TEST BANK: OHIO REAL
ESTATE COMMISSION
LAW (2026/2027
STANDARDS)
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
● PART I: THE PRIMER
○ The Hook
○ The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
○ The 2026 Regulatory Redlines (Table)
● PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK (88 MCQs)
○ Tier 1 (Questions 1–28) - Foundational Syntax & Application: Hard deck
definitions, statutory limits, and 2026 mandates.
○ Tier 2 (Questions 29–58) - Complex Application & Simulation: Scenario-based
logic, trust account physics, tax math, and FinCEN reporting cascades.
○ Tier 3 (Questions 59–88) - Grandmaster Synthesis: Multi-variable, high-stakes
simulations requiring cross-disciplinary mastery.
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastering this rigorous 88-point test bank forges your raw legal knowledge into the immediate,
clinical precision required for elite Ohio real estate practice. By internalizing these 2026/2027
regulatory redlines, you transform rote memorization into the intuitive, high-stakes analytical
competence demanded of top-tier brokers and legal scholars.
● The 2026 Agency Redline (HB 466): You must execute a written agency agreement with
a buyer before showing residential property or drafting an offer. Verbal consent is
professionally fatal.
● The Wholesaling Disclosure Mandate (SB 155): Wholesalers must provide a separate,
12-point bold disclosure to sellers before a binding contract. Failure allows the seller to
cancel penalty-free prior to closing.
● The Trust Account Physics (OAC 1301:5-5): General brokerage trust accounts must
not bear interest. Property management trust accounts may bear interest, but it must be
paid to the owner pro-rata.
, ● The FinCEN Residential Rule: Effective March 1, 2026, cash purchases by entities
(LLCs) trigger federal reporting. Title companies (closing agents) hold first-priority
reporting liability, not the real estate broker.
● The Regulatory Ceiling (ORC 4735.18): Record retention is strictly three years. The
Recovery Fund caps at $40,000 per licensee and inherently excludes punitive damages
and attorney's fees.
The 2026 Regulatory Redlines
Regulatory Domain 2026 Benchmark / Threshold Analytical Implication
Pre-Licensure (HB 238) Salesperson: 100 hours. Educational barriers have
Broker: College degree shifted from academic duration
requirement eliminated, to targeted transactional
replaced with specialized competence.
certificate + experience.
Wholesaling (SB 155) 12-point bold disclosure Strict transparency
required prior to contract. requirements neutralize
Violations trigger CSPA liability.
predatory assignment
practices.
Property Tax (HB 186) Unvoted 20-mill floor growth Homeowners are shielded from
capped to 3-year GDP deflator. automatic tax spikes driven
New construction is exempt. purely by market reappraisals.
FinCEN Rule Mandatory reporting for Shifts AML (Anti-Money
residential cash purchases by Laundering) compliance burden
legal entities. to the settlement agent
cascade.
Recovery Fund Hard cap at $40,000. State restitution provides a
Assessment triggered if fund baseline safety net, not
drops below $250,000. comprehensive civil damage
recovery.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1 - Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: Under the 2026 Ohio HB 466 standards, a buyer requests to tour a residential listing. Based
on the principles of Ohio Agency Law, which action is FIRST required by the licensee? A)
Secure a formal mortgage pre-approval letter. B) Verbally disclose the brokerage's fee structure.
C) Execute a written buyer agency representation agreement. D) Obtain the listing agent's
authorization to split compensation.
● The Answer: C (Execute a written buyer agency representation agreement.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Pre-approval is a financial best practice, not a statutory prerequisite
for showing property.
○ B is incorrect: Verbal disclosures are void under HB 466; representation parameters
must be written.
○ D is incorrect: Compensation offers from listing agents are no longer an MLS
default mechanism.
,The Mentor's Analysis: Representation requires explicit, documented boundaries before
physical action. When showing residential property, the immediate priority is written
authorization. By utilizing upfront written agreements, you bypass the trap of statutory
non-compliance. Professional/Academic Intuition: Paper precedes the property tour.
Q2: An individual wishes to engage in real estate wholesaling in Ohio. Based on the principles
of SB 155, what is the IMMEDIATELY required format for the seller disclosure? A) A verbal
warning recorded on audio. B) A 10-point italicized clause within the primary purchase contract.
C) A separate document printed in at least 12-point boldface type. D) An addendum signed by a
notary public.
● The Answer: C (A separate document printed in at least 12-point boldface type.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The statute demands written evidence to protect consumers.
○ B is incorrect: The disclosure must be entirely separate from the purchase
agreement, not buried within it.
○ D is incorrect: Notarization is not statutorily required for the SB 155 disclosure.
The Mentor's Analysis: Consumer protection mandates high-visibility disclosures. When
wholesaling, the immediate priority is executing the standalone 12-point bold form. By utilizing
this exact typography, you bypass the trap of contract voidability under the Consumer Sales
Practices Act. Professional/Academic Intuition: Wholesaling disclosures must stand alone,
bold, and large.
Q3: A seasoned Ohio salesperson with 25 closed transactions seeks a broker's license. Under
the HB 238 modernization reforms, what is the MOST ACCURATE educational prerequisite? A)
A four-year bachelor's degree from an accredited university. B) 120 hours of post-secondary
college credits. C) A specialized certificate program or equivalent documented experience. D)
An associate degree in business administration.
● The Answer: C (A specialized certificate program or equivalent documented experience.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: HB 238 explicitly eliminated the legacy four-year degree requirement.
○ B is incorrect: The rigid college credit hour requirement was repealed to lower
barriers.
○ D is incorrect: Specific degrees are no longer mandated if the certificate pathway is
used.
The Mentor's Analysis: The state modernized access by removing academic bottlenecks in
favor of targeted competence. When assessing broker qualifications, the immediate priority is
confirming the specialized certificate or transaction history. By utilizing this alternative pathway,
you bypass the trap of outdated degree mandates. Professional/Academic Intuition: Experience
and specialized certificates now trump general college degrees.
Q4: A broker opens a new general escrow account to hold earnest money deposits. Based on
OREC trust account regulations, which status is MOST ACCURATE? A) The account must bear
interest payable to the Ohio Real Estate Commission. B) The account must bear interest
payable to the buyer. C) The account must be strictly non-interest bearing. D) The account may
bear interest if the principal broker agrees.
● The Answer: C (The account must be strictly non-interest bearing.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Real estate brokerages cannot use IOTA/IOLTA-style accounts that
generate state funds.
○ B is incorrect: General escrow accounts for purchase contracts cannot yield
interest.
, ○ D is incorrect: Broker preference does not override the absolute statutory ban on
interest for general trust accounts.
The Mentor's Analysis: Escrow funds for property sales are inherently volatile and must remain
liquid and neutral. When establishing a general trust account, the immediate priority is stripping
all interest-bearing capabilities. By utilizing a zero-yield account, you bypass the trap of fiduciary
commingling. Professional/Academic Intuition: General trust accounts hold cash, never yield.
Q5: A property manager receives a $2,000 security deposit. They place it in a designated
property management trust account. Under Ohio law, can this account bear interest? A) No, all
real estate trust accounts must be non-interest bearing. B) Yes, provided the interest is paid to
the property owner on a pro-rata basis. C) Yes, provided the interest is retained by the broker as
a management fee. D) No, unless approved by the tenant in writing.
● The Answer: B (Yes, provided the interest is paid to the property owner on a pro-rata
basis.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Property management accounts are the explicit exception to the
general non-interest rule.
○ C is incorrect: The broker retaining interest constitutes an illegal hidden profit and
fiduciary breach.
○ D is incorrect: The interest inherently belongs to the property owner, not the tenant.
The Mentor's Analysis: Long-term capital holds differ fundamentally from short-term purchase
escrows. When managing owner assets, the immediate priority is yielding returns for the
principal. By utilizing an interest-bearing management account paid to the owner, you bypass
the trap of financial stagnation or broker embezzlement. Professional/Academic Intuition:
**Management interest belongs to the owner.
Q6: A consumer wins a $60,000 civil judgment against a bankrupt Ohio broker for fraud,
including $10,000 in attorney's fees. What is the MAXIMUM payout from the Ohio Real Estate
Recovery Fund? A) $60,000 B) $50,000 C) $40,000 D) $0, because attorney's fees disqualify
the claim.
● The Answer: C ($40,000)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The fund has a hard statutory cap of $40,000 per licensee.
○ B is incorrect: Subtracting the attorney fees leaves $50,000, which still exceeds the
absolute cap.
○ D is incorrect: The presence of attorney fees does not disqualify the core actual
loss; the fees are simply severed.
The Mentor's Analysis: State recovery funds provide baseline survival, not total restitution.
When calculating a fund payout, the immediate priority is applying the $40,000 statutory ceiling.
By utilizing this cap, you bypass the trap of assuming the fund mirrors comprehensive
insurance. Professional/Academic Intuition: The Recovery Fund ceiling is a hard $40,000 per
licensee.
Q7: A licensee receives an earnest money check on Tuesday. Based on ORC 4735.18, how
long must the broker retain the records of this transaction? A) 1 year from the date of closing. B)
3 years from the date of the transaction. C) 5 years from the date of the transaction. D) 7 years
for IRS synchronization.
● The Answer: B (3 years from the date of the transaction.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: One year is critically non-compliant and invites license suspension.
○ C is incorrect: Five years is a common corporate norm, but Ohio real estate law