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Real Estate

Real Estate Exam Prep: State Pass Rates & How to Pass on Your First Try

July 3, 2026By MLS Campus7 min read
Real Estate Exam Prep · 2026
Real Estate Exam Prep: State Pass Rates & How to Pass on Your First Try

Real estate exam prep done right: compare pass rates by state, learn the tips that move the odds in your favor, and find the state-approved prep course — with practice questions and math cram — that gets you licensed.

Find Your State Exam-Prep Course →

Quick answer: Most U.S. real estate licensing exams are pass/fail at roughly a 70–75% score, split into a national and a state-specific portion, and the first-time pass rate averages around 57% nationwide. The candidates who pass on the first try almost always do one thing the rest don’t: they drill full-length practice exams and master real estate math before test day.

By the Numbers

Real Estate Exam Pass Rates by State (2026)

First-time pass rates tell you how tough each state’s exam really is — and where strong prep matters most. Here is how the states MLS Campus serves compare.

State Exam provider Questions Passing score First-time pass rate Prep course
Florida Pearson VUE (DBPR) 100 75% ~50% Florida Exam Prep
Texas Pearson VUE (TREC) 110 70% ~58% Texas Exam Prep
California California DRE 150 70% ~50% California Exam Prep
New York NY Dept. of State 75 70% Not published New York Exam Prep
Virginia PSI 120 70% / 75% Not published Virginia Exam Prep
Maryland PSI 110 70% Not published Maryland Exam Prep

Exam format from official state exam bulletins. First-time pass rates: Florida ~50% (DBPR/Pearson VUE), Texas ~58% (TREC), California ~50% (California DRE); the national first-time average is roughly 57%. New York, Virginia, and Maryland do not publish official first-time pass rates, so they are marked “Not published.” Last updated July 2026.

Know the Challenge

Why the Real Estate Exam Is Hard — and How Prep Changes the Odds

With first-time pass rates hovering near 50–58% in most states, roughly half of candidates fail on their first attempt. The exam is not designed to trick you, but it is broad: it covers national real estate principles, your state’s specific license law, contracts, financing, and a block of real estate math — all under a strict time limit.

The candidates who fail usually run out of time, get caught by the math, or never practiced under real exam conditions. That is exactly what structured prep fixes: full-length timed practice exams rebuild your stamina and pacing, targeted math drills remove the single biggest point-loser, and question banks expose the state-specific rules that surprise unprepared test-takers.

Your Game Plan

10 Tips to Pass Your Real Estate Exam on the First Try

  1. Master the math first. Proration, commission splits, loan-to-value, and area calculations trip up more candidates than any other topic. Work a dedicated math cram course until the formulas are automatic — and see our real estate math guide.
  2. Drill full-length practice exams. Take timed, exam-length practice tests until you consistently score above the passing threshold — this is the single strongest predictor of passing.
  3. Learn the vocabulary cold. Many questions are really definition questions in disguise; flashcards on terms like escheat, easement, and encumbrance pay off fast.
  4. Separate national from state. Study the national principles and your state’s license law as two distinct blocks — you must pass both portions.
  5. Manage your time. Flag hard questions and move on; never let one problem burn five minutes.
  6. Read the question twice. Watch for “except,” “not,” and “most likely” — the wording is often the trap.
  7. Focus your state’s law. State-specific rules (agency, disclosure, license law) carry heavy weight and are where unprepared candidates lose points.
  8. Simulate test day. Practice on a computer, timed, without notes, so the real exam feels familiar.
  9. Review every wrong answer. Your missed questions are your study guide — understand why the right answer is right.
  10. Schedule when you are ready, not before. Book the exam once your practice scores are consistently passing, and read your state’s pass guide — e.g. Florida, Virginia, and Texas.
Practice Until Passing Is Automatic

MLS Campus exam prep gives you full-length practice exams, a dedicated math cram, and audio review — built around your state’s exact test.

Choose Your State Exam Prep →

The Format

What’s on the Real Estate Exam?

While the details vary by state, almost every real estate salesperson exam follows the same shape:

  • Two portions: a national section (principles, practices, math) and a state section (your state’s license law).
  • Multiple choice: roughly 75–150 questions depending on the state (see the table above).
  • Passing score: generally 70–75%, scored per portion — you must pass both.
  • Time limit: commonly 1.5 to 4 hours; math and reading pace matter.
  • Retakes: most states let you retake, often for a fee, but many limit attempts within a window — passing the first time saves time and money.
Choose Your State

Choose Your State Exam-Prep Course

Each course is built around your state’s exact exam, with practice questions, a math cram, and audio review.

Florida

Pass the 100-question Pearson VUE exam (75% to pass). Start the Florida Sales Associate Exam Prep or Florida Broker Exam Prep, and shore up the math with the Florida Math Cram.

Texas

Prepare for the TREC/Pearson VUE exam with the Texas Sales Agent Exam Prep or the Texas Broker Exam Prep.

New York

Get ready for the 75-question NY Department of State exam with the New York State Exam Prep Master or Broker Exam Prep Master, plus the NY Math Cram.

Virginia

Prepare for the PSI exam with the Virginia Salesperson Exam Prep or Broker Exam Prep, plus the Virginia Math Cram.

Maryland

Get exam-ready for the PSI exam with the Maryland Salesperson Exam Prep Master and the Maryland Math Cram.

California

Prepare for the 150-question California DRE exam with the California Salesperson State Exam Prep.

What You Get

What’s Inside MLS Campus Exam Prep

  • Full-length practice exams that mirror your state’s real test format and timing.
  • A dedicated math cram that turns the exam’s toughest section into easy points.
  • Hundreds of practice questions with explanations, split by national and state topics.
  • Audio review lessons so you can study on the go.
  • 100% online and self-paced — practice on any device, right up to test day.
Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the real estate exam pass rate?

The first-time pass rate averages around 57% nationally, and sits near 50–58% in most states MLS Campus serves. Roughly half of candidates fail on their first attempt, which is why structured practice matters.

How do I pass the real estate exam on my first try?

Drill full-length timed practice exams until you consistently score above passing, master real estate math with a math cram, learn the vocabulary, and study your state’s license law as its own block. Book the exam only once your practice scores are reliably passing.

What score do I need to pass?

Most states require about 70–75%, scored separately on the national and state portions — you must pass both. Check your state’s row in the table above.

How many questions are on the real estate exam?

It ranges from about 75 questions (New York) to 150 (California), combining a national section and a state-law section. See the state table for specifics.

Is there math on the real estate exam?

Yes — expect questions on proration, commissions, loan-to-value, and area. Math is the most common reason candidates fail, so a dedicated math cram is one of the highest-value ways to prepare.

Can I retake the exam if I fail?

Most states allow retakes, usually for a fee, though some limit attempts within a set window. Passing on the first try saves both time and money — the reason good prep pays for itself.

Can I prepare for the exam online?

Yes. Every MLS Campus exam-prep course is 100% online and self-paced, with practice exams, math cram, and audio review you can use on any device.

Pass the First Time
Ready to Pass Your Real Estate Exam?

Don’t leave the biggest test of your new career to chance. Pick your state and start practicing with exam prep built around the real thing.

Start Your State Exam Prep →

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