NY Real Estate Broker vs Salesperson License — Which One Do You Actually Need?
Two licenses, two paths. Most people start with salesperson. A broker license unlocks higher earning potential and independence — but requires more experience and education. Here’s the full breakdown.
Quick answerSalesperson licenseBroker licenseSide-by-side tableCareer progressionAssociate brokerWhich to pursue
Quick answer
If you’re new to real estate in NY, you start with the Salesperson license. It requires a 77-hour course, a state exam, and a sponsoring broker. Most people work as a Salesperson for 2-3 years, then qualify and take the Broker exam to upgrade.
The two are distinct credentials. A broker can do everything a salesperson can do, plus more — including owning a brokerage and supervising other licensees. A salesperson must always work under a broker.
NY Real Estate Salesperson license
The entry-level NY real estate credential.
- Education: 77 hours of NY-approved pre-licensing course
- Exam: 75 questions, 90 minutes, 70% to pass
- Cost: ~$300-$450 total (course + fees + fingerprinting + license)
- Required: Must work under a sponsoring broker. Cannot operate independently.
- Compensation: Receives commission only through the sponsoring broker — never directly from clients.
- Term: 2-year license, renewable with 22.5 hours of CE.
Salesperson is the path 95%+ of new NY licensees take. You can start a real estate career, build your sphere of influence, learn how transactions work, and earn commission immediately.
NY Real Estate Broker license
The senior credential. Allows independence and brokerage ownership.
- Education: 152 hours total (the 77-hour salesperson course + an additional 75-hour broker course)
- Experience required: Either (1) 2+ years as a NY salesperson with the equivalent of 3,500+ points from qualifying real estate activities, OR (2) Equivalent experience in another state (with NY DOS approval).
- Exam: 100 questions, 2.5 hours, 70% to pass
- Cost: Add ~$150-$400 for the 75-hour broker course + $50 broker exam fee + $150 broker license fee
- Can: Operate independently. Open and own a brokerage. Hire and supervise salespersons. Earn commission directly. Hold escrow funds.
- Required: No sponsoring broker needed. You ARE the broker.
The broker path is for people who want independence, higher splits, or to build their own brokerage.
Side-by-side comparison
| Salesperson | Broker | |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-licensing hours | 77 hours | 152 hours (77 + 75) |
| Exam length | 75 questions / 90 min | 100 questions / 2.5 hrs |
| Pass score | 70% | 70% |
| Experience required | None | 2+ years as salesperson + 3,500 points |
| Can work independently | No | Yes |
| Can supervise others | No | Yes |
| Can own a brokerage | No | Yes |
| License fee (2 yr) | $55 | $150 |
| CE required | 22.5 hours / 2 yr | 22.5 hours / 2 yr |
| Typical income | $30K-$120K | $80K-$500K+ (with brokerage) |
Career progression
The typical NY real estate career path:
- Year 0: Complete 77-hour course, pass salesperson exam, find sponsoring broker, get licensed.
- Years 1-3: Work as a salesperson. Close deals. Accumulate experience and points (NY DOS has a points system for qualifying experience).
- Year 2-3: Complete the additional 75-hour broker pre-licensing course (can be online).
- Year 3: Take the broker exam. If you pass, apply for the broker license.
- Year 3+: Decide path:
- Associate broker — keep working under a brokerage but with broker credentials and higher splits
- Principal broker — open your own brokerage, hire your own agents
- Continue as salesperson functionally — keep working as a salesperson; the broker license is just credentials
What’s an “Associate Broker”?
A common middle path. An Associate Broker holds the broker license but chooses to work under another broker rather than operate independently. Benefits:
- Higher commission splits at most brokerages (you bring more credentials)
- More autonomy in transactions
- Resume value when meeting clients
- You don’t take on the responsibilities of running your own brokerage (compliance, supervision, insurance, etc.)
Many established agents stay as Associate Brokers their entire careers because the brokerage handles the administrative burden.
Which one should you pursue?
Get the Salesperson license if:
- You’re brand new to real estate
- You want to start earning ASAP
- You don’t yet know if real estate is your long-term career
- You want to learn the trade under an experienced broker
Get the Broker license (eventually) if:
- You’ve worked 2+ years as a salesperson and have a track record
- You want to open your own brokerage
- You want maximum commission splits
- You want to supervise / mentor other agents
- You want the credibility of broker-level credentials with clients
See our complete guide to passing the salesperson exam if you’re starting at step one.
Once you’re eligible — pass the exam
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