Real Estate License Renewal Checklist

Steps a licensed agent or broker runs each renewal cycle to complete continuing education, submit the state commission renewal application on time, and keep audit-ready records. Pacing is anchored to the license expiration date.

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1

Renewal Window Setup

  1. Confirm the license expiration date
    • Pull the exact expiration date from the state commission lookup (CA DRE, TX TREC, FL DBPR, etc.) — do not rely on the date printed on the wall license, which is sometimes out of date after a name or brokerage change. Renewal cycles are typically 1, 2, or 4 years depending on the state.

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  2. Look up the state CE hour breakdown
    • Most states mandate a specific topic split — e.g., core law, agency, fair housing, ethics, and electives. Texas TREC requires 18 hours including 4 of Legal Update I and 4 of Legal Update II; California DRE requires 45 hours including specific consumer-protection and implicit-bias content. Document the breakdown before enrolling so you don't pay for hours that don't count.

  3. Confirm NAR REALTOR membership status
    • REALTOR members owe the NAR Code of Ethics training on a triennial cycle separate from state CE. Non-members do not. The triennial deadline does not align with state renewal — confirm both deadlines independently.

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  4. Pull the license history from the commission
    • Check for open complaints, unresolved audits, or unpaid fines on the licensee record. Renewal will be blocked until these clear, and the commission will not always notify you proactively.

2

Continuing Education Completion

  1. Enroll with an approved CE provider
    • Use a state-approved provider — The CE Shop, Kaplan, McKissock, Colibri, or your local board. Out-of-state or unapproved courses do not count even if the topic matches. Verify the provider's approval number on the commission website before paying.

  2. Complete the fair housing hours
    • Most states now require dedicated fair housing or implicit bias hours. Coverage should include protected classes under the federal Fair Housing Act plus state additions (source of income, sexual orientation, gender identity in many jurisdictions) and steering scenarios.

  3. Complete the NAR Code of Ethics training
    • Required of REALTOR members on a triennial cycle. NAR's free 2.5-hour course satisfies the requirement; many state CE providers also offer a version that double-counts toward state ethics hours. Failing the triennial deadline results in suspension of REALTOR membership, not state license.

  4. Complete the agency and core law hours
    • Cover the state's required agency, contracts, and legal-update content. Post-NAR-settlement changes to buyer representation agreements and cooperative compensation are heavily tested in current cycles.

  5. Finish the remaining elective hours
    • Topics like risk management, escrow handling, wire-fraud prevention, or designation coursework (ABR, SRS, CRS) often qualify as electives. Confirm each course's CE-credit equivalence with the state before assuming it counts.

  6. Save certificates of completion
    • The state commission may auto-receive completions from approved providers, but audits go back 3-7 years and the licensee bears the burden of proof. Download PDF certificates from each provider portal and store them in the brokerage compliance folder.

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3

E&O Insurance and Brokerage Affiliation

  1. Confirm E&O coverage spans the new license period
    • Some states (e.g., Iowa, North Dakota, Tennessee) require active E&O as a renewal condition. Verify the policy's effective dates extend past the new license expiration; a one-day gap is enough to block renewal.

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  2. Verify brokerage affiliation with the commission
    • The commission record must match your current sponsoring broker. If you switched brokerages this cycle, confirm the transfer / sponsorship form was filed and accepted — agents have been blocked at renewal because a prior broker never released them in the system.

  3. Update managing broker or DR contact info
4

Renewal Application Submission

  1. Log into the commission licensing portal
    • Examples: DRE eLicensing (CA), TREC Online Services (TX), MyDBPR (FL), eAccessNY (NY). Reset password before the deadline window — portal lockouts are the most common cause of last-minute renewal failures.

  2. Update contact and advertising info
    • The address of record drives where the commission mails official notices. Team names, DBAs, and any registered trade names also need to match brokerage advertising — discrepancies generate audit citations.

  3. Answer the disciplinary disclosure questions
    • Renewal applications ask about new criminal convictions, professional license actions, and civil judgments since the last renewal. Failure to disclose is a separate violation from the underlying event, often more serious than the event itself.

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  4. Attach supplemental disclosure documentation
    • Required when a disclosure question is answered Yes. Attach court records, dispositions, or other-state license orders. Consider consulting the brokerage's compliance counsel before submitting — phrasing of the explanation affects the commission's review path.

  5. Pay the renewal fee
    • Fees vary by license type — salesperson vs. broker vs. broker-associate — and rise sharply if you cross into the late or reinstatement window. Use a card the bookkeeper can match against the brokerage expense reimbursement.

  6. Submit the renewal application
    • Save the confirmation number and the submission receipt PDF. Submission does not equal approval — the commission may take days to weeks to process, especially if disclosures or audit flags are attached.

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5

Post-Renewal Compliance

  1. Verify the renewed license in public lookup
    • Search the public licensee lookup and confirm the new expiration date and active status. If the record still shows the old date within 48 hours of expiration, contact the commission directly — do not assume processing will catch up.

  2. Update MLS, signage, and marketing assets
    • License number and expiration appear on yard signs, business cards, brokerage website bio, MLS profile, and email signatures. State advertising rules require these to reflect current status — out-of-date numbers on active marketing are an easy audit citation.

  3. Archive certificates and renewal receipts
    • Move CE certificates, the E&O dec page, the submission confirmation, and the new license PDF into the brokerage compliance folder. Retain for at least one full audit cycle past the next renewal — most states audit 2-5% of renewals each cycle at random.

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