Maryland · Post-Exam Roadmap 2026
You cleared the hard part. Now here is your step-by-step path from a passing score to an active license and your first commission check.
Clearing the Maryland salesperson exam feels like the finish line. It is really the starting line. The score you earned at the PSI test center is not a license yet, and the state will not let you list a home, show a property, or collect a commission until a few more boxes are checked.
The good news: the path from passing score to active agent is short and well defined. Most candidates move from the test chair to a live license in roughly three to ten weeks. Here is exactly what happens next, what it costs, and how to make your first month count.
Salesperson application fee
To receive MREC instructions
To apply before your score expires
Minimum passing score, each portion
Step Zero
When you pass both the national and state portions, PSI hands you a Confirmation Notice at the testing center. Keep it – but understand that it is proof of your score, not a license to practice.
Within three to five business days, MREC emails you a registration number and instructions for applying. From the date you pass, you have one full year to submit your application before the score expires and you would have to retest.
Hold onto the PSI Confirmation Notice. In 3 to 5 business days, MREC emails your registration number and the link to apply.
To hold an active license you must affiliate with a licensed Maryland broker who supervises your transactions. Interview a few before you commit – culture, training, and splits vary widely.
Submit your salesperson application through the Maryland Department of Labor licensing portal, with your broker information attached. The fee includes a contribution to the state Guaranty Fund.
MREC reviews your application and background. Approval typically takes around three weeks, after which your license is officially issued.
With an active license, join your local MLS and association, set up E and O coverage and lockbox access, and begin taking clients under your broker.
MLS Campus offers state-approved pre-licensing and exam prep built to get you to a passing score the first time.
The Biggest Decision
Your first brokerage shapes your first year more than your course ever did. Two offices under the same national brand can feel completely different ten minutes apart, so treat this like a job search, not a formality. Meet several, compare what they offer, and choose for support – not just the highest split.
The $90 state fee is the easy part. Real estate is commission-based, so budget for these recurring business costs while your pipeline fills up.
Annual Bright MLS subscription, often billed quarterly.
Yearly fee for secure access to listed properties.
Local, state, and national dues – prorated your first year.
Errors and omissions coverage, sometimes paid by your broker.
On top of these, expect possible brokerage desk fees or a commission split, basic marketing, and a cushion to cover living expenses before your first closings settle.
If you have a broker and want to earn, affiliate immediately. Your license goes live, the dues clock starts, and you can begin taking clients and building a pipeline.
Not ready yet? You can place your license on inactive status and take up to three years to affiliate with a broker. You avoid ongoing dues, but you cannot practice or earn commissions until you activate.
Hit The Ground Running
The first month is mostly repetition: learning your forms, learning your MLS, and learning how to explain the process without sounding unsure. Build momentum with a simple checklist.
The way agents get paid shifted after the 2024 National Association of REALTORS settlement, and it directly affects how you work from day one. Buyer agents now sign a written representation agreement with a client before showing homes, spelling out services and compensation up front. Commissions are negotiated directly with the people you represent rather than assumed, and offers of pay are no longer advertised inside the MLS. For a brand-new agent, the lesson is simple: learn to explain your value and your fee clearly, because that conversation now happens early and out loud.
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MLS Campus · Maryland Agent Guidance
Expect the MREC application email within 3 to 5 business days. After you apply with a broker attached, issuance usually takes about three weeks – so most new agents are fully active within five to ten weeks of passing.
To hold an active license, yes. If you are not ready, you can apply and place the license on inactive status, then take up to three years to affiliate with a sponsoring broker.
The state application fee is $90. After that, plan for recurring costs such as MLS access, association dues, lockbox service, and E and O insurance, which together commonly run well over a thousand dollars a year.
One year. You must apply for your salesperson license within twelve months of passing, or the score expires and you would need to retake the exam.
Maryland holds reciprocal agreements only with Pennsylvania and Oklahoma. Licensees from other states are reviewed case by case and may need to pass the Maryland state portion or complete additional education.
From state-approved pre-licensing to exam prep that gets you across the line, MLS Campus helps Maryland agents launch with confidence.