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Real Estate License Guide

Nevada · NV

Nevada Real Estate License Checklist (2026)

Every step, fee, and deadline on one page — designed to print cleanly to PDF and check off as you go.

Before you start

  • You are at least 18 years old
  • You hold a high school diploma or GED
  • You can pass a criminal background check / fingerprinting

Education

Nevada requires 120 total hours: 45 hours of Real Estate Principles, 45 hours of Real Estate Law (including 18 hours of Nevada-specific law), 15 hours of Contracts, and 15 hours of Agency. Heads up: plenty of websites still say 90 hours — that was the old rule. The Nevada Real Estate Division raised the requirement to 120 hours for applications on or after October 1, 2021, and the official red.nv.gov requirements page confirms 120 hours as of July 2026. College credit can substitute (3 credits = 45 hours).

  • Confirm you're at least 18 and have a high school diploma or GED — Nevada checks both.
  • Enroll in a 120-hour pre-licensing program with a Division-approved school (Form 502 lists approved Nevada schools; approved online providers also qualify).
  • Complete all four required courses: 45 hours Principles, 45 hours Law (with 18 hours Nevada law), 15 hours Contracts, and 15 hours Agency.
  • Collect certified certificates of completion or transcripts — you'll submit these with your license application.
  • Register with Pearson VUE and schedule your Nevada salesperson exam (no Division pre-approval needed to sit for the test).

Application & exam

  • Pass both portions of the Pearson VUE exam ($100). Your passing results are only valid for 12 months, so don't sit on them.
  • Sign and date the fingerprint background waiver (inside Form 549) BEFORE getting fingerprinted — the Division is strict about the order here.
  • Get fingerprinted through a Division-approved vendor (Form 619 lists them; roughly $40–$70 all-in). Fingerprints expire after 2 months, so time this close to your application.
  • Complete license application Form 549 and have your sponsoring broker sign it — your license is issued to your broker of record. No broker lined up yet? Contact the Division about inactive issuance; you can't practice until a broker activates you.
  • Submit the application packet with your original exam results, education certificates, fingerprint verification, and the $140 application fee.
  • Once issued, remember your original Nevada license is only good for ONE year — you'll need 30 hours of post-licensing education before your first renewal ($195).

Budget

Nevada licensing budget with a blank column for your actual spend
ItemEstimateActual
120-hour pre-licensing course (typical online package)$400 
Pearson VUE exam fee$100 
Fingerprinting and background check (approved vendor)$60 
License application fee (Form 549)$140 
Estimated total$700 

Key deadlines

  • The Nevada Real Estate Division raised the requirement to 120 hours for applications on or after October 1, 2021, and the official red.nv.gov requirements page confirms 120 hours as of July 2026.
  • Your original license is valid for just 1 year — first renewal is $195 and requires 30 hours of post-licensing education (modules A–O).
  • After that, you renew every 2 years with 36 hours of continuing education.
  • Your passing results are only valid for 12 months, so don't sit on them.
  • Sign and date the fingerprint background waiver (inside Form 549) BEFORE getting fingerprinted — the Division is strict about the order here.
  • Fingerprints expire after 2 months, so time this close to your application.
  • Once issued, remember your original Nevada license is only good for ONE year — you'll need 30 hours of post-licensing education before your first renewal ($195).
  • Most people take 2 to 4 months.