Florida real estate exam readiness calculator
Answer five quick questions and get a personalized readiness score before you schedule Pearson VUE. No account, no email, no signup.
Readiness is only useful when it tells you what to do next.
Use your result as a routing tool. Try exam wording, drill mixed math, or move into the full app when you need saved practice and topic tracking.
Use this calculator if you are asking, "Am I ready for the Florida real estate exam?" A strong result means you have studied after the 63-hour course, practiced application-level questions, drilled Florida math, and tested your pacing on a full 100-question timed exam. It is a readiness estimate, not a guarantee.
Study hours, practice type, math, timed exams, and retake status.
Florida sales associate exam questions, with 210 minutes to finish.
Minutes on the official Florida sales associate exam.
The practical target is 75 correct answers out of 100.
One Pass Florida diagnostic question from each official content area.
How many hours have you studied after completing your pre-licensing course?
What your readiness score means.
Treat the score as a decision aid. It should help you choose whether to book, drill weak areas, or slow down and rebuild your study plan.
Likely close to ready
Confirm with one full timed practice exam. If pacing is solid and no topic is weak, you can start thinking about a test date.
Close, but not clean yet
You probably have enough foundation to improve quickly. Spend the next stretch on math, weak topics, and scenario questions.
Do not rush the appointment
You need more reps before Pearson VUE. Focus on topic gaps, timed practice, and Florida-specific rules before you book.
Start with diagnosis
You are early in the process. Take a diagnostic, build a simple study plan, and give yourself enough weeks to improve.
Time after the pre-license course
The course gets you eligible. Focused post-course prep is where you turn course knowledge into exam speed.
Scenario practice beats rereading
The Florida exam often asks what should happen next, not just what a term means. Recall questions alone can make you feel ready too early.
Florida math is a pass/fail swing factor
Commission, proration, documentary stamps, intangible tax, property tax, and cap rate questions are predictable enough to drill.
Pacing has to be tested
Untimed practice can hide problems. A 100-question timed set shows whether you can think clearly for the full exam window.
What to read next after your score.
The next step depends on the gap. Pass-rate context, timed practice, retake strategy, and math review each solve a different readiness problem.
Can this calculator predict whether I will pass the Florida real estate exam?+
No calculator can predict a live exam result. This tool estimates readiness from the behaviors that matter most: focused study hours, question difficulty, math confidence, timed practice, and whether you are a first-time or repeat candidate.
What score should I get before scheduling the Florida real estate exam?+
A readiness score of 75% or higher is a useful signal, but it should not be your only trigger. You should also complete a full 100-question timed practice exam, score around 80% or better, and avoid major weak areas.
Why does the calculator ask about timed practice exams?+
The Florida sales associate exam has 100 questions and a 210-minute time limit. Timed practice shows whether you can keep your accuracy when pacing, fatigue, math, and scenario wording all show up together.
Why does math affect my readiness score?+
Florida math is predictable but easy to neglect. Documentary stamps, intangible tax, prorations, commission, property tax, and cap rate questions can be the difference between a near miss and a passing score.
Is this the same as the Pass Florida diagnostic?+
No. This page is a quick readiness self-check. The Pass Florida app includes a 19-question diagnostic with one question from each official content area, plus practice modes, Math Coach, and Trap Library drills.