This free Florida real estate broker practice test gives you exam-style questions across all 12 broker content areas, with instant feedback and per-topic scoring so you know what to study next. The first 5 questions are free; full access unlocks all 344 original questions plus a timed 100-question simulation that mirrors the real Pearson VUE exam.
What the broker practice test is
Our practice test is a focused, no-fluff way to prepare for the Florida real estate broker examination. Every question is written to match the style, difficulty, and subject mix of the real exam, which is administered by Pearson VUE under the Florida DBPR and FREC. The actual exam is 100 multiple-choice questions split into 45 national and 55 state items, and you get 3.5 hours to finish. You need a score of 75% or higher to pass.
The broker exam is a genuine step up from the sales associate exam. It goes deeper on escrow and trust accounts, brokerage operations, supervising agents, and real estate math. Our questions are written to push you on exactly those higher-stakes areas, so nothing on test day feels unfamiliar. For a structured overview of every topic, pair this practice test with our Florida broker study guide.
How it works
The format is simple and deliberately built around active recall, the study method proven to lock in long-term retention better than passive reading. Here is how a session runs:
- One question at a time. You stay focused on a single item instead of scanning a wall of text, which mirrors the rhythm of the real exam.
- Instant feedback. The moment you answer, you see whether you were right and read a plain-English explanation of why the correct choice is correct, so a wrong answer becomes a learning moment.
- Per-topic scoring. Your results break down by content area, so you can instantly see whether escrow handling or closing math is dragging your average down.
- Filter by content area. Drill only the topics you choose. If trust-account rules are your weak spot, you can practice those exclusively until they click.
Active recall beats rereading every time. Each question forces your brain to retrieve the answer, and that retrieval effort is what turns short-term cramming into durable, exam-ready knowledge. A few focused practice sessions will move the needle more than hours of passive highlighting.
What the practice test covers
This site includes 344 original practice questions spread across all 12 broker content areas. That breadth matters: the real exam can pull from any corner of the syllabus, so practicing across the full map is the surest way to avoid surprises. You will work through items on license law and qualifications, brokerage relationships and disclosure, real estate contracts, property rights, federal and state regulations, escrow and trust accounting, brokerage operations and supervision, valuation and appraisal, financing, closing transactions, taxes, and real estate math.
Because brokers are held to a higher standard than sales associates, expect extra weight on the operational and fiduciary topics. To stress-test those areas, try our broker math practice for the calculation-heavy questions, then review our breakdown of common broker exam questions to see how concepts get tested in context.
Free vs. full access
You can start right now for free. The first 5 questions are open to everyone, so you can try the format, check the difficulty, and see the instant-feedback explanations before deciding anything. When you are ready to prepare seriously, full access unlocks all 344 questions plus a timed 100-question simulation that recreates real exam conditions, including the clock and the national-plus-state question split.
The timed sim is where confidence is built. Practicing under a realistic time limit trains your pacing so the 3.5-hour window feels comfortable instead of stressful. Combined with per-topic scoring, it tells you precisely when you are ready to schedule with Pearson VUE.
How hard is the broker exam, and how do I prepare?
The Florida broker exam is widely regarded as challenging, and many first-time candidates underestimate it. The good news is that difficulty is predictable: it comes from the depth of escrow, supervision, and math topics, not from trick questions. Consistent practice on realistic items is the most reliable way to walk in prepared. For the full picture, see what to expect on the Florida broker state exam and our step-by-step guide on how to pass the Florida broker exam.
Before you sit the exam, make sure you meet the eligibility requirements: you must complete the 72-hour broker pre-license course and have prior active experience as a licensed sales associate. Once that box is checked, your job is simple. Practice until your per-topic scores are consistently above the passing line, then book your seat with confidence.
Ready to start practicing?
Jump into the free practice test now, or browse the full study guide to map out your prep. Every question brings you one step closer to passing the Florida broker exam.