Edition: 300 Verified Questions with Correct Answers &
Detailed Rationales Based on 225 ILCS 407 & IDFPR Rules
– Your Complete Guide to First-Attempt Success
This 300-question practice exam covers all content required for the Illinois Auctioneer Licensing
Examination, including the 2026 statutory definitions of “online auction” and “estate sale,” expanded
licensing for estate sale services, license qualifications (age 18, high school diploma, exam), exemptions
(owner sales, charities, real estate brokers), reciprocity, recordkeeping and trust account rules (3-year
retention, no commingling, monthly reconciliation), advertising and buyer premium disclosures, written
contract requirements, prohibited practices (shill bidding, undisclosed fees), ethics and fiduciary duties,
continuing education (12 hours per 2-year renewal), disciplinary grounds and penalties (up to $2,500 per
violation), and detailed scenarios on bidder disputes, misrepresentation, and auctioneer liability, all
based directly on 225 ILCS 407 and IDFPR administrative rules.
DOMAIN I: DEFINITIONS & GENERAL PROVISIONS (Questions 1-25)
Question 1
Under the Illinois Auction License Act (225 ILCS 407) as amended effective January
1, 2026, which of the following is the new statutory definition of "online auction"?
A) Any sale of goods via the internet where bids are placed electronically
B) An auction conducted through an interactive computer service that allows
prospective purchasers to view items and submit bids electronically in real time or
over a defined period, with or without a live auctioneer
C) A website that merely lists items for sale at a fixed price
D) A live auction that is simultaneously streamed over the internet without
electronic bidding
Answer: B
Rationale: The 2026 amendments added a specific definition for "online auction"
to clarify that it includes auctions conducted via interactive computer services
where bids are submitted electronically, whether in real time or over a defined
period, with or without a live auctioneer. This distinguishes online auctions from
simple fixed-price listings or passive streaming.
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,Question 2
Effective January 1, 2026, how does the Act define "estate sale"?
A) Any sale of property from a deceased person's residence, regardless of who
conducts it
B) The sale of personal property from a residence or other location, for a fee or
compensation, by a person who is not the owner of the property, where the sale
is advertised to the public and conducted over one or more days
C) A sale of furniture and household goods only
D) A probate-required liquidation supervised by a court
Answer: B
Rationale: The 2026 update introduced a clear definition of "estate sale" to close
a previous loophole. It now means the sale of personal property from a residence
or other location, for a fee or compensation, by a person who is not the owner,
where the sale is advertised to the public. This brings estate sale services under
the licensure umbrella unless exempted.
Question 3
According to Section 5-10 of the Act, what is an "auction service"?
A) Only the act of calling bids at a podium
B) The service of arranging, managing, advertising, or conducting auctions for
another for compensation
C) The physical venue where an auction is held
D) The delivery of purchased items to buyers
Answer: B
Rationale: Section 5-10 defines "auction service" broadly as arranging, managing,
advertising, or conducting auctions for another for compensation. This includes
pre-auction preparation, marketing, and post-auction settlement, not just the
bid-calling itself.
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,Question 4
Under the 2026 amendments, which activity now explicitly requires an auctioneer
license if conducted for compensation?
A) Selling one's own used furniture on Facebook Marketplace
B) Conducting an online auction for a charity, receiving no compensation, when
the charity is a not-for-profit organization
C) Providing estate sale services from a residence, advertising to the public, for a
fee
D) A court-appointed receiver liquidating assets
Answer: C
Rationale: The 2026 expanded licensing requirements for estate sale services
mean that anyone who, for a fee, advertises and conducts an estate sale from a
residence must hold an auctioneer license. The charitable exemption (B) remains
if truly no compensation. Court-appointed receivers (D) are exempt under Section
10-1(f).
Question 5
What is the definition of "buyer premium" in the Act?
A) An extra charge for using a credit card
B) Any fee or compensation paid by the successful purchaser to the auctioneer,
auction firm, seller, or other party, other than the purchase price
C) The deposit required to register to bid
D) A premium paid to the seller if the item sells above a certain price
Answer: B
Rationale: Section 5-10 defines "buyer premium" as any fee or compensation paid
by the successful purchaser other than the purchase price. This must be disclosed
in advertising and at the auction.
Question 6
Which of the following is NOT considered an "advertisement" under the Act (as
amended 2026)?
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, A) A post on a social media platform promoting an upcoming auction
B) A handwritten sign placed on a bulletin board
C) An internal memo to auction staff regarding schedule changes
D) A radio commercial
Answer: C
Rationale: Section 5-10 defines "advertisement" broadly as any written, oral, or
electronic communication containing a promotion, inducement, or offer to
conduct an auction or provide an auction service. Internal communications not
directed to the public are not advertisements for regulatory purposes.
Question 7
What is an "interactive computer service" for purposes of the online auction
exemption?
A) Any website that allows users to post comments
B) An information service, system, or access software provider that provides or
enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server, including
specifically a service or system that provides access to the Internet
C) A stand-alone auction software used only by licensed auctioneers
D) A real-time bidding platform without any user interaction
Answer: B
Rationale: The Act incorporates the federal definition from the Communications
Decency Act. "Interactive computer service" is broadly defined to include
platforms like eBay, Craigslist, and similar sites that host third-party listings
without examining or setting terms of sale.
Question 8
Under the 2026 definition, a person providing an "Internet auction listing
service" is:
A) Always required to hold an auctioneer license
B) Exempt from licensure if they do not examine, set prices, or use a natural
person auctioneer
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