Overview
A real estate license allows you to represent buyers and sellers in property transactions for compensation. Every state licenses two main tiers: salesperson (entry level, must work under a broker) and broker (senior level, can operate independently or supervise salespeople). Requirements vary substantially by state.
Eligibility requirements
Minimum age is 18 in most states. You must be a US citizen or legal resident, pass a criminal background check (some convictions are disqualifying), and complete required pre-licensing education (typically 60-180 hours depending on state).
The Ohio licensing process, step by step
- Complete pre-licensing education. State-mandated coursework, typically 60-180 hours covering real estate principles, practices, agency, contracts, and state law. Available in-person and online.
- Submit your application. Includes background check, fingerprinting, and application fees. Processing typically takes 4-8 weeks.
- Take and pass the licensing exam. Two sections in most states: a national portion (general principles) and a state-specific portion (state law and practice). Each is scored separately; you must pass both.
- Find a sponsoring broker. Salespeople must work under a licensed broker. Your license is activated when you affiliate with a brokerage.
- Pay licensing fees and receive your license. License renewal typically every 1-4 years with continuing education requirements.
Ohio Real Estate at a glance
- License fee: approximately $76 exam fee; $135 license fee (verify current amount with Ohio Real Estate Commission — fees change periodically)
- Ohio-specific note: Ohio requires 120 hours of pre-licensing education — among the higher requirements nationally; the ODRE administers licensing.
What to study
The national portion covers principles common to all states: ownership, agency, contracts, financing, valuation, fair housing, ethics, and math. The state portion covers your state's specific real estate law, including license law, agency disclosure requirements, and state regulatory authority. Study materials from your pre-licensing course and the state real estate commission's candidate handbook are the primary sources.
The official Ohio handbook is published by the Ohio Real Estate Commission. Read it cover to cover before your written exam — practice tests like ours are most useful as a check on your understanding, not a substitute for reading the source.
Free Ohio Real Estate practice tests
Practice with our state-specific tests until you consistently score above 75%, then schedule your exam with the Ohio Real Estate Commission.
Salesperson (National)
30-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
OhioSalesperson (State Law)
30-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
OhioBroker (National)
30-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
OhioBroker (State Law)
30-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
Common reasons people fail
Common reasons candidates fail: skipping the math (real estate math is heavily tested and easily learned, but skipped because it feels unintuitive); under-studying the state portion (national-only courses leave a gap that the state-specific section will exploit); and trying to memorize answers rather than understand principles. The real exam covers concepts in different language than practice tests, so understanding why an answer is right matters more than recognizing the question.
After you pass
Building a real estate career takes years. Most new agents work part-time initially and supplement income elsewhere while building a client base. Continuing education is mandatory for renewal in every state. Many salespeople pursue a broker's license after the required experience period (usually 2-3 years) to operate independently.
State requirements change
State licensing fees, processes, and requirements change. Ohio Real Estate Commission and our understanding of the Ohio process at time of writing. Ohio Real Estate Commission before scheduling your exam or paying fees.