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Arkansas Real Estate Exam Pass Rate

The real estate licensing exam has a national first-attempt pass rate of roughly 50% — meaning about half of all first-time test-takers fail. Pass rates vary by state, but the pattern is consistent: underprepared candidates fail at high rates, and well-prepared candidates pass reliably.

Understanding what drives Arkansas's pass rate — and more importantly, what you can do about it — is more useful than the raw number. This page covers what the data shows and how to use it to plan your prep.

Why Candidates Fail the Arkansas Real Estate Exam

No Targeted Study Plan

Many candidates study general material without knowing which topics carry the most weight on the Arkansas exam. The Pearson VUE candidate handbook publishes a topic outline with content weightings — study to those proportions, not randomly.

Weak on State-Specific Content

The Arkansas portion of the exam tests state-specific license law, agency disclosure rules, and commission regulations. Candidates who focus entirely on national prep and neglect Arkansas content fail this portion at high rates.

Passive Study Instead of Practice

Reading notes and re-watching videos is passive. The exam tests application and recall under time pressure. Active practice — timed question sets, immediate review of wrong answers, and drilling weak areas — produces dramatically better results.

Test Anxiety and Timing

Many candidates run out of time or make careless errors under pressure. Practice tests taken under timed conditions build the mental stamina and pacing skills needed on exam day.

How to Improve Your Arkansas Exam Pass Rate

The strongest predictor of first-attempt passing is consistent, structured practice in the weeks before the exam. Candidates who regularly score 75–80%+ on practice exams under timed conditions pass at significantly higher rates than those who don't practice this way.

Focus your prep on two things: understanding the national concepts tested across all state exams (agency, contracts, finance, valuation), and learning the Arkansas-specific rules that will appear on the state portion. Both are tested, and neglecting either is a common reason for failure.

If you've already failed the Arkansas exam once, don't retake it until you've identified what went wrong. Review your score report, identify the topic areas where you scored lowest, and focus your re-study there before rescheduling.

What Passing Candidates Do Differently

Study the official Pearson VUE candidate handbook topic outline — it tells you exactly what's tested and how much

Complete at least 500 practice questions before sitting for the exam

Take at least 3–5 full-length timed practice exams to build pacing and stamina

Review every wrong answer immediately — understand why, not just what

Study Arkansas-specific content separately from the national portion

Schedule the exam when your practice scores are consistently above 75%

Arkansas Exam Prep Resources