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How to Get Your Colorado Real Estate License: 2026 Guide

Doug Smart
April 10, 2026
5 min read
How to Get Your Colorado Real Estate License: 2026 Guide

Requirements at a Glance

Colorado real estate license requirements - 168 hours education, 154 exam questions, $128+ total fees

Colorado has some of the highest barriers to entry in the country – 168 hours of education, a $485 application fee, and an exam with 154 questions. But that’s by design. The state treats every licensee as a “Broker” from day one (there’s no salesperson license), which means higher standards and more responsibility from the start. If you’re serious about a career in Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, or the mountain communities, here’s the full roadmap.

Quick Overview

Age: 18+ | Education: 168 hours (6 courses) | Exam: 154 questions, ~4 hours, 71-75% to pass | Total cost: ~$1,200-$1,800

What You Need Before You Start

You need to be at least 18 and pass a background check through fingerprinting (both Colorado CBI and FBI). No residency or college degree required.

Colorado doesn’t have a “salesperson” or “agent” license. Everyone starts as a Broker (specifically an Associate Broker who works under an Employing Broker). What other states call a “broker,” Colorado calls an Employing Broker. The terminology is different, but the entry-level path is the same.

Step 1: Complete 168 Hours of Pre-Licensing Education

Colorado requires six courses totaling 168 hours – among the highest in the country:

  • Law & Practice (48 hours)
  • Contracts & Regulations (48 hours)
  • Practical Applications (32 hours)
  • Real Estate Closing (24 hours)
  • Record Keeping & Trust Accounts (8 hours)
  • Current Legal Issues (8 hours)

Budget $600-$1,200 for education. Popular DORA-approved schools include VanEd, The CE Shop, Kaplan, Colorado Real Estate School, and AceableAgent. Courses are available online (self-paced) or in-person.

Time Investment

168 hours is no joke. At a full-time pace (40 hours/week), that’s about a month of solid studying. Part-time students typically take 3-6 months to complete the coursework. Plan your schedule accordingly.

Step 2: Pass the Colorado Real Estate Exam

The exam is administered by PSI at seven testing centers across Colorado (Centennial, Wheat Ridge, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Grand Junction, Durango) or via remote online proctoring from home.

Exam Format

National: 80 questions, 2 hours, 75% to pass | State: 74 questions, 110 min, ~72% to pass | Total: 154 questions, ~4 hours | Fee: ~$49/attempt

DetailNational PortionState Portion
Questions8074
Time2 hours110 minutes
Passing Score75% (60 correct)~72% (53 correct)
Fee~$49 per attempt
ProviderPSI (in-person or remote proctored)
RetakesUnlimited, next day; scores expire in 1 year
First-Time Pass Rate~55-63%

How to Prepare

Colorado’s first-time pass rate is 55-63%, which means nearly half of test-takers fail on their first attempt. The 168 hours of education helps, but the exam is challenging.

  • The state portion is where people fail. 74 questions on Colorado-specific law, contracts, trust accounts, and regulations. Master the Commission-approved forms and Colorado closing procedures.
  • Contracts & Regulations is critical. That 48-hour course directly feeds into the state exam. Know the standard contract provisions inside and out.
  • Take practice exams. Free resources: Real Estate License Wizard, AceableAgent, OpenExamPrep
  • Passing scores expire in one year. If you pass the national but fail the state (or vice versa), you have one year to pass the other section before your passing score expires.

If You Don’t Pass

You can retake as soon as the next day (subject to availability). Each retake costs about $43-$49. You only retake the section you failed. There’s no cap on attempts, but passing scores expire after one year.

Step 3: Get Fingerprinted

Colorado requires both CBI (state) and FBI (federal) fingerprint-based background checks through the CABS program. Two approved vendors:

  • IdentoGO – CBI/FBI fee $39.50 + vendor fee $10 = ~$49.50
  • Colorado Fingerprinting – CBI/FBI fee $39.50 + vendor fee $15 = ~$54.50

Timing Matters

Submit fingerprints no more than 2-3 weeks before your license application. If more than 60 days pass between your fingerprint record and your application, you’ll need to redo them.

Step 4: Apply for Your License

After passing the exam, submit your broker license application through DORA’s eLicense portal. The application fee is $485 – the highest among the states we cover. It’s non-refundable.

Processing takes up to 10 business days. Your license won’t be active until you affiliate with an Employing Broker.

Step 5: Find an Employing Broker

As an Associate Broker, you must work under an Employing Broker. This is non-negotiable in Colorado.

  • Training and mentorship. Colorado’s extensive pre-licensing gives you a strong foundation, but nothing replaces hands-on guidance from experienced agents. Ask about their onboarding process.
  • Commission structure. Get the full breakdown: split, cap, fees, E&O insurance. Colorado brokerages vary widely in their models.
  • Technology and tools. CRM, marketing, lead gen, transaction management. What’s included vs. what’s extra.
  • Market expertise. Colorado’s markets range dramatically from the Front Range to the mountains to the Western Slope. Find a broker with strength where you want to work.

Comparing models? Check out our team value breakdown or browse our eXp Realty guides to see how a cloud-based brokerage works.

Total Costs Breakdown

What You’ll Spend

Pre-licensing (168 hrs): $600-$1,200 | Exam: ~$49 | Fingerprinting: ~$50-$55 | Application: $485 | Total: ~$1,184-$1,789

ItemCost
Pre-licensing courses (168 hrs)$600 – $1,200
Exam fee~$49
Fingerprinting (CBI/FBI)$50 – $55
License application$485
Total$1,184 – $1,789

Colorado is one of the most expensive states to get licensed in, largely because of the $485 application fee and 168 hours of required education. Your license renews every 3 years for $387, with 24 hours of continuing education required (including three 4-hour Annual Commission Update courses).

How Long Does It Take?

  • Pre-licensing education (168 hrs): 3 weeks (intensive full-time) to 6 months (part-time)
  • Exam prep + testing: 1-2 weeks
  • Fingerprinting + background check: 2-3 weeks
  • Application processing: Up to 10 business days

The fastest path is about 2 months with full-time study. Most people take 3-5 months. The 168 hours of coursework is the major time commitment – everything else moves relatively quickly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Colorado eliminated the salesperson/agent license category. Everyone is a Broker. Entry-level agents are Associate Brokers (work under an Employing Broker). Independent Brokers can operate on their own. Employing Brokers can supervise other brokers (requires 2 years of active experience as of 2026).
Colorado’s $485 fee covers the full license processing cost. Some states charge less upfront but have additional fees throughout the process. Colorado’s single-fee approach is expensive but straightforward.
Yes. PSI offers remote online proctoring for Colorado. You need a webcam, microphone, and a clean private workspace.
Plan for $1,200-$1,800. The $485 application fee and 168 hours of education are the biggest factors. Colorado is one of the priciest states to get licensed in.
If you pass one section of the exam, that score is valid for one year. You must pass the other section and submit your application within that window, or you’ll need to retake the expired portion. How to Get a Real Estate License in Other States Oklahoma · Missouri · Indiana · Georgia · Ohio · Michigan · Illinois · Texas · Florida · California State-by-State Licensing Guide: See requirements for all 50 states in our complete guide to getting your real estate license. Next Step: Ready to start your pre-licensing education? Check our top-rated Colorado real estate schools to find the right courses.

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Doug Smart

Doug Smart

Co-Founder, Smart Agent Alliance

Top 1% eXp team builder. Designed and built this website, the agent portal, and the systems and automations powering production workflows and attraction tools across the organization.

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