Compliance Snapshot
- National bank
- 3,000+ planned national questions
- State portions
- Expanding state-specific coverage
- Access
- $34.99 standard / The 90 Club™ $44.99 -> $24.99 net
- Core areas
- Agency, contracts, finance, property law, math, valuation, and state rules
- Model
- Independent exam-prep Qbank, not pre-licensing credit
Who this guide is for
This guide is for real estate candidates who already know their state education requirement and want extra practice for national concepts, state law, and real estate math.
A real estate Qbank should split national and state practice clearly. National practice should include agency, contracts, ownership, finance, valuation, fair housing, property management, transfer, and math. State portions should be separated so candidates do not confuse local rules with national rules.
What to check before paying
A useful exam-prep page should answer the practical questions before checkout: how many original questions are included, whether practice is unlimited, whether explanations are shown after answering, how long access lasts, and whether the product is independent from the exam owner.
For bilingual or ESL study, also check whether Spanish is a full study-access layer or only a short marketing note. For coding, licensing, and healthcare exams, verify that the page explains what the course does not issue: no license, official score, certificate of board passage, or regulator approval.
- Check whether national and state practice are separated.
- Look for worked math, not answer-only math.
- Do not treat exam prep as state-required pre-licensing education unless the page says it is approved for that purpose.
- Confirm price, access length, and whether state portions are available for your target state.
How to use the question bank
Alternate national concept blocks with real estate math and state-law blocks. Keep a running vocabulary list because many misses come from terms like encumbrance, fiduciary, escrow, proration, lien priority, and agency relationship.
Use short domain sets first, read every rationale, and then move into timed mixed blocks. The goal is to learn the rule behind each distractor, not memorize the answer position.
Independent prep and limitations
National Course Portal exam-prep products are independent study products. They are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by the official exam owners, testing vendors, certification bodies, state boards, or trade organizations named only to identify the exam style.
The course exam, practice score, or rebate path does not guarantee a real exam result, licensure, employment, school admission, certification, or third-party acceptance.
Action Checklist
- 1Confirm your state pre-licensing and exam eligibility rules first.
- 2Separate national practice from state-specific practice.
- 3Do real estate math by hand until the steps are repeatable.
- 4Review agency, contracts, finance, fair housing, and valuation weekly.
- 5Use mixed timed blocks only after topic drills are stable.
FAQ
Does this replace state-required real estate pre-licensing education?
No. It is independent exam prep. State-required pre-licensing education and approval rules must be confirmed through the relevant state regulator.
Why separate national and state practice?
Many candidates lose points by applying a national rule to a state-specific question or vice versa. Separate drills make that distinction clearer.
What should I do if real estate math is weak?
Use worked math explanations and redo each missed problem without notes. Math improves fastest when you practice the process, not just the answer.
Official Sources
This guide is general information for employer planning. It is not legal advice, and employers should confirm requirements with counsel, the regulator, or the requesting agency before relying on any course for a specific obligation.