200+ Free OK Real Estate Practice Questions
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Key Facts: OK Real Estate Exam
120 Q
Exam Length
Pearson VUE OK candidate bulletin
80 + 40
National + State Split
Pearson VUE OK candidate bulletin
75%
Passing Score (Each Section)
OREC (75% = passing grade per OK statute)
90 hrs
Pre-License Education
OREC licensing requirements
$60
Exam Fee (Pearson VUE)
OREC / Pearson VUE fee schedule
21 hrs/3yr
CE Renewal Requirement
OREC (3-year license cycle)
Oklahoma's provisional sales associate (PSA) exam is administered by Pearson VUE: 80 national questions + 40 state-specific questions = 120 scored total; both sections require 75% to pass. Pre-licensing: 90 hours of OREC-approved education (45 hours basic principles + 45 hours contract/OK law). After passing and affiliating with a broker, complete a 45-hour PSA post-license course within your first year or your license expires. Key OK topics: OBRA (Oklahoma Broker Relationships Act) governs seller's agents, buyer's agents, transaction brokers, and designated agents — first substantive contact disclosure required; the Oklahoma Residential Property Condition Disclosure Act (Disclosure Statement vs. Disclaimer Statement); psychologically impacted property (no duty to disclose deaths or paranormal events unless directly asked); trust accounts (next business day deposit, OREC audit authority); Oklahoma Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (2-month security deposit cap, 30-day return, 24-hour entry notice). Fingerprinting required via IdentoGO (service code 2B7NR3). Biennial license renewal with 21 hours CE every 3 years.
About the OK Real Estate Exam
The Oklahoma real estate salesperson exam covers national real estate fundamentals plus Oklahoma-specific topics including OREC licensing requirements, the Oklahoma Broker Relationships Act (OBRA) — which defines duties to clients and customers — the Oklahoma Residential Property Condition Disclosure Act, psychologically impacted property statute (Title 60 §833), Oklahoma Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (security deposit limits, 24-hour entry notice), trust account rules (next-business-day deposit), and the Real Estate Recovery Fund.
Questions
120 scored questions
Time Limit
4 hours total
Passing Score
75% on each section
Exam Fee
$60 (Oklahoma Real Estate Commission (OREC) / Pearson VUE)
OK Real Estate Exam Content Outline
Oklahoma Laws & Rules (Domain I)
OREC authority and structure, provisional sales associate requirements (90-hr pre-license, 45-hr PSA post-license within 1st year), broker vs. PSA vs. associate broker license types, license application and fees ($60 exam fee), Pearson VUE exam administration, IdentoGO fingerprinting (service code 2B7NR3), license renewal (3-year cycle), 21-hour CE requirement, OREC disciplinary authority and sanctions, advertising rules, unlicensed activity prohibitions, trust account rules (next-business-day deposit, commingling/conversion prohibitions, OREC audit), Real Estate Recovery Fund ($25,000/transaction, $50,000/licensee aggregate limit), prohibited acts, address change notification (10 days)
Oklahoma Broker Relationships Act — OBRA (Domain II)
Definitions: seller's agent, buyer's agent, transaction broker (limited agent), designated agent, dual agency with consent; duties to all parties (honest dealing, accurate information, disclosure of adverse material facts affecting health/safety); enhanced duties to clients (loyalty, obedience, reasonable care, confidentiality, full disclosure, accounting); confidentiality survives transaction termination; first substantive contact disclosure requirement (written, describes relationship type); in-company designated agency, OBRA-required agency disclosure form
Oklahoma Property Management (Domain III)
Property management license requirements (broker required), management agreements, Oklahoma Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (ORLTA): security deposit cap (2 months' rent for unfurnished units), 30-day return deadline with itemized accounting, 24-hour advance notice for non-emergency entry, eviction process (5-day pay-or-quit notice for nonpayment), habitability standards, prohibited landlord conduct, tenant remedies, commercial property management distinctions
Oklahoma Disclosures & Hazards (Domain IV)
Oklahoma Residential Property Condition Disclosure Act: Disclosure Statement (known defects) vs. Disclaimer Statement ('as is' sale); seller's duty to disclose known material defects; psychologically impacted property statute (Title 60 §833: no duty to disclose deaths, crimes, or paranormal events unless directly asked); licensee duty to disclose health/safety hazards; lead-based paint disclosure (pre-1978 housing); environmental hazards: radon, asbestos, USTs, wetlands, flood zones, CERCLA liability; water quality and environmental site assessments
How to Pass the OK Real Estate Exam
What You Need to Know
- Passing score: 75% on each section
- Exam length: 120 questions
- Time limit: 4 hours total
- Exam fee: $60
Keys to Passing
- Complete 500+ practice questions
- Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
- Focus on highest-weighted sections
- Use our AI tutor for tough concepts
OK Real Estate Study Tips from Top Performers
Frequently Asked Questions
How many questions are on the Oklahoma real estate salesperson exam?
The Oklahoma Pearson VUE exam has 120 scored questions: 80 on the national portion and 40 on the Oklahoma state-specific portion, for a total testing time of 4 hours. Both sections require a passing score of 75%. There may also be a small number of unscored pretest questions embedded in the exam. The exam is administered at Pearson VUE testing centers throughout Oklahoma.
What is the Oklahoma Real Estate exam pass rate?
The estimated first-time pass rate for Oklahoma PSA candidates is approximately 55-60%. Preparation is key: the state section (Domain II: OBRA, Domain III: property management, Domain IV: disclosures) is often where candidates lose points. Study Oklahoma-specific topics like OBRA duties, the Disclaimer Statement rules, psychologically impacted property, and trust account timing thoroughly.
What is the Oklahoma Broker Relationships Act (OBRA)?
OBRA is Oklahoma's agency law that defines the four broker relationship types: seller's agent (represents seller with full fiduciary duties), buyer's agent (represents buyer with full fiduciary duties), transaction broker or limited agent (assists both parties without full fiduciary duties to either), and designated agent (one licensee in a firm represents buyer while another represents seller in the same transaction). OBRA requires written disclosure of the relationship at the first substantive contact — any conversation where real estate needs, financial qualifications, or motivation to buy/sell are discussed.
What is the difference between a Disclosure Statement and Disclaimer Statement in Oklahoma?
Under Oklahoma's Residential Property Condition Disclosure Act, a seller must provide either a Disclosure Statement or a Disclaimer Statement. A Disclosure Statement requires the seller to disclose all known material defects. A Disclaimer Statement means the seller makes no representations about the property's condition — an 'as is' sale as to known material defects. However, a Disclaimer Statement does NOT protect the seller from liability for fraud or intentional concealment of known defects, and sellers must still disclose conditions that constitute a serious health or safety risk.
Does Oklahoma require disclosure of deaths or crimes on a property?
No — Oklahoma's psychologically impacted property statute (Title 60, Section 833) provides that the fact that a property was the site of a death (of any manner), an alleged paranormal phenomenon, or a crime that did not result in physical damage is not a material fact requiring disclosure. Sellers and licensees have no affirmative duty to volunteer this information. However, if a buyer directly asks whether such events occurred, the seller and licensee must answer truthfully — they cannot actively misrepresent or lie.