How to Get a Real Estate License in Michigan: 2026 Guide
Requirements at a Glance
Michigan has one of the lowest education requirements in the country – just 40 hours of pre-licensing coursework. That means you can go from zero to licensed faster here than in most states. With strong markets in Detroit, Grand Rapids, Ann Arbor, and across the lakeshore communities, it’s a solid place to build a real estate career.
Quick Overview
Age: 18+ | Education: 40 hours | Exam: 115 questions, 3 hours, 70% to pass | Total cost: ~$420-$530
Table of Contents
What You Need Before You Start
Michigan keeps it simple. You need to be at least 18, and you’ll need to pass an FBI background check through fingerprinting. There’s no college degree or residency requirement.
The background check is processed through IdentoGO by IDEMIA. A criminal record doesn’t automatically disqualify you, but LARA (Michigan’s licensing authority) will review any convictions before issuing a license.
Step 1: Complete 40 Hours of Pre-Licensing Education
Michigan requires just 40 hours of approved pre-licensing education – the lowest among the states we cover. The coursework must include at least 4 hours on Civil Rights Law and Equal Opportunity in Housing, which is a Michigan-specific requirement.
The course covers property ownership, land use, valuation, financing, agency law, contracts, fair housing, disclosures, and Michigan-specific regulations. You can take it online (self-paced) or in a classroom.
Michigan’s Civil Rights Focus
Michigan has the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act, which goes beyond federal fair housing law. It includes protections for sexual orientation, gender identity, hair style/texture, and source of income. You’ll be tested on both federal AND Michigan civil rights law, so don’t treat this as a throwaway section.
Budget $200-$300 for education. Popular LARA-approved schools include the Michigan Institute of Real Estate, Kaplan, AceableAgent, and Colibri Real Estate.
Step 2: Apply and Get Fingerprinted
Submit your application through MiPLUS (Michigan Professional Licensing User System). The application fee is $88.
You’ll also need to complete fingerprinting through IdentoGO:
- Cost: $50-$65 depending on location
- Schedule: Book at mi.state.identogo.com or call (866) 226-2952
- Processing: Over 80% completed within 48 hours, though full background checks can take up to 6 weeks
- Bring: Unexpired state-issued photo ID and the completed RI-030 form
Step 3: Pass the Michigan Real Estate Exam
The exam is administered by PSI Services at seven testing centers across Michigan: Grand Rapids, Southfield (2 locations), Holt (Lansing area), Dearborn, Gaylord, and Marquette. You can also take it at any PSI center nationwide. Remote proctoring is not available for Michigan.
Exam Format
National: 80 questions, 70% to pass | State: 35 questions, 70% to pass | Total: 115 questions, 3 hours | Fee: $79/attempt
| Detail | National Portion | State Portion |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 80 | 35 |
| Passing Score | 70% (56 correct) | 70% (24 correct) |
| Total Time | 3 hours (115 questions) | |
| Fee | $79 per attempt | |
| Provider | PSI (in-person only, no remote) | |
| Retakes | Unlimited, 24-hour wait | |
| First-Time Pass Rate | ~70% | |
How to Prepare
Michigan’s first-time pass rate is around 70%, which is above average nationally. The state portion (Michigan-specific law) tends to be harder than the national portion.
- Know Michigan civil rights law. The Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act and its expanded protections are a favorite exam topic. Understand the differences between federal and state protections.
- Study Michigan-specific regulations. LARA rules, Michigan disclosure requirements, and state-specific contract law will appear on the state portion.
- Take practice exams. Free resources: Real Estate License Wizard, OpenExamPrep (500+ questions with AI tutor), AceableAgent
- Don’t underestimate the math. Real estate calculations (commissions, prorations, area) show up on both sections.
Exam Day
Bring valid photo ID. No remote proctoring is available for Michigan – you must go to a PSI testing center in person. Results are provided immediately after the exam.
If You Don’t Pass
You can retake the exam unlimited times with only a 24-hour wait between attempts. Each retake costs $79. You only need to retake the section you failed.
Step 4: Find a Sponsoring Broker
After passing, you need to affiliate with a licensed Michigan real estate broker to activate your license. You cannot practice without one.
What to Look for in a Brokerage
- Training and mentorship. Michigan’s 40-hour pre-licensing is one of the shortest in the country. That means you’ll rely more on your broker’s training to fill the gaps. Make sure they offer real onboarding, not just a welcome email.
- Commission structure. Get the complete picture – split, cap, fees, E&O insurance. Compare total cost, not just the headline number.
- Technology. CRM, lead gen, marketing tools, transaction management. Ask what’s included.
- Market knowledge. Michigan’s markets vary significantly from Detroit to Traverse City. Find a broker with strength in the area you want to work.
Comparing brokerage 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 course (40 hrs): $200-$300 | Application: $88 | Exam: $79 | Fingerprinting: $50-$65 | Total: ~$420-$530
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Pre-licensing course (40 hrs) | $200 – $300 |
| Application fee | $88 |
| Exam fee | $79 |
| Fingerprinting (IdentoGO) | $50 – $65 |
| Total | $420 – $530 |
Michigan is one of the most affordable states to get licensed in, thanks to the lower education hours and reasonable fees. Your license renews every 3 years for $78, with 18 hours of continuing education required (including annual fair housing credits).
How Long Does It Take?
- Pre-licensing education (40 hrs): 1-3 weeks (self-paced online can be very fast)
- Application processing: 1-2 weeks
- Fingerprinting + background check: 48 hours to 6 weeks
- Exam scheduling + taking: 1-2 weeks
- License activation: 5-10 business days after broker affiliation
With only 40 hours of coursework, motivated students can be licensed in 4-6 weeks. Average timeline is 2-3 months. The background check is the biggest wildcard – 80% clear within 48 hours, but some take weeks.
Frequently Asked Questions
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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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