Illinois Auctioneer Licensing Examination ACTUAL EXAM
COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND DETAILED SOLUTIONS LATEST
UPDATE THIS YEAR-JUST RELEASED
SUMMARIZED EXAM COVERAGE (ALL CONTENTS COVERED)
The Illinois Auctioneer Licensing Exam mainly tests your ability to:
• Follow Illinois licensing rules and IDFPR regulations
• Conduct auctions lawfully and ethically
• Understand reserve vs absolute auctions
• Form valid auction contracts and enforce auction terms
• Avoid fraud, shill bidding, and misleading advertising
• Handle deposits, payments, and client funds properly
• Maintain proper auction records and settlement statements
• Apply contract/UCC principles to auction sales
• Calculate commissions, premiums, taxes, and seller payouts
• Understand disciplinary actions and compliance requirements
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Q1
An Illinois auctioneer advertises a sale as “absolute auction” but privately tells the seller they can reject
low bids. What is the most accurate concern?
A. Absolute auctions allow seller rejection anytime
B. The advertisement is misleading because absolute auctions imply property sells to highest bidder
C. This is allowed if the seller signs a contract
D. This is acceptable if bids start above market value
Answer: B
Rationale: Advertising “absolute” implies no reserve. Allowing seller rejection misrepresents the auction
terms.
Q2
A bidder wins a lot, and the auctioneer’s hammer falls, but the bidder immediately says they changed
their mind. What is the legal effect?
A. The bidder may retract without consequences
B. A binding contract was formed at the fall of the hammer, subject to announced terms
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C. The seller must restart the auction
D. The bidder must be allowed to renegotiate price
Answer: B
Rationale: In auctions, contract formation generally occurs at the fall of the hammer unless stated
otherwise.
Q3
A seller asks an auctioneer to bid on the seller’s own property to raise prices without telling bidders.
What is this called?
A. Buyer’s premium
B. Shill bidding or fictitious bidding
C. Reserve bidding disclosure
D. Bid increment strategy
Answer: B
Rationale: Shill bidding involves fake bids to artificially inflate price and is unethical and generally illegal.
Q4
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An auctioneer accepts a $5,000 deposit from a buyer for equipment but deposits it into the auctioneer’s
personal account temporarily. What rule is violated?
A. Advertising disclosure rule
B. Duty to disclose reserve
C. Proper handling and segregation of client funds
D. Duty to accept credit cards
Answer: C
Rationale: Client funds must be handled properly and not commingled with personal funds.
Q5
An Illinois auctioneer allows a friend to conduct bid calling while the auctioneer steps away, and the
friend is unlicensed. What is the likely issue?
A. It is allowed if no commission is paid
B. It may be unlicensed practice of auctioneering
C. It is allowed if the friend is over 18
D. It is required under IDFPR rules