If you want to become a licensed real estate salesperson in New York City, you need to pass the state licensing exam. This guide covers exactly what you need to know — the exam structure, the topics that actually show up, and how to study without wasting time.
What the NYS Real Estate Salesperson Exam Covers
The New York State Real Estate Salesperson exam is administered by PSI Exams and consists of 75 questions. You have 90 minutes to complete it. A passing score is 70% or higher (53 out of 75 correct).
The exam tests your knowledge across these core areas:
- License Law and Regulations — NY Real Property Law, DOS rules, duties of licensees
- Law of Agency — fiduciary duties, agency relationships, buyer/seller representation
- Legal Issues — contracts, deeds, title, property rights, landlord-tenant law
- Finance — mortgage types, loan terms, amortization, points, APR
- Valuation and Market Analysis — appraisal methods, CMA, market value vs. assessed value
- Land Use — zoning, building codes, environmental regulations
- Human Rights and Fair Housing — protected classes, discriminatory practices, blockbusting, steering
- Real Estate Math — commission calculations, prorations, area calculations
Before You Can Sit for the Exam
New York requires you to complete a 77-hour pre-licensing course from a DOS-approved school before you can take the state exam. This is non-negotiable. The course itself will cover most of the material, but passing it does not mean you are exam-ready — many people still fail the state exam after completing the course.
How to Actually Study for the Exam
1. Know the High-Weight Topics Cold
Not all topics are weighted equally. Based on the exam content outline, these areas tend to carry the most questions:
- Law of Agency (roughly 15-18% of questions)
- Finance and Mortgages (roughly 12-15%)
- Contracts and Legal Issues (roughly 12%)
- License Law (roughly 10%)
Do not skim agency law. Understand the difference between a seller’s agent, buyer’s agent, dual agent, and designated agent. Know what each owes to each party in the transaction.
2. Memorize These Key Formulas
Math questions on the exam are straightforward if you know the formulas. The ones you must know:
- Commission: Sale Price × Commission Rate = Total Commission
- Net to Seller: Sale Price − Commission − Closing Costs = Net
- Loan-to-Value (LTV): Loan Amount ÷ Appraised Value = LTV%
- Proration: Annual amount ÷ 365 × days = prorated amount
- Area: Length × Width = Square Footage
- Assessed Value: Market Value × Assessment Rate = Assessed Value
- Property Tax: Assessed Value × Tax Rate = Annual Tax
3. Use Practice Exams Heavily
The most effective prep strategy is repetitive practice testing. Aim for at least 500 practice questions before your exam date. When you get a question wrong, do not just move on — read the explanation and understand why the correct answer is correct.
Free and low-cost resources:
- Real Estate Express practice tests
- Exam Scholar (New York-specific)
- PrepAgent (video explanations for every topic)
4. Know Your Fair Housing Laws Exactly
New York has one of the most expansive fair housing frameworks in the country. You need to know both the Federal Fair Housing Act (1968) and the New York State Human Rights Law.
Federal protected classes: Race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, disability.
New York adds: Age, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, lawful source of income, military status.
Know the definitions of blockbusting (inducing panic selling based on demographic change) and steering (directing buyers toward or away from neighborhoods based on protected characteristics). Both will appear on the exam.
5. Understand Mortgage Types
Finance questions trip up a lot of first-time test-takers. Be clear on the differences between:
- Fixed-rate vs. ARM — how rates adjust, caps, initial periods
- FHA loans — low down payment (3.5%), MIP required, owner-occupant only
- VA loans — no down payment required, for eligible veterans, no PMI
- Conventional loans — PMI required if LTV is above 80%
- Hard money loans — asset-based, short-term, high-interest, used by investors
- Purchase money mortgage — seller finances the buyer
Exam Day: What to Expect
You will test at a PSI testing center. Bring a valid, government-issued photo ID. No calculators, phones, or notes are allowed in the testing room — PSI provides a whiteboard or scratch paper.
Arrive 15 minutes early. If you arrive late, you forfeit your exam fee.
Results are given immediately after you finish. If you pass, you will receive a score report showing a passing designation. If you fail, the report will show which content areas need improvement.
If You Fail the Exam
You can retake the exam as many times as needed, but you must wait 24 hours between attempts and pay the exam fee ($15) each time. Review your score report to identify weak areas before retesting. Most people who fail do so because of agency law or finance — go back to those sections first.
After You Pass
Passing the exam does not make you licensed. You still need to:
- Find a sponsoring broker to work under
- Submit your license application to the NY Department of State (DOS)
- Pay the $65 license application fee
- Complete background disclosure questions on the application
Your license is not active until the DOS approves the application and your sponsoring broker associates you. Do not practice real estate before this step is complete.
Bottom Line
The NYC real estate exam is passable with focused study. Most people who fail do so because they relied only on their pre-licensing course and did not practice exam questions. Run through at least 500 practice questions, know your agency law and mortgage types cold, and show up on time. That is the formula.
