Continuing Education Checklist
Steps an agent or broker runs each renewal cycle to complete state-required continuing education, document mandatory topics like fair housing and agency, and keep certificates audit-ready. Built for the period from renewal-deadline awareness through commission filing.
Renewal Requirements and Planning
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Confirm the license renewal deadline
Pull the renewal date from the state commission portal (CA DRE eLicensing, FL DBPR, TX TREC Online Services, etc.). Don't rely on the date in your CRM — commissions occasionally adjust cycles after disciplinary actions or address changes.
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Look up state CE hour requirements
Total hours typically run 12–30 per 1–2 year cycle, with mandatory sub-categories: ethics, fair housing, agency, legal updates, and trust-account handling for brokers. Note any post-license or first-renewal hours required for newer licensees — these are easy to miss.
Collects number Collects paragraph -
Check NAR Code of Ethics cycle status
NAR requires the Code of Ethics training every three years for REALTORS — this is separate from state CE and is enforced by the local board. Failure to complete results in suspension of REALTOR membership, not license suspension. Confirm the cycle end date in your local board's portal.
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Confirm brokerage CE reimbursement policy
Many brokerages reimburse a fixed dollar amount or specific course types (designations like ABR, SRS, GRI). Get the cap and approval workflow from the office manager before enrolling — reimbursement after the fact is harder to claim.
Course Selection and Enrollment
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Verify the CE provider is state-approved
Cross-reference the provider on your state commission's approved-school list (e.g., TREC's approved provider search, CA DRE's sponsor lookup). National providers like The CE Shop, McKissock, and Kaplan are approved in most states but not all — and an approved provider in one state doesn't transfer to another.
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Select an alternate state-approved provider
Pull the commission's approved-provider list and pick one offering the mandatory topics in a format that fits your schedule (self-paced online, live webinar, classroom). Confirm hour-for-hour reciprocity if you previously paid for a non-approved course.
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Pick courses covering mandatory topics
Map each course to a mandatory category (ethics, fair housing, agency, legal updates, trust-account). Don't double-count a single course across two categories — most states reject overlap. Leave room in elective hours for designations or skill-building (negotiation, lead-gen, contracts).
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Register and pay course fees
Use the brokerage card if covered by reimbursement, or a personal card and submit the receipt per the policy confirmed earlier. Save the enrollment confirmation — some commissions accept it as proof of intent during late-renewal grace periods.
Course Completion
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Complete required coursework hours
Online providers track time-on-page; closing the browser tab pauses the clock. Don't try to finish 12 hours in one weekend — most states require an end-of-course exam and rushed material doesn't survive an audit conversation if the commission asks what you learned.
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Pass each end-of-course exam
Most CE exams require 70-75% to pass; failed attempts usually allow a retake but some providers cap retakes at two. Re-read the legal-update materials before the exam — these courses change yearly and prior knowledge from last cycle won't cover new statutes.
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Save completion certificates and final scores
Download the PDF certificate from each course; provider portals occasionally purge old certificates after 12-24 months. State commissions typically require records retention for 3-5 years, so file these in a permanent folder, not the active deal drive.
Collects number Collects date Collects file
Compliance Filing and Recordkeeping
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Post hours to the state license portal
Most approved providers report directly to the commission within 5-10 business days; verify the hours show up before assuming they were filed. Note whether the portal flags your renewal as audit-selected — random audit rates run roughly 5-10% in most states.
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Upload certificates to the audit portal
Audit response windows are tight — typically 30 days from notice. Upload all course certificates with provider name, hours, topic category, and completion date visible. Missing or illegible certificates trigger a deficiency letter and can delay renewal.
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File certificates in the brokerage compliance folder
Designated brokers are responsible for agent CE compliance during brokerage audits — keep a copy in the agent file even if the certificates also live in your personal records. Use the same folder structure used for transaction files so a file review can pull both quickly.
Apply Learning to Practice
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Update intake forms for legislative changes
Annual legal-update CE almost always covers a new disclosure, agency-form revision, or buyer-rep agreement change (the post-NAR-settlement buyer agreement is a recent example). Update your Dotloop or SkySlope template library — out-of-date forms in active deals are a top cause of broker file-review citations.
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Brief the team on fair housing updates
Walk through any new state-protected classes (source of income, gender identity) and refresh scripted neighborhood-discussion language to avoid steering. Keep it concrete — bring the actual disclosure form and the commission's recent enforcement summaries rather than abstract principles.
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Set the next renewal cycle reminder
Schedule the next CE workflow run 90 days before the next renewal deadline so course selection and completion don't slip into the final month. Add a 30-days-out reminder for the NAR Code of Ethics cycle if it falls on a different schedule.
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