Getting a real estate license in New York involves five steps: meeting eligibility requirements, completing a 77-hour pre-licensing course, passing the state licensing exam, finding a sponsoring broker, and submitting your application. This guide walks through each step in order.
Step 1 — Meet the Basic Requirements
Before starting the licensing process, confirm you meet the minimum requirements:
You are at least 18 years old
You are legally authorized to work in the United States
You do not have a disqualifying criminal history
There is no NY State residency requirement. You can live outside New York and still apply for a NY real estate salesperson license.
For a full requirements breakdown, see: NY Real Estate License Requirements.
Step 2 — Complete the 77-Hour Pre-Licensing Course
New York requires all salesperson applicants to complete a 77-hour pre-licensing education course through a school approved by the NY Department of State.
What the course covers:
The course covers law of agency, contracts, property ownership, financing, fair housing, real estate math, NY license law, and the role of the real estate salesperson.
How long it takes:
Online self-paced: 2–4 weeks depending on hours per day
In-person scheduled classes: 4–8 weeks depending on the school’s schedule
Hybrid: varies
What you get at the end:
A certificate of completion that you must have before registering for the licensing exam. Your school submits your completion record to PSI Exams directly.
How to find a school:
Search the NY Department of State’s list of approved real estate education providers. Online courses are typically $150–$400. In-person courses vary by location.
Step 3 — Pass the NY Real Estate Licensing Exam
After your school submits your completion record, you can schedule your licensing exam through PSI Exams.
Exam details:
75 multiple-choice questions
90-minute time limit
Passing score: 70% (at least 53 correct answers)
Fee: $15 per attempt
Location: PSI testing centers throughout New York State
If you do not pass:
You can reschedule and retake the exam. There is no limit on the number of attempts, but you must pay the $15 fee each time.
How to prepare:
Start with our free 10-question diagnostic test to identify weak areas, then work through our NY Real Estate Practice Tests — three full-length 75-question tests with instant answer review.
For topic-by-topic preparation, see: NY Real Estate Exam Topics: A Complete Breakdown.
Step 4 — Find a Sponsoring Broker
In New York, a new real estate salesperson cannot practice independently. You must be sponsored by a licensed real estate broker. Your broker submits your license application on your behalf and supervises your practice.
How to find a broker:
Research brokerages in your target market — national franchises and independent local brokerages both sponsor new agents
Interview multiple brokers before committing — ask about commission splits, training, marketing support, and office culture
Consider your goals: new agents at larger brokerages often get more structured training; smaller brokerages may offer higher splits but less support
You do not need to find a broker before passing your exam. Many candidates line up a broker after passing so they can start working immediately.
Step 5 — Submit Your License Application
Once you have passed the exam and found a sponsoring broker, your broker initiates the license application through the NY Department of State’s eAccessNY system.
What is needed:
Your exam pass certificate from PSI
Your broker’s sponsorship
The $65 license fee (two-year license)
Most applications are processed within 1–2 weeks. Once approved, your license appears in eAccessNY and you can begin working immediately.
How Long Does the Whole Process Take?
Complete 77-hour course: 2–8 weeks
Schedule and pass licensing exam: 1–2 weeks
Find a sponsoring broker: 1–4 weeks
License application processing: 1–2 weeks
Total: 5–16 weeks
What Comes After Your License
Once licensed, you practice as a real estate salesperson under your sponsoring broker’s supervision. Your license is valid for two years. To renew, you must complete 22.5 hours of continuing education, including at least 3 hours on fair housing.
For a detailed study strategy before your exam, see: How to Prepare for the NY Real Estate Exam.
Practice Exam Hub is not affiliated with the New York Department of State, PSI Exams, or any licensing authority. This content is for general informational purposes only. Requirements may change — always verify current requirements with the NY Department of State.
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