1) RACE; (2) COLOR; (3) RELIGION; (4) NATIONAL ORIGIN; (5) SEX (added 1974; HUD interprets to include gender identity and sexual orientation since 2021); (6) FAMILIAL STATUS (added 1988; protects families with children, pregnant women…
-
What is a typical maximum disciplinary penalty a state real estate commission can impose?
- Only a warning letter
- Range of penalties: warning/reprimand, fines (typically up to $1,000-$10,000 per violation), required education, probation, license SUSPENSION (temporary loss of license), license REVOCATION (permanent or long-term loss); criminal cases referred to prosecutors ✓
- Imprisonment
- Death penalty
STATE COMMISSION DISCIPLINARY AUTHORITY: state real estate commissions have administrative authority to discipline licensees for violations of license law, regulations, or unethical conduct. RANGE OF PENALTIES (varies by state but commonly): (1) WARNING / REPRIMAND — informal; on record but no furth…
-
What is an OPTION CONTRACT in real estate?
- A purchase contract
- A contract where one party (the optionee) pays consideration to another (the optionor) for the right (but not obligation) to purchase or lease property at a specified price within a specified time; if the optionee chooses to exercise the option, it becomes a purchase contract ✓
- A lease only
- A type of mortgage
OPTION CONTRACT: a unilateral contract where the optionee pays the optionor for the right (option) to buy or lease the property within a specified time at a specified price. KEY ELEMENTS: (1) OPTION CONSIDERATION — money paid by optionee to optionor; non-refundable typically; usually small compared …
-
What is required for a person to be exempt from real estate licensing requirements?
- Anyone can be exempt
- Common exemptions include: property owners selling their own property; attorneys acting within their legal practice; trustees, executors, and court-appointed receivers; certain employees of property managers acting on behalf of employer; auctioneers (with limits); state and federal employees acting in their official duties — exemptions vary by state ✓
- Only family members can be exempt
- No exemptions exist
REAL ESTATE LICENSE EXEMPTIONS: certain individuals and roles are exempt from real estate licensing requirements even when engaged in activities that would otherwise require a license. COMMON EXEMPTIONS (varies by state but widely recognized): (1) PROPERTY OWNERS selling/leasing their OWN property —…
-
What is DUAL AGENCY, and what is typically required for it to be permitted?
- Forbidden in all states
- An agent representing BOTH the buyer and seller in the same transaction; permitted in most states with INFORMED CONSENT in writing from both parties; some states (e.g., Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma) have abolished traditional dual agency in favor of transaction brokerage ✓
- Permitted without disclosure
- Only for residential transactions
DUAL AGENCY: one real estate professional (or brokerage) represents both parties — the buyer AND seller — in the same transaction. STATE TREATMENTS: (1) PERMITTED WITH WRITTEN INFORMED CONSENT — most states allow dual agency if both parties are informed and consent in writing; (2) ABOLISHED in favor…
-
A salesperson moves to a different brokerage. What is typically required?
- Nothing — the salesperson can continue with no action
- The salesperson must notify the state commission of the change, the new broker must accept sponsorship, the old broker must release the licensee (or commission processes the change), and the license must be updated to reflect the new affiliation; specific procedures and timeframes vary by state ✓
- Only the salesperson must notify their clients
- Only the new broker must notify
BROKER CHANGES (also called sponsorship transfers) are routine events but require specific procedures. The salesperson's license is tied to their sponsoring broker; without a sponsoring broker, the license becomes INACTIVE or PARKED (no real estate activity permitted). PROCESS (state-specific but co…
-
What is required if a real estate salesperson buys property for themselves or sells their own property?
- Nothing — they can act as a regular buyer/seller
- Most states require the licensee to DISCLOSE their license status in writing in the transaction, often in advertising, contracts, and any communications — to prevent any appearance of misrepresenting themselves as just a regular party ✓
- They cannot buy or sell their own property
- Only the broker needs to know
LICENSEE TRANSACTIONS for their own property: state license laws require licensees to disclose their licensed status when buying or selling their own real estate, even when they're not representing others. WHY: (1) Prevents licensee from misrepresenting themselves as a 'regular FSBO seller' to gain …
-
STEERING in real estate refers to:
- Helping a buyer pick paint colors
- Directing prospective buyers or renters toward or away from neighborhoods, properties, or housing options based on protected class characteristics (race, color, religion, etc.) — a Fair Housing Act violation, regardless of intent ✓
- Driving clients to view properties
- Negotiating contracts
STEERING: an illegal practice under the federal Fair Housing Act and state fair housing laws. Definition: directing buyers or renters toward or away from specific neighborhoods, properties, or housing options based on protected class characteristics. EXAMPLES of illegal steering: (1) An agent tellin…
-
What is a real estate RECOVERY FUND (also called Guaranty Fund or Recovery Account)?
- An office expense account
- A state-administered fund that compensates consumers who have suffered financial losses due to licensee fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct when other remedies (suing the licensee) are unsuccessful or insufficient; funded by license fees ✓
- A retirement fund for brokers
- Commission's operating budget
REAL ESTATE RECOVERY FUND (terminology varies by state — Recovery Account, Guaranty Fund, Real Estate Trust Recovery Fund): a state-administered fund that provides limited compensation to consumers harmed by licensee misconduct. PURPOSE: protect consumers when (1) Licensee has acted fraudulently or …
-
What is a TIMESHARE under most state law?
- A type of vacation rental
- A form of ownership or use rights in real property — typically a unit at a resort — where multiple owners share the use of the property on a time-based schedule; subject to specific state and federal regulation, with required disclosures and rescission periods ✓
- A leased apartment
- A traditional residential property
TIMESHARE: a property where multiple individuals share rights to use the property at different times during the year. TYPES OF TIMESHARE OWNERSHIP: (1) FEE SIMPLE OWNERSHIP — owners own a deeded interest in the property (typically 1/52 of a property for a weekly timeshare); inheritable, sellable; su…
-
What is the process for handling a complaint filed against a real estate licensee with the state commission?
- The commission ignores complaints
- Complaint received → investigation (commission staff gathers evidence) → notice to licensee → opportunity for licensee to respond → potential hearing (administrative law judge or commission) → decision with discipline if violation found → appeal rights through state court ✓
- Immediate license revocation
- Sent directly to criminal court
COMPLAINT PROCESS in detail: (1) COMPLAINT FILED — by consumer, another licensee, public, or initiated by commission; written form, sometimes with supporting documents; (2) INTAKE/SCREENING — staff reviews for jurisdiction (must be licensee, complaint must allege license law violation) and merit; (3…
-
When a listing agreement EXPIRES without a sale, what typically happens?
- The brokerage automatically retains the listing forever
- The listing agreement terminates per its terms; the seller is free to enter a new agreement with the same or different broker; PROTECTION PERIOD/PROCURING CAUSE clauses may still require the seller to pay commission if they sell to a buyer who was identified during the listing period ✓
- Property cannot be sold for one year
- Seller automatically owes the broker commission
LISTING AGREEMENT EXPIRATION: when a listing agreement reaches its end date without a successful sale, the listing terminates. KEY ISSUES: (1) AUTOMATIC TERMINATION — listing ends per its terms (specific date); seller is free to: (a) re-list with same broker (extension), (b) list with different brok…
-
What is required for a salesperson's first activity as a licensed real estate professional after passing the exam?
- Immediately start selling properties
- Must be SPONSORED by an active licensed broker before practicing; license is officially issued only after sponsorship; activity is permitted only after license is issued AND sponsorship is in place AND any other state-specific requirements (e.g., E&O insurance, agency disclosure forms, post-license education enrollment) are met ✓
- Take the broker exam
- Apply for federal registration
POST-EXAM REQUIREMENTS for new salespersons before practicing: (1) PASS THE EXAM — passing the state real estate exam (or 'Pre-License Exam' depending on state terminology); typically scored at 70-75% or higher; passes generally need both national and state portions; (2) APPLY FOR LICENSE — pay fees…
-
What is the purpose of the state real estate commission's disciplinary authority?
- To collect taxes from real estate transactions
- To investigate complaints and discipline licensees who violate state real estate law — protecting the public through licence suspension, revocation, fines, and other remedies ✓
- To set commission rates for all transactions
- To approve all real estate contracts
State real estate commissions have administrative disciplinary authority over licencees. Their primary mission is CONSUMER PROTECTION. Authority includes: investigating complaints from consumers, other licencees, and the commission itself; conducting hearings (administrative, not criminal); imposing…
-
What is 'continuing education' (CE) required for real estate licence renewal?
- CE is optional for experienced agents
- State-mandated coursework licencees must complete before renewing their licence — typically covering ethics, agency, fair housing updates, and state law changes; usually 12-24 hours per 2-year renewal period ✓
- Only required for brokers, not agents
- CE is required only after a disciplinary action
CONTINUING EDUCATION (CE) for real estate licencees ensures that active practitioners stay current on changes in law, regulations, and ethical standards. Requirements vary by state: HOURS: typically 12-24 hours per 2-year renewal cycle; MANDATORY TOPICS: most states require a portion on ethics, fair…
-
What is 'reciprocity' in real estate licensing?
- When two agents split a commission evenly
- An agreement between states allowing licencees from one state to obtain a licence in another state without repeating all licensing requirements — typically requiring passing the new state's state-specific exam portion only ✓
- When a broker allows two agents to share a client
- The requirement to share commission with the listing broker
RECIPROCITY (or portability) allows real estate licencees to obtain a licence in another state without repeating the entire process. Different states have different reciprocity arrangements: FULL RECIPROCITY: If you hold a licence in State A, State B grants a licence without any additional exam; PAR…
-
A salesperson's licence expires because they did not renew it on time. Can they still practise real estate while renewing?
- Yes — a short lapse is acceptable
- No — practising real estate with an expired licence is illegal; they must complete any reinstatement requirements (including any late CE) and receive a renewed active licence before conducting any real estate activities ✓
- Yes, for 30 days after expiration
- Only if their broker gives written permission
EXPIRED LICENCE: Practising real estate without a valid active licence is an illegal act in every state. Consequences: civil penalty; possible criminal charge depending on state; any transactions conducted with an expired licence may be voidable; the salesperson cannot claim commission. REINSTATEMEN…
-
A licencee is found guilty of 'commingling' by the state real estate commission. What does this mean?
- Mixing clients from different companies
- Depositing client trust funds (earnest money, rent deposits) into the broker's operating account rather than maintaining a separate trust account — a serious violation ✓
- Showing properties to clients from multiple brokerages
- Working as both a buyer's and seller's agent simultaneously
COMMINGLING is one of the most serious trust account violations: mixing client funds (earnest money, security deposits, advance fees) with the broker's own business or personal funds. Why it's prohibited: client funds are not the broker's money — they are held in trust; mixing makes accounting diffi…
-
What is the typical time frame for depositing earnest money into a broker's trust account after contract execution?
- 30 days
- 7 days
- 1-3 business days (varies by state law) ✓
- At closing only
EARNEST MONEY DEPOSIT TIMING is specified by state law and the purchase contract. Most states require deposit within: 1 business day (strict states); 2-3 business days (most common); some states specify 'promptly' which is interpreted as 1-3 business days. Holding earnest money for longer than requi…
-
What is a 'designated broker' and why is the role critical?
- The broker with the most experience
- The individually licensed broker who is responsible for all real estate activities conducted through the brokerage — they bear personal legal responsibility for the conduct of their agents and for the brokerage's trust accounts ✓
- The broker designated to handle commercial listings only
- The managing partner of a real estate investment trust
DESIGNATED BROKER (also called Principal Broker, Managing Broker, or Responsible Broker depending on the state) is the individual who: holds the brokerage licence; bears legal responsibility for all licencees operating under their licence; is personally responsible for trust account maintenance and …
-
What must a licencee disclose to a client they are representing?
- Only information that helps the transaction close
- All material facts that could affect the client's decision — including information about the property, the other party, and any conflicts of interest of the agent ✓
- Only legally required disclosures on state forms
- Only defects visible during a showing
FIDUCIARY DUTY OF DISCLOSURE requires an agent to tell their client everything relevant to the transaction that the client would want to know. For a buyer's agent: disclose known material defects in the property; disclose if the seller is in financial distress (affecting negotiation); disclose the a…
-
What is a 'net listing' and why is it problematic?
- A listing where the broker networks with other agents to find buyers
- A listing agreement where the broker keeps everything above a specified net amount as their commission — the broker has an incentive to sell for the highest possible price, but the structure creates conflicts of interest and is illegal in some states ✓
- A listing on the internet
- A listing that guarantees a minimum sale price
NET LISTING: The seller specifies a minimum 'net' they want from the sale; the broker keeps everything above that net as commission. Example: seller wants $400,000 net; broker sells for $450,000; broker keeps $50,000 commission. PROBLEMS: Conflict of interest — the broker is incentivized to negotiat…
-
What is 'latent defect' disclosure and what does it require of a seller?
- Sellers only need to disclose what buyers can see for themselves
- Sellers must disclose known LATENT DEFECTS — material defects that are not visible or discoverable through a reasonable inspection — because failing to disclose known latent defects is fraudulent concealment ✓
- Sellers need only disclose on a standard checklist form
- Only the listing agent is responsible for defect disclosure, not the seller
LATENT DEFECT: A material defect that is hidden, not visible or discoverable through reasonable inspection. PATENT DEFECT: visible and obvious. Sellers are NOT required to disclose patent defects (buyer can see them). Sellers ARE required to disclose KNOWN LATENT DEFECTS because: if the seller knows…
-
Generally, when must a real estate salesperson deposit earnest money or other trust funds received from a client?
- Whenever convenient
- Promptly — typically within a short, state-specified time frame (often by the next business day or within a few days) into the broker's trust/escrow account; salespeople usually must turn funds over to their broker immediately ✓
- Within one month
- Only at closing
TRUST FUND HANDLING TIMING: When a salesperson receives earnest money or other trust funds, they must handle them promptly per state law. TYPICAL RULES: The salesperson must turn the funds over to their BROKER (or deposit per broker/state procedure) promptly — often immediately or by the next busine…
-
Under most state license laws, can an unlicensed assistant perform activities that require a real estate license, such as negotiating contract terms or showing property and discussing its features to make a sale?
- Yes, anything the broker allows
- No — unlicensed assistants may perform only ministerial/administrative tasks (clerical work, scheduling, basic factual information); activities requiring a license (negotiating, soliciting, advising on terms, performing the core brokerage services) must be done by a licensee ✓
- Yes, if supervised remotely
- Only on weekends
UNLICENSED ASSISTANTS — PERMITTED vs PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES: PERMITTED (ministerial/administrative tasks): Clerical work; answering phones and forwarding calls; scheduling appointments; preparing/distributing marketing materials (under supervision); placing signs; providing basic FACTUAL information …
-
Under state agency law, when must an agent typically provide an agency disclosure to a consumer?
- Only at closing
- At first substantive contact or before entering into an agency relationship or before the consumer discloses confidential information — the timing is set by state law to ensure consumers understand who the agent represents ✓
- Never
- Only if the consumer asks
AGENCY DISCLOSURE TIMING: States require agents to disclose WHO THEY REPRESENT (and the available agency relationship options) to consumers, typically at or before a specified point. COMMON TIMING: At 'first substantive contact' (when meaningful discussion of the consumer's needs/the transaction beg…
-
What typically happens to a salesperson's license if their sponsoring/employing broker's license is revoked or the salesperson leaves the broker?
- Nothing changes
- The salesperson generally cannot practice until they affiliate with a new broker — a salesperson's license must be held/sponsored by an active broker; without an affiliated broker, the salesperson's license becomes inactive and they cannot conduct brokerage activities ✓
- They automatically become a broker
- They keep working independently
SALESPERSON-BROKER AFFILIATION: A real estate SALESPERSON's license must be SPONSORED/HELD by an actively licensed BROKER; salespeople cannot operate independently — they work under a broker's supervision and license. IF THE BROKER'S LICENSE IS REVOKED/SUSPENDED or the salesperson LEAVES: The salesp…
-
Which of the following is a common ground for disciplinary action against a real estate licensee under state law?
- Selling too many houses
- Misrepresentation or fraud, commingling/conversion of trust funds, acting without proper agency disclosure, practicing with an expired license, or engaging in dishonest dealing — violations of license law and fiduciary duties ✓
- Working long hours
- Advertising a listing
COMMON GROUNDS FOR DISCIPLINARY ACTION: State real estate commissions can discipline licensees for violations including: MISREPRESENTATION or FRAUD (lying about material facts, deceiving clients/customers); COMMINGLING or CONVERSION of trust funds; failure to provide required AGENCY DISCLOSURE; prac…
-
What is the typical requirement for a real estate license to remain active regarding continuing education (CE)?
- No education is ever required after licensing
- Licensees must complete a state-specified number of continuing education hours within each renewal period (often every 1-4 years) to renew and keep the license active — including required topics like law updates, ethics, and fair housing ✓
- A college degree every year
- One hour total for life
CONTINUING EDUCATION (CE) REQUIREMENTS: To RENEW and keep a real estate license active, licensees must complete a state-specified number of CE hours within each renewal period. TYPICAL STRUCTURE: A set number of hours (e.g., commonly ranging from about 12 to 30+ hours) per renewal cycle (renewal per…
-
Under state law, what is a 'transaction broker' (or transaction agent), where this relationship is recognized?
- A broker who only handles commercial deals
- A broker who facilitates a transaction without representing either party as an agent/fiduciary — providing services to both buyer and seller without the full fiduciary duties of agency (recognized in some states as an alternative to agency) ✓
- A broker who works for free
- A broker who only represents banks
TRANSACTION BROKER (transaction agent / facilitator): In states that recognize this relationship, a transaction broker FACILITATES a real estate transaction WITHOUT representing either party as a fiduciary agent. CHARACTERISTICS: Provides services to help the transaction close (paperwork, coordinati…
-
What is the role of the state real estate recovery fund (where one exists)?
- To pay agents' commissions
- To compensate consumers who have suffered monetary loss due to a licensee's fraud, misrepresentation, or other violation, when they cannot collect from the licensee directly — funded by licensee fees ✓
- To fund real estate schools
- To pay property taxes
REAL ESTATE RECOVERY FUND (Guaranty Fund): A fund maintained by some states to COMPENSATE consumers (members of the public) who have suffered an actual monetary loss due to a licensee's fraud, misrepresentation, deceit, or conversion of trust funds — when the consumer has obtained a court judgment a…
-
What generally distinguishes a real estate BROKER's license from a SALESPERSON's license under state law?
- Nothing — they are identical
- A broker has met higher education and experience requirements and can operate independently, supervise salespeople, and own/manage a brokerage; a salesperson must work under a sponsoring broker and cannot operate independently ✓
- A salesperson earns more
- A broker cannot sell property
BROKER vs SALESPERSON LICENSE: SALESPERSON (sales agent) LICENSE: Entry-level; requires pre-licensing education and passing the exam; MUST work under a sponsoring/supervising BROKER; cannot operate independently; cannot hold others' licenses; BROKER LICENSE: Requires ADDITIONAL education AND EXPERIE…
-
Under state law, what must an agent do with a client's confidential information after the agency relationship ends?
- Share it freely
- Continue to maintain the confidentiality of certain information (such as the client's financial position, motivation, or negotiating strategy) even after the relationship ends — the duty of confidentiality survives termination of the agency ✓
- Post it publicly
- Give it to the other party
CONFIDENTIALITY DUTY SURVIVES AGENCY TERMINATION: The fiduciary duty of CONFIDENTIALITY continues even AFTER the agency relationship ends. PROTECTED CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION: The client's financial situation (how much they can afford/will accept); their MOTIVATION (e.g., 'must sell quickly due to di…
-
Under most state laws, must a seller (and their agent) disclose known material defects in a residential property?
- No, the rule is 'buyer beware' with no disclosure
- Yes — most states require disclosure of known MATERIAL DEFECTS that affect the property's value or desirability (e.g., a leaking roof, foundation problems, flooding history); the agent must disclose known material facts and cannot conceal them ✓
- Only defects the buyer asks about
- Only after closing
MATERIAL DEFECT DISCLOSURE: Most states require sellers (and their agents) to DISCLOSE known MATERIAL DEFECTS — conditions that significantly affect the property's value, desirability, or safety. EXAMPLES: Roof leaks; foundation/structural problems; flooding or water intrusion history; pest infestat…
-
Under state advertising rules, what is generally required when a licensee advertises a property or their services?
- Nothing specific
- The advertising must not be false or misleading, and must typically identify the brokerage (and licensee status) — 'blind ads' that hide that the advertiser is a real estate professional/brokerage are generally prohibited ✓
- Only the price
- Only the agent's personal phone number
ADVERTISING REQUIREMENTS: State license laws regulate real estate advertising to protect consumers. COMMON RULES: Advertising must NOT be FALSE or MISLEADING; must typically include the BROKERAGE name (and disclose that the advertiser is a licensed real estate professional/brokerage); BLIND ADS (ads…
-
Under state law, who is generally permitted to prepare or fill in the blanks on standard real estate purchase contract forms?
- Only attorneys can ever touch contracts
- Licensees may typically fill in the blanks on standardized, pre-approved forms for transactions they are handling, but may NOT draft custom legal provisions or give legal advice — that constitutes the unauthorized practice of law ✓
- Anyone can draft any contract
- Only the buyer
CONTRACT PREPARATION AND UNAUTHORIZED PRACTICE OF LAW (UPL): LICENSEES MAY: Fill in the blanks on STANDARDIZED, pre-approved contract forms for transactions they are handling (selecting and completing standard forms with transaction-specific information); LICENSEES MAY NOT: Draft custom legal clause…
-
What is typically required for a person to qualify to take the real estate salesperson licensing exam?
- Nothing — anyone can take it anytime
- Meeting state requirements such as a minimum age, completing required pre-licensing education hours, and submitting an application (often with a background check) — requirements vary by state ✓
- A college degree in real estate
- Ten years of experience
SALESPERSON EXAM/LICENSE QUALIFICATIONS: To qualify for a real estate salesperson license, applicants must typically meet state requirements: MINIMUM AGE (commonly 18, sometimes 19); PRE-LICENSING EDUCATION (completing a state-required number of hours of approved coursework — varies widely by state)…
-
Under state agency law, if an agent represents the seller, what duty does the agent owe to the BUYER (a customer, not a client)?
- No duties at all
- The duties of HONESTY and FAIR DEALING — including disclosing known material defects and not misrepresenting facts — even though the agent does not owe the buyer the fiduciary duties (loyalty, confidentiality) owed to the seller-client ✓
- Full fiduciary duties
- To always get the buyer the lowest price
DUTIES TO A CUSTOMER (the non-represented party): When an agent represents the SELLER (client), the BUYER is a CUSTOMER — the agent does NOT owe the buyer the full fiduciary duties (loyalty, confidentiality, full advocacy) owed to the seller; BUT the agent DOES owe the buyer (customer): HONESTY and …
-
In most states, what generally happens to a license if a licensee fails to complete required continuing education before renewal?
- Nothing — continuing education is optional everywhere
- The license typically cannot be renewed until the continuing education is completed, and practicing on an expired or lapsed license is prohibited ✓
- The state automatically waives the requirement
- The licensee may keep working indefinitely
Most states condition license renewal on completing a set number of continuing-education hours within the renewal period, often including required topics such as ethics, fair housing, or law updates. If the licensee does not complete the required education, the state generally will not renew the lic…
-
What is the general purpose of a state real estate commission (or equivalent regulatory agency)?
- To set home prices in the state
- To administer and enforce the state's real estate license law — licensing applicants, setting rules, investigating complaints, and disciplining licensees to protect the public ✓
- To act as a brokerage for the public
- To appraise all properties in the state
Every state has a regulatory body — commonly a real estate commission, board, or division — charged with carrying out the state's license law. Its core functions typically include setting and administering licensing requirements and exams, adopting rules and regulations that interpret the statute, i…
-
In general, who may a licensed salesperson lawfully receive real estate commission payments from?
- Directly from the buyer or seller
- Only from their sponsoring or employing broker, not directly from the parties to the transaction ✓
- From any party who offers it
- From another salesperson directly
Across the states, a salesperson (or associate broker) generally may be paid a real estate commission only by the broker under whom they are licensed, not directly by the buyer, seller, or another agent. The broker is the party to the listing or commission agreement; the salesperson's compensation f…
-
When must agency relationship disclosures generally be made to a consumer?
- Only after closing
- Early in the relationship — typically at first substantive contact or before confidential information is shared — so the consumer understands whom the agent represents ✓
- Never, agency is assumed
- Only if the consumer asks
Most states require that agents disclose the nature of their agency relationship to consumers early — commonly at the first substantive contact about a specific property or before the consumer shares confidential information — so the consumer knows whether the agent represents the seller, the buyer,…
-
Why do state license laws commonly require that a licensee give a copy of any signed document to the party who signed it?
- To create extra paperwork
- So each party has a record of what they agreed to, promoting transparency and protecting consumers; failing to deliver copies is a common license-law violation ✓
- Because copies are needed for the broker only
- Only sellers are entitled to copies
State license laws widely require that whenever a party signs a document in a transaction — a listing agreement, purchase offer, disclosure, or amendment — the licensee promptly provides that party a copy. This ensures consumers have a record of their obligations and the terms they agreed to, suppor…
-
What is the general rule about a licensee preparing legal documents or giving legal advice?
- Licensees may draft any legal document
- Licensees may complete standard, approved transaction forms but generally may not draft custom legal documents or give legal advice, which would be the unauthorized practice of law ✓
- Licensees must always act as the parties' attorney
- Only brokers may give legal advice
Real estate licensees are generally permitted to fill in the blanks on standardized, state-approved or commonly used forms (such as a purchase agreement) as part of a transaction, but they must not draft custom contract provisions, prepare deeds or other legal instruments, or give legal advice — tho…
-
What is the general rule for how a salesperson should handle earnest money received from a buyer?
- Keep it in a personal account
- Promptly turn it over to their broker (or deposit it as the broker directs) so it can be placed in the broker's trust account, rather than holding or using it personally ✓
- Spend it on marketing
- Give it directly to the seller immediately
A salesperson who receives earnest money or other trust funds must not hold them personally or deposit them in a personal account. The general rule is that the salesperson promptly delivers the funds to their employing broker, who deposits them into the brokerage trust (escrow) account within the ti…
-
What does most state law require regarding a licensee's advertising of a property or services?
- No requirements apply to advertising
- Advertising must be truthful and not misleading and generally must identify the brokerage, so consumers know the licensee works under a licensed broker ✓
- Only the agent's name is required
- Advertising rules apply only to newspapers
State advertising rules commonly require that a licensee's advertising — including yard signs, print, websites, and social media — be truthful and not misleading, and that it disclose the name of the brokerage under which the licensee operates. This 'blind ad' prohibition prevents consumers from bei…
-
How do many state fair housing laws compare to the federal Fair Housing Act?
- State laws always provide less protection
- Many states mirror the federal protected classes and add their own protected classes (such as age, marital status, source of income, or sexual orientation), so state protections can be broader ✓
- State law replaces federal law entirely
- Fair housing applies only at the federal level
The federal Fair Housing Act protects against discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and disability. Many states adopt these same classes and add others — common state additions include age, marital status, source of income, ancestry, sexual orientation…
-
What is generally required for a real estate license application regarding an applicant's background?
- No background check is ever required
- States commonly review an applicant's background and may deny a license for certain criminal convictions or prior dishonest conduct relevant to fitness to hold a license ✓
- Only a credit score is checked
- Background is irrelevant to licensing
As part of protecting the public, states commonly examine a license applicant's background — often including a criminal history check — and may deny licensure based on convictions or conduct that bear on the applicant's honesty, trustworthiness, or competence to handle other people's money and trans…
-
What is a licensee's general duty to disclose known material defects in a property?
- Conceal defects to help the seller
- Disclose known material defects affecting the property's value or desirability to the parties as required, even though the licensee owes fiduciary duties to their own client ✓
- Disclose only defects the buyer asks about
- Never disclose anything to the other side
Even while owing fiduciary duties to their client, a licensee generally must disclose known material defects — significant physical or other conditions affecting a property's value or desirability — to the parties, and must not conceal or misrepresent them. A seller's agent cannot help hide a known …
-
What generally makes a listing agreement enforceable under most state laws?
- A verbal handshake is always enough
- It is typically required to be in writing, signed by the seller, and to state a definite expiration date and the terms of compensation ✓
- It needs only the agent's signature
- No particular form is ever required
Most states require a listing agreement to be in writing and signed by the property owner to be enforceable, and many require that it include a definite expiration date and clearly state how and how much the broker will be compensated. A listing without a set termination date, or an open-ended one, …
-
What is the general consequence if a licensee or broker uses trust funds for their own purposes?
- It is allowed if repaid later
- It is conversion — a serious violation that can lead to license suspension or revocation and possible criminal liability, because trust funds belong to the parties, not the licensee ✓
- It is only a minor paperwork issue
- Trust funds may be borrowed freely
Using trust funds — earnest money, deposits, or rents held for others — for the licensee's or broker's own purposes is conversion, one of the most serious violations in real estate regulation. Because these funds belong to the clients or parties to the transaction and not to the licensee, converting…
-
What is 'blockbusting,' which both federal and state fair-housing laws prohibit?
- Selling several homes on one block at once
- Inducing owners to sell or rent by suggesting that people of a particular protected class are moving into the neighborhood, in order to profit from the resulting turnover ✓
- Building large apartment blocks
- Advertising an open house for a whole block
Blockbusting (also called panic selling) is the illegal practice of persuading owners to sell or rent their property by playing on fears that members of a particular protected class — by race, national origin, or another protected characteristic — are moving into the area, so that the agent can prof…
-
In general, what must a licensee do if their personal information, such as their home address or license status, changes?
- Nothing needs to be reported
- Notify the licensing authority of changes such as address, name, or employing broker, within the time and manner the state requires, to keep records current ✓
- Wait until the next renewal regardless
- Report only to their broker, never the state
States require licensees to keep their records with the licensing authority current. Common reportable changes include a change of name, mailing or residence address, employing or sponsoring broker, or contact information, and a licensee must usually notify the commission within a set number of days…