How Hard Is the NY Real Estate Exam? (An Honest Answer)
“Hard” depends on your starting point. Here’s the actual difficulty, who tends to struggle, why students fail when they fail, and what study volume gets people across the line.
How hard, objectivelyPass ratesHardest topicsWhy people failHow much study timePredict your oddsStrategy
How hard is it, objectively?
The NY State Real Estate Salesperson exam is moderately difficult. It’s not a bar exam β it’s a 75-question multiple-choice test, all of which is directly covered in the 77-hour pre-licensing course. There are no essays, no oral components, no professional judgment scenarios. If you’ve completed the course in good faith and study consistently for 4-6 weeks, you should pass.
But “should” isn’t “will.” A meaningful percentage of first-time test-takers fail. The exam is engineered to filter out candidates who memorized rather than understood, who skipped math, or who relied on generic national prep instead of NY-specific material.
Pass rates on the NY Salesperson exam
NY DOS does not publish official pass-rate statistics on a regular cadence, but historical estimates and pre-licensing school reports suggest:
- First-time pass rate: roughly 50-60%
- Second-attempt pass rate: roughly 70-80%
- Pass rate after thorough practice-test preparation: 80-90%+
In other words, half of first-time test-takers fail. But the failure rate drops dramatically with disciplined preparation. The exam isn’t filtering for intelligence β it’s filtering for preparation.
The hardest topics on the exam
Based on student-reported difficulty and our own question-difficulty analysis across 745 practice questions, these are the topics that trip up the most candidates:
| Topic | Approx. % of Exam | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Real Estate Math | ~10% | Hard β most-feared section |
| NY-Specific Topics (co-ops, rent stab, etc.) | ~10% | Hard if you didn’t study NY-specific material |
| Agency Law (disclosure timing, fiduciary duties) | ~10% | Medium β heavy testing on specifics |
| Fair Housing (NY State protections beyond federal) | ~7% | Medium β generic prep misses NY additions |
| Real Estate Finance (LTV, points, amortization) | ~10% | Medium |
| Real Estate Instruments (Contracts) | ~10% | Medium |
| License Law (Article 12-A) | ~15% | Easier β direct memorization |
| Other (title, valuation, leases, closing, etc.) | ~28% | Varies |
Why students fail (the patterns we see)
- They skipped math during prep. “I’ll figure it out on test day.” They never figure it out on test day. Math turns 7-8 questions into guesses, and that’s the difference between 70% and 65%.
- They studied only the 77-hour course material. The State exam re-words concepts and tests application, not just recall. Practice tests force you to apply.
- They used generic national prep. Kaplan and similar national providers don’t deeply cover NY-specific topics. Source-of-income protection, co-op vs condo rules, mansion tax β these are NY-only and get tested.
- They didn’t take timed full-length exams. 25-question untimed practice doesn’t prepare you for 75-question 90-minute pressure. Stamina matters.
- They crammed. Your brain consolidates between sleep cycles. 30 minutes a day for 4 weeks beats 4 hours a day for 1 week.
- They didn’t review wrong answers. Taking 50 practice tests without reviewing wrong answers is just “miss the same questions 50 different ways.”
How much study time is enough?
After completing the 77-hour pre-licensing course (which is required to sit), most candidates need:
- 20-30 hours of practice testing distributed over 4-6 weeks
- A minimum of 3 full-length timed mock exams before the real thing
- Targeted drill on weak topics identified by the practice tests (usually math and NY-specific)
That’s about 45 minutes a day, 5 days a week, for 5-6 weeks. Less if you scored well on a cold diagnostic; more if you scored below 50%.
Predict your odds (informal benchmark)
Take a cold, no-prep practice test. Don’t review the 77-hour material first. Just take it and grade it. Then use this rough guide:
| Cold Diagnostic Score | What it suggests | Suggested Prep |
|---|---|---|
| 80%+ | You’re ready or nearly so | 1-2 weeks of polish + a few full-length timed mocks |
| 70-79% | Solid foundation, fix weak topics | 3-4 weeks targeted study |
| 60-69% | Likely to fail on first try without prep | 4-6 weeks of structured study |
| 50-59% | Significant gaps | 6-8 weeks; re-read 77-hour material |
| Below 50% | Major gaps β consider re-taking parts of the 77-hour course | Don’t schedule the State exam yet |
You can take our free 10-question diagnostic right now to get a rough baseline.
Strategy: How to make the exam easier than it actually is
- Front-load the math. If math is your weakest area (which it is for most), drill it first. Memorize the formulas cold. Practice with only basic arithmetic β no phone.
- Use NY-specific material. National generic prep gets you to 65%. NY-specific prep gets you to 80%+.
- Take topic-balanced practice tests. Don’t just do “agency questions for two hours.” Mix it up like the real exam mixes it up.
- Time yourself. Stamina under timed pressure is its own skill. Build it in weeks 4-5 of prep.
- Drill the “trap” questions. Most NY exam questions aren’t “hard.” They’re tricky β one wrong detail flips the answer. Our 20 Most-Missed Questions post focuses entirely on these patterns.
- Sleep before the exam. Not glamorous, but it matters.
The NY Real Estate exam is hard if you treat it casually, and entirely passable if you respect it. Most candidates who fail share the same handful of mistakes. Don’t make them.
Prep that costs less than the exam fee.
Take the free 10-question diagnostic β see exactly where you stand.
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