Starting Your License
Need the 90-hour course
Start here if you still need Idaho's required prelicense course and want exam prep included.
- Course + exam prep in one package
- Best fit for most new students
Idaho Online Real Estate Academy
The Idaho real estate exam is passable with the right preparation. This page shows you how the test is structured, where students get tripped up, and what to study so you can walk in more confident.
You'll take both sections in one sitting: the larger national portion first, then the Idaho-specific state section.
Whether you still need the 90-hour course, want extra help getting exam ready, or you're already licensed elsewhere — choose the Idaho exam prep path that fits your situation.
Need the 90-hour course
Start here if you still need Idaho's required prelicense course and want exam prep included.
Need extra help getting exam ready
Choose this if you're in class now, nearing test day, or want more practice after an unsuccessful attempt.
Already licensed elsewhere
See the Idaho-specific guidance, waiver path details, and prep options for licensed agents.
The Idaho real estate exam is a multiple-choice test administered by Pearson Professional Assessments at testing centers across the state. You can browse nearby exam locations from our statewide city pages resource, or jump directly to local pages for Boise, Idaho Falls, or Coeur d’Alene.
The exam has two sections — a national portion covering general real estate principles and a state portion focused specifically on Idaho law, regulations, and commission rules. Both sections must be passed with a 70% score or better in a single sitting, so make sure you’re prepared before scheduling your exam.
Most students find that the coursework itself provides strong foundational preparation, since the curriculum is designed around the same topics that appear on the exam. The difference between passing and failing usually comes down to how much additional practice you do after finishing the course — particularly with practice exams, flashcards, and focused review of weak areas like real estate math and legal descriptions.
Most students begin focused exam prep during Module 2 of the 90-hour coursework, once the foundational concepts from Module 1 are in place. By that point you've covered property ownership, agency, and contracts — and you can start reinforcing those topics with practice exams and flashcards while the material is still fresh.
If you've already completed your coursework, don't wait. Schedule your exam within two to three weeks of finishing. The longer you wait, the more material you'll need to re-study. Students who sit for the exam within a month of completing their education consistently perform better than those who delay.
If you haven't started your education yet, exam prep is built into most course packages — the Standard tier and above include unlimited practice exams with a readiness indicator, so you don't need to purchase prep separately.
The exact number of questions per topic, sourced from the official Pearson Professional Assessments content outlines.
Error rates by topic area from 129 student assessments across 7 Idaho prelicense exams.
These 4 questions have the highest error rates from 129 Idaho prelicense students. Try them yourself, then see what trips most people up.
These are the topics where targeted practice makes the biggest difference. The Standard package and above include unlimited practice exams with a readiness indicator.
Compare PackagesIt happens — and it doesn't mean you're not cut out for real estate. Most students who fail do so because of specific topic gaps, not overall lack of preparation. The data on this page shows you exactly which areas have the highest error rates so you can focus your retake prep where it matters most.
You can retake the exam after 24 hours. The fee is $83 per attempt, and if you only failed one section, you have one year to pass it without retaking the other. There's no limit on retakes.
Key details from the PearsonVUE Idaho Candidate Handbook that most students don't see until they're at the testing center.
Quick answers about Idaho exam prep, standalone study options, out-of-state scenarios, and when to schedule your test. For step-by-step licensing help, see our Idaho Licensing Process Guide. If you still need the full 90-hour course, compare Idaho real estate classes.
Starting your license? Exam prep is built into every package. Need exam prep only? We've got that too.
Compare Licensing Packages