Part-Time vs. Full-Time: Can You Get Your Real Estate License While Working a 9‑to‑5?

The honest, data-backed guide to earning your license around a day job — and deciding when (or if) to make the leap.

Published March 19, 2026 🕑 16 min read Cameron Academy • Real Estate Education

If you’ve been researching a career in real estate, you’ve probably asked yourself the same question thousands of aspiring agents ask every year: “Can I actually do this without quitting my job first?”

Get your real estate license while working a 9-to-5 — a guide by cameron academy

The short answer is yes — and in fact, it’s one of the smartest ways to start. Real estate licensure has one of the lowest barriers to entry of any licensed profession in the United States. Most states require between 40 and 180 hours of pre-licensing education, the entire process typically takes two to six months, and the initial cost to get licensed often falls somewhere between $300 and $1,500. Compare that to the years of schooling and tens of thousands of dollars required for professions like nursing, accounting, or law, and the value proposition is hard to ignore.

But getting your license is only one part of the equation. The bigger question — and the one this article is built to answer — is how you structure the transition from your current job into a real estate career. Should you go part-time or full-time? Can you realistically close deals while clocking in somewhere else? What does the income trajectory look like in year one, and when should you plan to leave your day job?

Let’s break it all down.

Why 2026 Is a Strong Year to Get Licensed

The real estate market in 2026 sits at an inflection point. After years of pandemic-era volatility, interest rates are beginning to stabilize and housing inventory is slowly improving. According to the National Association of REALTORS® 2025 Member Profile, 74% of existing agents said they were “very certain” they would remain active in the industry for at least two more years. That confidence, even amid affordability challenges, signals a profession that rewards persistence.

At the same time, the post-NAR settlement landscape has reshaped how buyer agent compensation works. New agents entering the field today are learning the updated rules from day one rather than having to unlearn old habits — a genuine advantage. Meanwhile, the demand for agents remains strong: 88% of buyers in 2025 purchased their home through an agent or broker, and a record 91% of sellers used an agent, according to NAR’s 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers.

88%
of buyers used an agent in 2025
91%
of sellers used an agent (record high)
5%
FSBO rate — the lowest ever recorded

Only 5% of homes sold as For Sale By Owner in 2025 — the lowest share on record — and FSBO sellers typically received significantly lower prices than those who used an agent. The takeaway: buyers and sellers overwhelmingly prefer working with licensed professionals, and that demand isn’t going away.

How Real Estate Licensing Actually Works

Every state manages its own licensing process, but the general path is consistent across the country. There are no surprise detours, no multi-year degree requirements, and no gatekeepers beyond the state exam itself.

1

Meet Basic Eligibility Requirements

Most states require you to be at least 18 years old (19 in some states), be a legal U.S. resident, and hold a high school diploma or equivalent. A college degree is not required anywhere.

2

Complete Pre-Licensing Education

This is the most time-intensive step. You’ll take state-approved courses covering real estate law, ethics, contracts, property ownership, and market practices. Required hours range from 40 (Massachusetts, Michigan) to 180 (Texas). Florida sits at 63 hours — one of the more manageable requirements in the country. Most schools offer both online self-paced and in-person formats.

3

Pass the State Licensing Exam

State exams typically include a national section and a state-specific section, totaling 100 to 150 multiple-choice questions over two to three hours. Most states require a score of at least 70% to pass. Florida’s exam is 100 questions with a 75% passing threshold and a 3.5-hour time limit, administered by Pearson VUE. First-time pass rates vary nationally — California reports roughly 63%, while Texas sits around 57%.

4

Submit Your Application & Background Check

Once you pass the exam, you’ll submit a license application with fingerprints and a background check. Most states use electronic fingerprinting services, and the process takes a few days to a few weeks.

5

Join a Sponsoring Broker

New agents must affiliate with a licensed brokerage before they can practice. Your broker provides the legal umbrella, training, mentorship, and technology platform you’ll use to serve clients. Look for a brokerage that supports part-time agents if you plan to maintain your current job during the transition.

Key Takeaway

The entire licensing process — from enrollment to active license — typically takes 2 to 6 months depending on your state and study pace. For someone working full-time and studying 10–15 hours per week, a 3–4 month timeline is realistic in most states. In Florida, many students complete the process in about 2 months.

What It Costs — and How It Compares to Other Careers

One of real estate’s most compelling advantages is how affordable it is to get started. The licensing cost alone is typically a fraction of what other licensed professions require, and the upfront investment is something many people can cash-flow over just a few months.

In Florida, for example, the total licensing cost — including the 63-hour pre-licensing course, background check, application fee, and state exam — runs between $270 and $690, according to the Florida Commission-Approved Course Academy. In California, budgeting $600–$900 for the initial licensing is more typical given the higher state fees and 135 required hours. In Texas, where 180 hours of education are required, expect to spend $660 or more on courses and exam fees alone.

However, the total cost to actually launch a real estate business extends beyond the license itself. According to the Perry Real Estate College, the initial investment to get licensed and begin operating — including brokerage startup fees, NAR and MLS dues, and basic marketing — typically falls between $1,500 and $4,000.

To put those numbers in perspective, consider what other licensed professions cost to enter:

Licensed Profession Typical Education Cost Time to Licensure
Real Estate Agent $300 – $1,500 2 – 6 months
Registered Nurse (ADN) $40,000 – $80,000 2 – 4 years
CPA (Accountant) $30,000 – $60,000+ 4 – 5 years
Attorney $100,000 – $200,000+ 7 years
CDL (Truck Driver) $3,000 – $7,000 3 – 8 weeks

Here’s the encouraging math: according to US Realty Training, a single commission check from a median-priced home sale can often cover those startup costs and then some.

Online Schools Built for Working Professionals

The biggest enabler for people who want to get licensed around a 9-to-5 is the availability of fully online, self-paced pre-licensing programs. These platforms let you study at 6 a.m. before the kids wake up, during your lunch break, or at 10 p.m. after the house is quiet. Your progress saves automatically, and you can revisit material as many times as needed.

Several accredited providers have built strong reputations in this space. Colibri Real Estate operates across most states and is known for a flexible, self-paced platform with a strong exam prep program. Allied Schools has more than 30 years of experience in California and offers livestream options alongside self-paced courses. The CE Shop is available in over 40 states and features a particularly well-regarded exam prep tool called Exam Prep Edge. AceableAgent is a newer entrant with a highly modern, mobile-first interface designed for learning on the go — ideal for busy professionals. And in Florida, Cameron Academy has built a student-success-focused model with AI tutors, live study groups, and multimedia video learning that goes well beyond a typical self-paced course (more on that below).

Most online pre-licensing programs cost between $100 and $600 depending on the state, package level, and whether exam prep is bundled. Many offer payment plans, money-back guarantees if you don’t pass the exam, and career resources like brokerage placement assistance.

Tip for Working Professionals

When choosing a school, prioritize three things: state approval (confirm the school is recognized by your state’s real estate commission), self-paced access (no mandatory login times), and exam prep included (students who invest in practice exams are significantly more likely to pass on the first try). Also check the access window — most schools give you 6 to 12 months to complete the coursework.

Spotlight: How Cameron Academy Approaches It Differently

Full disclosure: this article is published by Cameron Academy, so we want to be transparent about who we are and what we offer. We believe the best way to earn your trust is to give you genuinely useful information first — and let our approach speak for itself.

Most online real estate schools follow a similar formula: text-based content, a final exam, and a certificate. That works for some people. But after 20+ years and over 100,000 students, we’ve learned that passing the exam — and actually understanding the material well enough to build a career — requires more than a PDF and a prayer.

Cameron Academy — Florida’s Top-Rated School

Over 3,000 Five-Star Reviews • 100,000+ Students • 20+ Years

Our 63-hour Florida pre-licensing course is designed around one goal: student success. Students have completed the course and received their license within 2 months of starting — even while working full-time jobs. Here’s what makes our approach different:

  • AI Tutors trained on each unit’s material — available 24/7 for instant answers and self-quizzing
  • Live Study Groups so you learn with real people, not just a screen
  • 100% Video Learning — recorded class sessions taught by experienced instructors, not just slides
  • Multimedia & Interactive Media including quizzes, handouts, and exercises built into every unit
  • Highlighted Textbook with key concepts already marked so study time is focused
  • 3 Learning Formatsself-paced online ($249), livestream ($395), or in-person in Orlando & Winter Park ($495)
  • Exam Prep Add-On — a dedicated exam prep subscription with a 14-day free trial, designed specifically for the Florida state exam
  • $105 Fingerprint Service — coordinated through a local UPS so it’s digital, automatic, no guesswork

You can try Unit 1 and the Unit 1 Quiz completely free — no credit card or personal information required — to experience the format before you commit. Start the free Unit 1 sample here.

Want to see what a Cameron Academy class actually looks like before you enroll? You can watch a full recorded class session for free on our YouTube channel — no sign-up required.

Part-Time vs. Full-Time: The Honest Comparison

Here’s where the rubber meets the road. Getting licensed is straightforward. Building a career once you’re licensed requires a more nuanced plan — especially when you’re splitting your time with another job.

Many new agents keep their day job when they start, and for good reason. Real estate income is commission-based and unpredictable, especially in year one. According to NAR’s 2025 Member Profile, agents with two years or less of experience earned a median annual income of just $8,100. That’s not a typo — the ramp-up period is real. Having the financial stability of a paycheck while you build your pipeline is not just practical; it’s what experienced brokers often recommend.

But here’s the trade-off that many people underestimate: real estate demands responsiveness. Buyers want to see homes on evenings and weekends. Sellers expect you to be reachable during the day for calls, questions, and showing feedback. Deals move fast, and if your day job doesn’t allow any flexibility to field a quick phone call or respond to a time-sensitive email, you may struggle to compete with full-time agents for clients.

Advantages of Starting Part-Time

  • Financial safety net while building your client pipeline
  • Lower-pressure entry — room to learn without depending on commissions
  • Evenings and weekends are already prime showing hours, since most buyers work 9-to-5 too
  • Time to test whether real estate is the right fit before going all-in
  • Opportunity to build a financial runway (6–12 months of savings) before transitioning

Challenges of Starting Part-Time

  • Limited daytime availability can cost you leads and listings
  • Clients may prefer agents with full-time dedication and faster response times
  • Commission income is inconsistent — your first check could be months away
  • Competing with full-time agents who can respond instantly
  • Risk of burnout from working 50–60+ total hours across both jobs

The most successful part-time agents share a few traits: they time-block aggressively, they choose a brokerage that offers mentorship and technology support for agents with limited availability, and they set clear communication boundaries with clients about when they’re reachable. Many consolidate all their in-person work — showings, listing appointments, open houses — into one or two days per week, then handle follow-ups, marketing, and paperwork during early mornings and evenings.

“You can start part-time, but don’t expect full-time results. Deals require momentum, follow-up, and trust — and that doesn’t build itself.” — RentSpree, “Essential Guide to Becoming a Part-Time Real Estate Agent”

Your Transition Plan: From Enrollment to Active License

If you’re currently working a 9-to-5 and considering real estate, here’s a realistic timeline for getting licensed and starting to practice — all while keeping your day job intact. We’ll use Florida as a detailed example since that’s our home turf, but the general framework applies in any state — just adjust for your state’s required hours and exam format.

Weeks 1–4: Complete Your Pre-Licensing Education

Enroll in a self-paced online pre-licensing program approved by your state. Plan to study 10–15 hours per week — early mornings, evenings, and chunks of weekend time. In Florida, with 63 required hours, most students can complete coursework in about 4 weeks at this pace. In states with lower hour requirements (40–75 hours), you could finish in as little as 3 weeks. In states with 135–180 hours, budget a full 8–12 weeks.

Weeks 5–6: Exam Prep and Testing

Once your coursework is complete, shift your focus to exam prep. Take as many practice tests as your school offers — students who invest in exam prep are significantly more likely to pass on their first attempt. Schedule the state exam on a day off or request a half-day from work. In Florida, the exam is available daily through Pearson VUE at testing centers statewide. If you don’t pass the first time, most states allow retakes with a per-attempt fee (typically $50–$100).

Weeks 7–8: Application, Background Check, and Broker Selection

Submit your license application and complete your fingerprinting and background check. In Florida, the license is typically issued within 10 business days after passing the state exam. Simultaneously, start interviewing brokerages. Ask each one: Do you support part-time agents? What technology and training do you offer? What are the commission splits and desk fees? Look for a brokerage where part-time agents are a normal part of the culture, not an afterthought.

Months 3–4: Active License, First Clients

Once your license is active and you’ve joined a brokerage, start building your sphere of influence. Tell everyone you know — friends, family, coworkers, your dentist — that you’re a licensed agent. Begin attending open houses, shadowing experienced agents at your brokerage, and creating your online presence. Your first transaction may take a few months to materialize, and that’s normal.

Financial Planning Note

Many experienced brokers and financial advisors recommend building a 6 to 12 month runway of living expenses before transitioning to full-time real estate. Use the overlap period — while you’re still employed and earning commissions on the side — to save aggressively. The financial pressure of needing a commission check to make rent is one of the top reasons new agents quit within their first year.

What New Agents Actually Earn

Let’s talk about money honestly. The income potential in real estate is one of its biggest draws, but the early-career numbers are sobering.

According to the NAR 2025 Member Profile, the median gross income across all REALTORS® was $58,100 in 2024, up from $55,800 the prior year. But the spread is enormous. Agents with 16 or more years of experience earned a median of $78,900, while agents with two or fewer years earned just $8,100. The typical new agent closed around three transactions in their first year, with a median sales volume of $500,000.

$58,100
Median gross income, all REALTORS® (2024)
$8,100
Median income, agents with ≤2 years experience
3
Median transactions, first-year agents

Here’s the encouraging part: income scales quickly with experience and network. Agents with three to five years of experience handled a median of eight transactions and $1.6 million in sales volume. By years six through fifteen, those numbers jumped to eleven transactions and $3.2 million. Real estate is a compounding career — your reputation, referral network, and repeat clients grow over time.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the median annual wage for real estate sales agents was $56,320 as of May 2024, with the profession expected to see moderate growth as interest rates stabilize and housing demand continues.

State-by-State Quick Reference

Pre-licensing requirements vary dramatically by state. The table below highlights a cross-section of states to give you an idea of what to expect. For a full 50-state breakdown, consult your state’s real estate commission website or visit a resource like LicenseMap or Colibri Real Estate’s cost guide.

State Pre-License Hours Approx. License Cost Online Self-Paced Available
Florida 63 hours $270 – $690 Yes
Texas 180 hours $660+ Yes
California 135 hours $600 – $900 Yes
New York 77 hours $500 – $900 Yes
Illinois 75 hours $770 – $1,220 Yes
Michigan 40 hours $300 – $600 Yes
Massachusetts 40 hours $300 – $600 Yes
Colorado 168 hours $600 – $1,000 Yes
Georgia 75 hours $400 – $800 Yes
Pennsylvania 75 hours $400 – $800 Yes

Note: Costs are estimates and may vary based on the education provider, exam retakes, and application path. Always verify current requirements directly with your state’s real estate commission.

Getting Licensed in Florida? We Can Help.

Cameron Academy’s 63-hour pre-licensing course features AI tutors, live study groups, multimedia video learning, and a highlighted textbook — everything you need to go from enrollment to licensed in about 2 months, even around a 9-to-5. Try Unit 1 free — no credit card required.

Try Unit 1 Free → Browse All Courses Call (407) 251-0051

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get my real estate license while working full-time?

Absolutely. Self-paced online pre-licensing courses are designed for exactly this situation. You can study early mornings, evenings, and weekends, completing most state programs in two to four months at 10–15 hours of study per week. In Florida, where only 63 hours are required, many students finish in about 4 weeks of coursework.

How much does it cost to get a real estate license?

Initial licensing costs typically range from $300 to $1,500 depending on your state. This covers pre-licensing education, exam fees, application fees, and background check costs. In Florida, the total is usually between $270 and $690. Budget an additional $1,000–$2,500 for brokerage startup, association dues, and basic marketing to launch your business.

How long does it take to get a real estate license?

Most aspiring agents complete the entire process in two to six months, depending on their state’s education requirements and how many hours per week they dedicate to studying. States with lower hour requirements (40–75 hours) allow faster completion; states like Texas (180 hours) or Colorado (168 hours) take longer. In Florida (63 hours), many students are fully licensed within 2 months.

Can I work as a real estate agent part-time?

Yes, and many agents start this way. Evenings and weekends are already the busiest times for showings and client meetings, since most buyers and sellers also work traditional hours. The key challenge is maintaining responsiveness during your day job — clients and other agents expect timely communication.

How much do first-year real estate agents earn?

Honestly, not much in most cases. NAR data shows agents with two years or less of experience earned a median of $8,100 annually in 2024, typically closing about three transactions. Income rises significantly with experience: agents with three to five years earned a median from eight transactions and $1.6 million in sales volume. That’s why keeping your day job during the ramp-up period is often the smart move.

What happens after the NAR settlement — is it still worth becoming an agent?

Yes. The settlement changed how buyer agent compensation is negotiated and disclosed, but it didn’t eliminate the role. In fact, 88% of buyers still used an agent in 2025, and only 5% of homes sold as FSBO — the lowest share ever recorded. Agents who understand the new rules from the start will have an advantage.

Do I need a college degree to get a real estate license?

No. No state in the U.S. requires a college degree for a real estate salesperson license. The educational requirement is the state’s pre-licensing course, which is a focused professional program — not a degree program. In some states, a college degree or law school completion may waive certain pre-licensing requirements.

Sources & References

  1. National Association of REALTORS®, 2025 Member Profile (August 2025). nar.realtor
  2. National Association of REALTORS®, 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers (November 2025). nar.realtor
  3. NAR Agent Income Data & Member Profile Highlights. nar.realtor/agent-income
  4. Houston Agent Magazine, NAR 2025 Member Profile: Realtor Demographics (August 2025). houstonagentmagazine.com
  5. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook: Real Estate Brokers and Sales Agents. bls.gov
  6. Florida Commission-Approved Course Academy, 4 Steps to Get a Florida Real Estate License (2026). flcaa.com
  7. Perry Real Estate College, 2025 Real Estate License: Cost, Timeline & 7 Steps (December 2025). perryrealestatecollege.com
  8. US Realty Training, 16 Costs to Become a Real Estate Agent (July 2025). usrealtytraining.com
  9. Colibri Real Estate, How Much Does It Cost to Get a Real Estate License? (August 2025). colibrirealestate.com
  10. RentSpree, Essential Guide to Becoming a Part-Time Real Estate Agent (April 2025). rentspree.com
  11. 360training, Real Estate License Cost: How Much Are Real Estate Classes? (December 2025). 360training.com
  12. RealEstateU, Real Estate License Timeline: How Long It Really Takes in 2026 (December 2025). realestateu.com
  13. LicenseMap, Real Estate License Requirements by State (2026). getlicensemap.com

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