Utah Real Estate Exam Study Guide
Pass the Utah Real Estate Sales Agent exam on your first attempt. 75 original practice questions with detailed answer explanations, complete coverage of all two-section Pearson VUE content areas, and every real estate math formula you’ll see on test day — built for candidates who don’t have time to waste.
Beat the 60–70% First-Attempt Pass Rate
If you’ve been searching for a Utah real estate exam study guide, here’s the reality: the UT Sales Agent exam first-attempt pass rate is around 60–70%, and Utah uses split scoring — you must achieve a scaled score of 70 on EACH portion. Most candidates fail because their study materials don’t cover Utah’s Limited Agent framework (UT’s term for dual agency), the UT Agency Disclosure, the unique 55% primary residence assessment ratio for property tax (vs. 100% for non-primary), the NO state real estate transfer tax (one of few states without one), the lien theory + non-judicial foreclosure under trust deed (~120-180 days), or the unique vendor — Utah uses PEARSON VUE (not PSI). This guide distills Utah Code Title 61 Chapter 2f and Utah Administrative Code R162 into quick-reference tables and includes 75 original practice questions.
Utah Real Estate Exam Facts at a Glance
Exam Format
130 multiple choice
Time Limit
4 hours
Passing Score
Scaled score of 70 on EACH portion (split scoring)
Exam Fee
$59
Your Step-by-Step Path to Passing
The exact 7-step study sequence our guide walks you through
Complete Your 120-Hour Pre-License Course
Utah requires 120 hours of pre-license education from a DRE-approved school. The state exam must be taken within 1 year of pre-license completion. This guide is a focused exam-prep companion — it doesn’t replace the course.
- DRE-approved providers include Stringham Schools, Real Estate Express, Aceable Agent
- Submit application + ~$157 license fee + background check
- Sponsorship by a UT-licensed principal broker required for activation
Master Universal Real Estate Principles
Drill the universal content areas first — they form the foundation for the Utah-specific material.
📘 Our guide’s Part 1 covers deeds, titles, the bundle of rights, contracts essentials, financing fundamentals, valuation approaches, fair housing protected classes, federal income tax rules, and more — in quick-reference table format so you can scan fast and recall on test day.
Master Utah-Specific Material (50 Questions)
UT-specific testing focuses on the UT Agency Disclosure, LIMITED AGENT (UT’s term for dual agency), the Utah Real Estate Purchase Contract (REPC), the LIEN THEORY system, non-judicial foreclosure under trust deed, the unique 55% PRIMARY RESIDENCE assessment ratio for property tax (vs. 100% for non-primary), and the absence of any state real estate transfer tax.
UT Agency Disclosure: First substantive contact disclosure
Limited Agent: UT’s term for dual agency — limited representation
Sales Agent: UT’s entry-level license title (not ‘Salesperson’)
Pearson VUE: UT exam vendor (NOT PSI)
Lien theory + trust deed foreclosure: 120-180 days; 3-month redemption
55% primary residence assessment: UT-specific — vs. 100% for non-primary
NO state transfer tax: UT is one of few states without one
Drill Real Estate Math (10 Questions)
Math is only 10% of the exam — but it’s the area that trips up the most candidates. Every formula has a pattern; once you see the pattern, the questions become easy points.
- Commission & percentage — Part = Whole × Rate (T-bar method)
- LTV calculations — Loan ÷ Value
- Tax prorations — 365-day method, day of closing belongs to buyer
- Property tax — Assessed value × tax rate (with state caps if applicable)
- Transfer tax — Utah-specific rate calculations
- Capitalization — Value = NOI ÷ Cap Rate
- Acreage — 1 acre = 43,560 sq ft; 1 section = 640 acres
Take Practice Exams Under Test Conditions
Sit for the full 75-question practice set in one sitting. 2-hour timer. No notes. No phone. The point isn’t to score perfectly — it’s to identify weak content areas before exam day.
🎯 Pro tip: Review every answer — even the ones you got right. Sometimes you get the right answer for the wrong reason, and the explanation reinforces the concept for similar variations on the actual exam.
Schedule Your Pearson VUE Exam
Schedule via Pearson VUE at one of UT’s testing centers — or take online via secure remote proctoring.
Exam fee: $59 per attempt (paid to Pearson VUE)
Format: 130 questions: 80 national + 50 UT-specific in 4 hours
Pass score: Scaled score of 70 on EACH portion (split scoring)
Materials: Closed book; basic calculator allowed
Pass with 70/70 → Activate Under a Sponsoring Principal Broker
Your UT Sales Agent license is active only when sponsored by a UT-licensed principal broker. License period is 2 years. CE: 18 hours per 2-year cycle (9 hr Core/Required + 9 hr elective).
What’s Next After Passing
- • Choose a sponsoring UT principal broker
- • Activate license through DRE
- • Plan 18-hour CE curriculum (with required Core topics)
- • Join local MLS & Utah REALTORS®
Build Your Business Fast
- • Google Business Profile + Maps SEO
- • Use AI for listings & client comms
- • Build referral network
- • Earn from your first closing
⚠️ Why Generic Practice Quizzes Fall Short:
Most free online practice tests recycle the same generic national questions and skip the Florida-specific material that makes up almost half the exam. Worse, many give you the answer with no explanation — so even when you get it right, you don’t understand why. Our 75 questions are organized by topic, written specifically for the Florida exam, and every answer includes a detailed explanation tied to the underlying statute or concept.
Everything You Need to Pass on Your First Attempt
28–32 pages · 75 practice questions · all two-section content areas · instant download
Utah Real Estate Sales Agent Exam Study Guide
2026 Edition · PDF Download · Written by Mark Sias
- All two-section Pearson VUE content areas covered with weight breakdown
- 75 original practice questions grouped by topic for targeted review
- Detailed answer explanations for every question — not just the ones you missed
- Complete real estate math walkthroughs (commission, LTV, prorations, doc stamps, cap rate, acreage)
- Quick-reference tables for Utah Code Title 61, Chapter 2f and Utah Administrative Code R162
- Utah-specific content: agency disclosure rules, license law, mandatory disclosures, transfer tax, state caps
- Memory aids and acronyms (DEEP-U, MARIA, COLIC, OLD CAR SKID, T-bar method)
- National portion fundamentals: deeds, contracts, financing, fair housing, valuation
- Recommended study approach with realistic 2–4 week timeline
Utah Exam Study Guide
Why This Guide Beats Free Practice Quizzes
Free quiz sites are everywhere. A focused, Utah-specific blueprint isn’t.
Pearson VUE Aligned
Organized exactly the way the Utah Division of Real Estate (DRE) — Department of Commerce breaks down the two-section content areas, so you study what’s actually tested at the right weighting.
Utah Law Built In
Utah Code Title 61, Chapter 2f and Utah Administrative Code R162 distilled into quick-reference tables — not buried in a 600-page textbook.
Math Made Simple
Every formula you’ll see on test day, with worked examples. The T-bar method makes percentage problems trivial.
75 Practice Questions
Original questions modeled on the exam format. Grouped by topic so you can target weak areas after your first run-through.
Detailed Explanations
Every answer is explained — not just labeled right or wrong. Memory aids and acronyms reinforce the concepts.
Phone & Print Ready
Optimized for reading on phones, tablets, and desktops. Print-friendly for highlighting and margin notes.
two-section Content Areas, Weighted by Exam Importance
Knowing which topics are worth the most points lets you spend study time where it matters
High-Weight (Study First)
UT Agency Disclosure at first substantive contact; LIMITED AGENT (UT dual agency); Sales Agent license (UT entry-level); LIEN THEORY state; non-judicial foreclosure under trust deed (~120-180 days); 3-month redemption (trust deed); 55% PRIMARY RESIDENCE assessment ratio (UT-specific); NO state real estate transfer tax; PEARSON VUE vendor (rare); 120-hour pre-license; 18 hr CE / 2-year cycle.
Medium-Weight
UT Methamphetamine Contamination disclosure (UT Code 57-27); Utah Fair Housing Act; Homestead Exemption; UT REPC contract.
Lower-Weight (Don’t Skip)
Specialty topics — water rights, agricultural assessments, Utah-specific HOA rules.
What Utah Licensing Actually Costs
Realistic Utah Sales Agent Licensing Budget
💰 The $59 retake math: Failing the UT exam and retaking costs $59. The average new UT agent’s first commission check is $5,000+. Spending $14.97 to pass on the first attempt is the obvious move.
Bonus: every concept in this guide reappears in real life. The contracts, disclosures, math, and brokerage relationship rules you study to pass the exam are the same rules that govern every transaction you’ll work for the rest of your career.
Who Wrote This Guide
Mark Sias — Founder, Noble Notary & Legal Document Preparers
Mark is a Florida-commissioned notary, legal document preparer, and digital marketing author based in Port Orange, FL. He co-owns Noble Notary & Legal Document Preparers with his wife Grace, where they prepare real estate documents (deeds, POAs, lease agreements, dissolution packages) for clients across multiple Florida counties.
Mark authored “A Homeless Guy’s Guide to Digital Marketing” and runs Notary Prosperity Academy, where he’s trained thousands of notaries, signing agents, and legal entrepreneurs through his YouTube channel (5,000+ subscribers, 500,000+ views) and online courses.
This study guide draws on years of working alongside real estate agents, title companies, and attorneys — distilling Utah’s exam material into the quick-reference format that mirrors how working professionals actually use the law every day.
After You Pass — Build a Real Income
Passing the exam is one milestone. Turning a license into actual closings is a separate challenge — and it’s the challenge most new agents underestimate.
Claude Code for Real Estate Agents
$17 on Etsy. Automate listing descriptions, buyer follow-ups, MLS remarks, and social posts using AI — with Fair Housing & NAR Code of Ethics compliance built in. Save 10+ hours per week from day one.
Google Maps SEO for Agents
$27 course. The #1 source of free buyer and seller leads for new agents. Rank your Google Business Profile in the local 3-pack with category selection, review strategy, and the Map Pin Stacking technique.
Mobile & RON Notary for Closings
When your closings need mobile or remote online notarization — refinances, POAs, out-of-state buyers — Noble Notary handles it. Licensed, bonded, flat-fee. Nationwide RON available.
Frequently Asked Questions
How hard is the Utah real estate exam?
The UT Sales Agent exam first-attempt pass rate is around 60–70%. The exam is 130 questions (80 national + 50 UT-specific) in 4 hours, with split scoring — you must achieve a scaled score of 70 on EACH portion. Most candidates fail because their study materials don’t cover Utah’s Limited Agency framework, the 55% primary residence assessment ratio, or the absence of any state real estate transfer tax.
How much does the Utah real estate exam cost?
The Pearson VUE exam fee is $59 per attempt — among the lowest in the nation. The DRE license fee on passing is approximately $157. Add background check (~$50) and the required 120-hour pre-license course ($400–$700) for total upfront licensing costs of $666–$966.
How long should I study for the Utah real estate exam?
Most candidates need 3–4 weeks of focused study after the 120-hour pre-license course. Plan for 1–2 hours per day. This guide compresses that timeline by focusing on what’s actually tested — Limited Agency, the REPC, UT-specific math, and lien theory + trust deed foreclosure.
Does this guide replace the 120-hour pre-license course?
No. UT law requires every Sales Agent candidate to complete 120 hours of pre-license education from a DRE-approved school. This study guide is a focused exam-prep companion.
What does the Utah real estate exam cover?
130 questions: 80 national + 50 UT-specific. National content covers deeds, contracts, financing, valuation, and federal fair housing. UT content covers Utah Code Title 61 Ch. 2f (license law), Utah Administrative Code R162, the UT Agency Disclosure, Limited Agency, the UT REPC, lien theory + non-judicial foreclosure under trust deed, the 55% primary residence assessment ratio, the absence of any state real estate transfer tax, the UT methamphetamine contamination disclosure (UT Code 57-27), and the Utah Fair Housing Act.
What is the default agency relationship in Utah?
Utah requires the UT Agency Disclosure at first substantive contact. UT recognizes Single Agent, Limited Agent (UT’s term for dual agency with limited representation), and Customer (unrepresented party). Limited Agency requires informed written consent of both parties.
Why is Utah’s exam administered by Pearson VUE?
Utah is one of the few states that contracts with Pearson VUE rather than PSI. The exam fee is $59 — among the lowest in the nation. Pearson VUE testing centers are available throughout UT, and online proctoring is available.
What format is the guide?
Digital PDF download — 24 pages with quick-reference tables, real estate math walkthroughs (commission, LTV, prorations, UT 55% primary residence assessment math, capitalization), 75 original practice questions, and detailed answer explanations. Print-friendly. Instant download via Kajabi.
© 2026 Noble Notary & Legal Document Preparers. All rights reserved.
This study guide provides educational information to help candidates prepare for the Utah Real Estate Sales Agent licensing examination. It is not legal advice and is not a substitute for the required 120-hour pre-license education or for the official content outline published by the Utah Division of Real Estate (DRE) — Department of Commerce. All practice questions are original content based on public statutes (Utah Code Title 61, Chapter 2f) and public administrative rules (Utah Administrative Code R162). No actual Pearson VUE exam content is reproduced. Utah statutes, administrative rules, fees, and exam content may change — always verify current information at realestate.utah.gov. Mark Sias is a Florida notary and legal document preparer, not a licensed attorney or real estate instructor. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the UT Division of Real Estate, Pearson VUE, or the National Association of REALTORS.