All Practice Exams

100+ Free ADREC Broker Exam Practice Questions

Pass your Abu Dhabi ADREC Real Estate Broker Registration Exam exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.

✓ No registration✓ No credit card✓ No hidden fees✓ Start practicing immediately
100+ Questions
100% Free

Loading practice questions...

Same family resources

Explore More UAE Real Estate Licensing Exams

Continue into nearby exams from the same family. Each card keeps practice questions, study guides, flashcards, videos, and articles in one place.

Sample ADREC Broker Exam Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your ADREC Broker Exam exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1Which law is the primary legislation regulating the real estate sector in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi that every ADREC-registered broker must understand?
A.Dubai Law No. 7 of 2006 on Land Registration
B.Abu Dhabi Law No. 3 of 2015 Concerning the Regulation of the Real Estate Sector
C.Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2018 on Anti-Money Laundering
D.Dubai Law No. 13 of 2008 on the Interim Real Estate Register
Explanation: Abu Dhabi Law No. 3 of 2015 is the cornerstone legislation regulating the real estate sector across the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, covering licensing, registers, off-plan sales, escrow accounts and broker conduct. It is distinct from Dubai's separate legal framework.
2Which authority currently regulates and licenses real estate brokers in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi?
A.Dubai Land Department (DLD)
B.Real Estate Regulatory Agency of Dubai (RERA Dubai)
C.Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC)
D.Federal Ministry of Economy
Explanation: The Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC) is the entity responsible for regulating the real estate sector and licensing professionals such as brokers in Abu Dhabi. ADREC took over functions previously held under the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT).
3What is DARI in the context of Abu Dhabi real estate?
A.A federal tax authority for property transactions
B.The unified digital real estate platform for Abu Dhabi services and transactions
C.A private property portal owned by developers
D.The Dubai equivalent of the Ejari leasing registration system
Explanation: DARI is the comprehensive digital real estate ecosystem for the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, launched with support from the DMT and now operated under ADREC. It hosts services such as professions licensing, transactions, certificates, escrow management and registration.
4Before marketing any property in Abu Dhabi, an individual broker must FIRST complete which of the following?
A.Approved real estate training and pass the broker exam, then register on DARI
B.Purchase a property in an investment zone
C.Obtain a federal trade licence from the Ministry of Economy
D.Register a company with the Dubai Department of Economic Development
Explanation: Abu Dhabi requires every broker to complete approved training, pass the broker exam, and register on the DARI platform before they may market property. Only after personal registration is approved is a Broker Licence Number (BLN) issued.
5What is a Broker Licence Number (BLN) in Abu Dhabi?
A.A federal tax identification number
B.A bank account number used for escrow deposits
C.The broker's public identifier issued once personal registration is approved, required on all listings and adverts
D.A property title deed reference number
Explanation: The BLN is the broker's public identifier issued after personal registration on DARI is approved. It must appear on all listings, social adverts, portals and contracts so clients can verify the broker in the licensed professional directory.
6What is Madhmoun, introduced by ADREC and integrated into the DARI portal?
A.A mandatory listing-verification system (an MLS) cross-checking adverts against ownership and DARI records
B.An escrow bank guarantee fund
C.A federal mortgage subsidy programme
D.A property valuation index published quarterly
Explanation: Madhmoun is Abu Dhabi's mandatory ad-verification layer and government-backed Multiple Listing Service (MLS), integrated into DARI. Listings on major portals are cross-checked against Madhmoun and DARI ownership records to eliminate fake or duplicated adverts.
7Under Madhmoun rules, what is the maximum number of licensed brokers that may share marketing rights on a single property when listed on a shared (non-exclusive) basis?
A.One broker only
B.Up to three brokers
C.Up to five brokers
D.There is no limit
Explanation: Under Madhmoun, a property can be listed either exclusively (only one broker may market it) or on a shared basis with up to three licensed brokers. The listing rights must be selected during the permit application.
8A broker in Abu Dhabi wishes to advertise a property on a major portal. What must be obtained before the advert is published?
A.Approval from the Dubai Land Department
B.A Madhmoun advertising permit with verified ownership and owner authorisation
C.A federal media licence from the National Media Council
D.Nothing; brokers may advertise freely once licensed
Explanation: Advertising in Abu Dhabi requires a Madhmoun permit. The broker must verify ownership via title deed records, obtain the owner's authorisation, and display a valid BLN. Listings are cross-checked to stop misleading or duplicated adverts.
9Can an individual operate as a freelance real estate broker in Abu Dhabi without any company affiliation?
A.Yes, freelancing is fully permitted once the broker passes the exam
B.No, a broker must generally be linked to a licensed brokerage entity, though an individual broker registration route exists on DARI
C.Yes, but only for off-plan sales
D.No, only UAE nationals may register at all
Explanation: Brokerage activity in Abu Dhabi is generally tied to a licensed corporate entity, although DARI provides a 'Register Broker (Individual)' route for individuals not tied to a company who meet the document and training requirements. The practical norm is affiliation with a licensed brokerage.
10Which documents must an individual typically upload on DARI when applying to register as a broker in Abu Dhabi?
A.Only a valid passport
B.Training completion certificate, police clearance certificate, experience certificate and academic qualification
C.A property title deed and a tenancy contract
D.A federal medical fitness certificate only
Explanation: The DARI individual broker registration requires uploading a Training Completion Certificate for Brokers, a Police Clearance Certificate, an Experience Certificate, and an Academic Qualification certificate, along with a valid Emirates ID and no active blocks on the account.

About the ADREC Broker Exam Exam

The ADREC broker exam is the knowledge assessment required to register as a licensed real estate broker or agent in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. Administered through ADREC and the DARI platform (with services also accessed via TAMM), it tests Abu Dhabi-specific law and regulation, including Law No. 3 of 2015 (as reformed by Law No. 2 of 2025), DARI and Madhmoun procedures, the code of conduct, property rights, off-plan and escrow rules, and anti-money-laundering obligations. It is distinct from the Dubai RERA broker exam.

Assessment

Multiple-choice knowledge assessment completed after an ADREC-accredited broker training course, covering Abu Dhabi real estate law, ADREC/DARI regulation, brokerage ethics, property rights, off-plan/escrow and AML.

Time Limit

Set by the accredited provider; typically a timed multiple-choice test of around 1-2 hours.

Passing Score

ADREC does not publish a fixed official pass mark; training providers commonly report a threshold around 70%-85% (candidate-reported). Confirm the definitive standard with your accredited provider.

Exam Fee

Training course fees plus ADREC/DARI registration fees. Broker company registration on DARI is around AED 9,000; individual registration and annual renewal fees are set by ADREC and change periodically. Verify current fees on DARI/TAMM. (Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC), via accredited training providers and the DARI platform)

ADREC Broker Exam Exam Content Outline

20%

Abu Dhabi Real Estate Law

Law No. 3 of 2015 and the Law No. 2 of 2025 reforms, definitions, registers, penalties and the sector's legislative framework.

22%

ADREC and DARI Regulation

ADREC's role, the DARI platform, TAMM, Madhmoun listing verification, the BLN, licensing, renewals and advertising permits.

23%

Brokerage Practice and Ethics

Code of conduct, brokerage agreements, commission, disclosure, confidentiality, conflicts of interest and client funds.

18%

Registration and Property Rights

Freehold, Musataha, usufruct and long-term lease rights, investment-zone ownership, jointly owned property and the registers.

11%

Off-Plan Sales and Escrow

Initial register, project escrow accounts, trustee banks, milestone releases, SPAs and developer licensing.

6%

Anti-Money Laundering

DNFBP duties, customer due diligence, beneficial owners, source-of-funds checks and goAML reporting.

How to Pass the ADREC Broker Exam Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: ADREC does not publish a fixed official pass mark; training providers commonly report a threshold around 70%-85% (candidate-reported). Confirm the definitive standard with your accredited provider.
  • Assessment: Multiple-choice knowledge assessment completed after an ADREC-accredited broker training course, covering Abu Dhabi real estate law, ADREC/DARI regulation, brokerage ethics, property rights, off-plan/escrow and AML.
  • Time limit: Set by the accredited provider; typically a timed multiple-choice test of around 1-2 hours.
  • Exam fee: Training course fees plus ADREC/DARI registration fees. Broker company registration on DARI is around AED 9,000; individual registration and annual renewal fees are set by ADREC and change periodically. Verify current fees on DARI/TAMM.

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

ADREC Broker Exam Study Tips from Top Performers

1Learn the Abu Dhabi-specific law cold: Law No. 3 of 2015 and the Law No. 2 of 2025 reforms (escrow oversight, owner associations, service-charge pre-approval, penalties). Do not memorise Dubai DLD/RERA rules, as they will mislead you on this exam.
2Master the DARI platform and Madhmoun in detail, including the Broker Licence Number requirement on all adverts, exclusive versus shared (up to three brokers) listings, and the verification of ownership before advertising.
3Practise scenario questions on the code of conduct and AML duties, since the exam tests how a broker should act on conflicts of interest, disclosure, client funds, source-of-funds checks and goAML reporting, not just definitions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who administers the ADREC broker exam and how do I register as a broker in Abu Dhabi?

The Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC) regulates broker licensing. You complete an ADREC-accredited training course, pass the broker exam, then register on the DARI platform (often via TAMM). Once approved, you receive a Broker Licence Number (BLN) that must appear on all listings.

How is the ADREC broker exam different from the Dubai RERA broker exam?

Each emirate runs its own framework. The ADREC exam covers Abu Dhabi-specific law (Law No. 3 of 2015 and the 2025 reforms), DARI, Madhmoun and ADREC procedures, while the Dubai exam covers the Dubai Land Department and RERA. Passing one does not license you in the other emirate.

What is the passing score for the ADREC broker exam?

ADREC does not publish a fixed official pass mark. Training providers commonly report a threshold around 70%-85%, but this is candidate-reported, not an official ADREC figure. Confirm the exact standard with your accredited training provider and aim to score consistently above 80% in practice.

What topics should I focus on for the Abu Dhabi broker exam?

Prioritise Abu Dhabi real estate law, the DARI platform and Madhmoun listing rules, the Broker Licence Number, the code of conduct, property rights such as Musataha and usufruct, off-plan escrow rules and anti-money-laundering obligations for brokers as DNFBPs.