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200+ Free CT Real Estate Practice Questions

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Questions by Category

Ct-Re-Licensing38 questions
Ct-Re-Property-Landlord-Tenant31 questions
Ct-Re-Agency-Disclosures29 questions
Contracts23 questions
Financing20 questions
Ct-Re-Contracts-Closing20 questions
Property-Ownership15 questions
Valuation14 questions
Fair-Housing10 questions
2026 Statistics

Key Facts: CT Real Estate Exam

110 Q

Scored Exam Questions

PSI CT candidate handbook

80 + 30

National + State Split

PSI CT candidate handbook

70%

Passing Score (Each Section)

CT DCP

60 hrs

Pre-License Education

CGS § 20-314

Age 18+

Minimum Age Requirement

CT DCP

12 hrs/2yr

CE Renewal Requirement

CGS § 20-328-8a

Connecticut requires 60 hours of pre-license education and passage of the PSI exam (80 national + 30 state questions, 70% on each section). Connecticut uses PSI Examination Services — not Pearson VUE. Agency relationships are governed by CGS § 20-325i, with major regulatory changes effective December 27, 2024 requiring new agency disclosure forms. Key CT facts: property assessed at 70% of fair market value; conveyance tax is 0.75% state + 0.25% municipal (~1%, higher over $800K); land records filed with Town Clerk (no counties in CT); closings require a licensed CT attorney; judicial foreclosure process. Salesperson license expires May 31 of even-numbered years; CE is 12 hours every 2 years including a mandatory 3-hour legal/fair housing course.

About the CT Real Estate Exam

The Connecticut real estate salesperson exam covers national real estate fundamentals plus Connecticut-specific topics under CGS Title 20, including CT Real Estate Commission licensing requirements, the 2024 agency disclosure forms (CGS § 20-325i, effective 12/27/2024), dual and designated agency consent, trust account management, CT conveyance tax, and the CT Condominium Act (CIOA). Connecticut is an attorney-closing state that uses the Town Clerk (not a county recorder) for land records.

Questions

110 scored questions

Time Limit

2 hours 45 minutes

Passing Score

70% on each section

Exam Fee

$65 exam + $80 application fee (Connecticut DCP / PSI Examination Services)

CT Real Estate Exam Content Outline

27%

CT Commission & Licensing

CT Real Estate Commission (8 members: 3 brokers, 2 salespersons, 3 public), CGS Title 20, licensing requirements (age 18, 60 hrs), PSI exam format, license types, May 31 even-year renewal, CE (12 hrs/2 yrs), Recovery Fund, discipline, reciprocity

27%

CT Agency & Disclosures

CGS § 20-325i, 2024 agency disclosure form changes (eff. 12/27/2024), buyer/seller representation, dual agency written consent, designated agency, confidentiality, presenting all offers, compensation rules, unlicensed assistant limits

23%

CT Contracts & Closing

Contracts (Statute of Frauds), CT attorney-closing requirement, judicial foreclosure, conveyance tax (0.75% state + 0.25% municipal), land records at Town Clerk, Property Condition Disclosure Act, adverse possession (15 years)

23%

CT Property & Landlord-Tenant

Assessment at 70% FMV, Board of Assessment Appeals, security deposits (2 months / 1 month for tenants age 62+), CIOA (condominiums/PUDs), CT fair housing (adds sexual orientation, gender identity, source of income), CT Landlord-Tenant Act

How to Pass the CT Real Estate Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 70% on each section
  • Exam length: 110 questions
  • Time limit: 2 hours 45 minutes
  • Exam fee: $65 exam + $80 application fee

Keys to Passing

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

CT Real Estate Study Tips from Top Performers

1Know CGS § 20-325i and the 2024 agency disclosure changes (eff. 12/27/2024) — new forms required for all agency relationships
2Connecticut uses PSI (not Pearson VUE) — register at psiexams.com for the CT real estate exam
3Remember CT's unique land records system: recorded with the Town Clerk (Connecticut has no counties)
4Study the CT conveyance tax: 0.75% state + 0.25% municipal = ~1% (state portion rises to 1.25% for sales over $800K)
5Connecticut is an attorney state for real estate closings — a licensed attorney must be present
6Know CT assessment ratio: property assessed at 70% of fair market value (equalization ratio); Board of Assessment Appeals handles disputes
7Master CT security deposit rules: maximum 2 months rent; reduced to 1 month for tenants age 62 and over
8Know CT judicial foreclosure — court approval required (also has strict foreclosure option)

Frequently Asked Questions

How many questions are on the Connecticut real estate salesperson exam?

The Connecticut exam has 110 scored questions: 80 national and 30 state-specific. The national portion is 120 minutes and the state portion is 45 minutes, for a total of 2 hours 45 minutes. Both sections require 70% to pass. The exam is administered by PSI Examination Services (not Pearson VUE).

What are the education requirements for a Connecticut real estate license?

Connecticut requires 60 hours of DCP-approved pre-license education in Real Estate Principles & Practices. After passing the exam, you must activate your license by affiliating with a Connecticut licensed broker. If you do not activate within 2 years of passing, you must retake the exam. License renewal is May 31 of even-numbered years, with 12 hours of CE required every 2 years including a mandatory 3-hour legal/fair housing course.

What changed in Connecticut agency law effective December 27, 2024?

Connecticut enacted significant changes to CGS § 20-325i effective December 27, 2024. New agency disclosure forms are required for all agency relationships including seller representation, buyer representation, dual agency, and designated agency. Licensees must use the new forms for all transactions commencing after the effective date. The changes clarify disclosure timing and the scope of designated agency obligations.

How does Connecticut's conveyance tax work?

Connecticut imposes a two-part conveyance tax. The state portion is 0.75% of the sale price (rising to 1.25% for residential property or unimproved land over $800,000). The municipal portion adds 0.25%, bringing the typical combined rate to approximately 1% (or up to 1.5% over $800K). The seller typically pays the conveyance tax, which is remitted to the Town Clerk where the property is located.

CT Real Estate Resources