Real Estate Licensing in Tamarac city, Florida

Who Needs a License

Under Florida law, a real estate broker or sales associate must be licensed to engage in the business of selling, buying, exchanging, leasing, or renting real property on behalf of others for compensation. Fla. Stat. § 489.105 defines a "broker" as any person who, for compensation, lists, sells, purchases, exchanges, or rents real property, or offers or attempts to do so. A "sales associate" is a licensed individual who works under a broker's supervision.

If you perform real estate transactions—including residential or commercial sales, leases, or property management services—for compensation in Tamarac, you need a state license.

How to Get Licensed

Real estate licensing in Florida is regulated by the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), not a local board.

Steps:
1. Complete education: Complete 63 classroom hours for a sales associate license or 72 hours for a broker license through an approved Florida real estate school.
2. Pass the state exam: Submit an application to DBPR and pass the state licensing examination.
3. Broker requirement: If applying for a broker license, you must have held a valid sales associate license for at least 12 months during the preceding 5 years.
4. Submit application: Apply through DBPR's licensing system with proof of education, exam passage, and required fees.

For current exam schedules, application procedures, and fees, contact DBPR's Division of Real Estate directly.

Local Requirements

Tamarac is subject to Broward County regulations and Tamarac Municipal Code provisions. Property transactions in Tamarac must comply with local land development regulations, zoning codes, and building requirements enforced by the Tamarac Building Department.

Before closing transactions involving real property in Tamarac, verify compliance with Tamarac Municipal Code requirements, including zoning restrictions, development standards, and any local licensing amendments. Contact the Tamarac Building Department for local ordinances affecting specific property types or transactions.

Exemptions

Under Fla. Stat. § 489.105, certain activities are exempt from licensing requirements:
- Owners selling, leasing, or exchanging their own property (not acting as a broker for others)
- Attorneys licensed in Florida acting in their professional capacity
- Persons employed by employers to manage or lease their employer's real property
- Certain officers and employees of financial institutions handling real estate in limited contexts

However, if you represent others for compensation, you must be licensed regardless of exemption claims.

State Licensing Board Contact

Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC), Department of Business and Professional Regulation
- Phone: 850-487-1395
- Website: https://www2.myfloridalicense.com/real-estate-commission/

References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)