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Washington Real Estate Practice Exam

Practice questions for Washington coming soon. Explore our study guide below.

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We're currently developing practice questions for this state exam. Check back soon or try our national exam in the meantime.

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This free Washington Real Estate Broker Practice Exam prepares you for the official licensing test. Review 130 practice questions, eligibility requirements, key exam content and structure, and essential exam prep. Start the practice exam below to evaluate your passing rate.

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Who is eligible to take the Washington Real Estate Broker exam?

To qualify for the Washington Broker license exam, candidates must meet specific educational, legal, and procedural requirements:

What’s on the Washington Real Estate Broker exam?

The Washington Real Estate Broker exam consists of 130 scored multiple-choice questions: 100 questions for the national portion and 30 for the state-specific portion. The test also includes 10 unscored pre-test questions.

The national section covers agency, contracts, property ownership, real estate math, and financing. The state section focuses on Washington licensing laws, closing procedures, and regulatory practices.

Washington Real Estate exam topics

Below are the main topics and subtopics for both national and state portions of the exam:

National Real Estate Topics

State Real Estate Topics

What is the Broker exam passing score?

A minimum score of 70% is required on both the national and state sections to pass. This means you must answer at least 70 out of 100 national questions and 21 out of 30 state-specific questions correctly.

What 2025 Washington Real Estate Laws Should You Know for the Broker Exam?

For the 2025 broker exam, you must understand Washington’s new statewide rent cap, expanded requirements for written broker services agreements, and recent zoning and housing density reforms. The exam emphasizes compliance with updated tenant protection rules, transparent compensation disclosures, and changes to agency relationships, all of which are central to current state law and business practices sections.

Below is a summary of the key 2025 laws:

Law/RuleBrief Description2025 StatusExam Relevance/
Statewide Rent Cap (HB 1217)Limits rent increases to 7% plus inflation, up to 10% per year; new tenant protectionsStatewide cap effective May 2025Reflected in Legislative Update, Landlord-Tenant Law
Broker Services Agreement RuleRequires written agreements with buyers and sellers; mandates compensation disclosureMandatory written agreements and compensation disclosure since Jan 2024Covered in State Law, Agency, Business Practices
Housing/Zoning Reform (HB 1491/1110)Increases housing density near transit, reduces single-family zoning restrictionsDenser zoning and reduced single-family restrictions in effect since 2023-25Covered in Legislative Update, Land Use, Zoning
Capital Gains & Estate Tax ChangesIncreases tax rates and thresholds for large gains and estatesHigher rates and exclusions effective in 2025Indirect, under Finance/Disclosure Topics
Eviction and Disclosure UpdatesStricter tenant eviction rules and expanded property disclosure requirementsExpanded notice and disclosure requirements in effectReflected in Legislative Update, Landlord-Tenant Law
BOI Ownership Reporting (FinCEN)Requires disclosure of beneficial real estate ownershipNew reporting requirement starting Dec 2025Potentially included in Compliance/CORE

How to prepare for the exam?

Boost your pass rate by understanding exam details, using reputable resources, and mastering real estate math skills relevant to Washington’s licensing test.

Understanding Washington Broker exam details

Washington Real Estate exam structure and requirements are essential for effective preparation. Here is information you need to know:

Learning from prep resources

Use trusted study guides and platforms that align with Washington’s exam outline. Quality resources include:

Prep books

Free practice test platforms

Other resources

Follow study strategy

A structured study plan improves content retention and builds confidence under real exam timing. You can begin with core topics, then refine your approach based on past performance. The table below is a sample of 8‑week study plan:

WeekFocusActivities
1 - 2Ownership & agencyRead outline, watch topic videos, flashcards
3 - 4Valuation, financing, contractsPractice questions + review wrong answers
5Disclosures & ethicsDeep dive into cases & laws
6Practice examsTimed mock tests
7Review weak areasRe-study low-scoring sections
8Final exam simulationFull test practice under timed conditions

Weak area analysis

Mastering Real Estate math

The Washington Broker exam includes up to 10 math questions. These problems often involve credits and debits, property taxes, Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratios, property valuation and measurements, market sales price calculations, and Return on Investments (ROI).

Since math questions can affect your result, focused practice is essential after reviewing the main topics. To prepare:

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I train for the Washington state section effectively using flashcards?

Use Quizlet or other flashcard apps loaded with Washington-specific content, especially recent decks (2020+). Repeatedly test yourself until you're scoring in the 90‑percentile on state-related terms and concepts.

Should I buy the official PSI test bank or use other resources for the Washington exam?

Absolutely. Many candidates find that purchasing the PSI Premium Test Bank, with over 500 questions, is highly reliable for the national section. It delivers accurate, PSI-style questions, which can be invaluable for building confidence before the test.

What’s the format and mix of questions like on the WA exam?

Expect a mixed-format exam of around 100 national + 30 state questions (plus 10 unscored). Topics range from agency law, contracts, marketing guidelines, fiduciary duties, to mortgage math and property measurements, all mixed randomly.

How should I pace my exam approach?

Use a two-pass method: quickly answer confident questions, flag the rest, then review flagged items. Take your time to read carefully, eliminate wrong choices, and ensure math accuracy.

How do I overcome test anxiety and second-guessing?

Label questions based on confidence (A – sure, B – unsure, C – math), complete the A group first, skip B and C, then return for review. Look for clues in later questions, you may find hidden answers.