Practice of Real Estate: What Every Real Estate Student Needs to Know to Pass the PSI Exam in 2026

Practices In Real Estate – Fair Housing Protected Classes & Familial Status Laws.
Practice of Real Estate: What Every Future Salesperson Should Know for the PSI Exam
The practice of real estate is where the law meets real life. It covers how a real estate licensee should act, how money must be handled, how offers move through a transaction, and how professionals stay fair, legal, and careful in every deal. For the PSI real estate salesperson exam, this topic matters because many questions test day-to-day brokerage behavior, not just definitions, which means students need both the rule and the reason behind it.
A strong way to study this section is to think like a working agent. On the exam, the questions often ask what a licensee should do next, what action to prohibit, or which rule the licensee has violated. That is why this post breaks the PSI outline into plain-language sections, adds exam tips, and points to outside resources you can use for extra review.
Why this topic matters
Real estate is a service business built on trust. Buyers and sellers rely on licensees to handle money properly, present offers promptly, protect confidential information, and avoid unfair or illegal conduct. The PSI exam reflects that reality by asking about common brokerage situations, such as escrow mistakes, handling multiple offers, fair housing violations, and antitrust issues.
Students sometimes miss these questions because the answer choices look similar. The best answer usually follows three ideas: protect the public, obey the law, and stay within the licensee’s role. If one answer involves hiding information, delaying an offer, mixing trust funds, or giving legal advice, that answer is usually wrong.
PSI outline subtopics at a glance
The PSI outline for the Practice of Real Estate focuses on the core behaviors expected of licensees in the field. These subtopics are the main points to know before exam day.
| PSI subtopic | What to know for the test |
| Duties and responsibilities of licensees | Advertising rules, escrow handling, commingling, and conversion are common test points. |
| Offers and counteroffers | Know how to present prompts, how counters work, and how to handle multiple offers. |
| Confidentiality, honesty, and fair dealing | Licensees owe honesty to all parties and confidentiality to clients. |
| Fair housing | Know the seven federally protected classes and illegal acts, such as steering and blockbusting. |
| ADA basics | Real estate offices that serve the public must follow basic accessibility rules as public accommodations. |
| Antitrust | Be ready to identify price-fixing, group boycotts, market allocation, and tie-in arrangements. |
| Risk management | E&O insurance helps cover claims arising from negligence and professional errors. |
| Unlicensed practice of law | Agents may use standard forms, but they may not give legal advice or draft custom legal language beyond their authority. |
Duties and responsibilities of licensees
A real estate license is not just permission to sell houses. It is a legal duty to act with care, competence, and honesty while following brokerage and state rules. Licensees must disclose material facts when required, obey lawful instructions from clients, account for money and documents, and avoid misleading acts in advertising and negotiation.
Advertising is a major exam area because it is easy to test. Ads must be truthful, not misleading, and usually must identify the brokerage in a way that the public can understand. A hidden or “blind” ad is a warning sign on exam questions because the public has a right to know that a real estate professional is behind the message.
Another major duty is the proper handling of trust or escrow funds. When a buyer gives earnest money, that money does not become the broker’s or the seller’s money right away; it must be held and handled in accordance with the law and the agreement. This is where many students must clearly separate commingling from conversion.
| Escrow mistake | Meaning | Why it matters on the PSI exam |
| Commingling | Mixing client funds with personal or business funds. | It is illegal even if the broker does not spend the money. |
| Conversion | Using client funds without authority for personal or business purposes. | It is more serious because it involves unauthorized use or theft. |
| Proper escrow handling | Keeping trust funds in the correct account and following the rules for deposits and disbursements. | This is often the “best answer” when an exam question asks what the broker should do. |
PSI exam tips for escrow questions
- If the facts say money was mixed with office funds, think commingling.
- If the facts say money was spent, borrowed, or used, think conversion
- If an answer choice says to place trust money in a separate escrow or trust account, that is often the correct direction.
- If the scenario sounds casual, remember the exam still expects strict handling of client money.
Offers, counteroffers, and multiple-offer situations
Real estate agents do more than market property. They also move communication between the parties, especially offers and counteroffers. A key rule is that offers should be presented in a timely manner, because delay can harm a client and may violate the licensee’s duty.
A counteroffer does not accept the first offer as written. Instead, it rejects the original offer and proposes new terms, meaning the first offer is no longer open unless renewed. This is a common exam trap because students sometimes treat a counteroffer like a partial acceptance when it is really a new offer.
Multiple-offer situations also often appear on exams because they test ethics and procedure simultaneously. A listing agent should present all offers to the seller as quickly as possible unless the seller has given written instructions to the contrary. The seller decides which offer to accept, reject, or counter, and the agent should not secretly hide an offer just because another one looks better.
PSI exam tips for offer questions
- Present all offers promptly unless lawful written instructions say otherwise.
- A counteroffer ends the original offer and creates a new one.
- The listing agent works for the seller but still owes honesty and fair dealing to buyers.
- In a multiple-offer question, focus on timely presentation and full disclosure to the client, not favoritism.
Confidentiality, honesty, and fair dealing
One of the most important differences on the exam is the difference between duties owed to a client and duties owed to all parties. Confidentiality is a client-level duty, meaning private information obtained through the agency relationship should be protected. Honesty and fair dealing apply more broadly, so a licensee must not lie, hide material facts when disclosure is required, or mislead the other side.
For example, an agent should not tell a buyer that the seller is desperate unless the seller has allowed that disclosure. That information could weaken the seller’s bargaining position and break confidentiality. At the same time, the agent cannot lie about a known material defect or make false statements about the property to push a sale forward.
This area also ties into risk management. Many complaints and lawsuits stem from poor communication, careless statements, and failure to document what was said and when. On the PSI exam, the safer answer is usually the one that protects confidential facts, tells the truth, and avoids promises the licensee cannot support.
Fair housing and discriminatory practices
Fair housing is one of the highest-value topics in practice questions because it connects law, ethics, and day-to-day behavior. The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, and disability. Students should know these seven classes in their exact form for the exam.
The exam also tests illegal conduct tied to those protected classes. Steering means guiding buyers or renters toward or away from certain neighborhoods based on a protected trait. Blockbusting means trying to scare owners into selling by suggesting that people from a protected class are moving into the neighborhood. Redlining means refusing loans, insurance, or services in certain neighborhoods because of the people who live there or are expected to live there.
Discriminatory advertising is another key point. Real estate ads should describe the property, not the type of person the advertiser prefers. Phrases that show preference or limitation based on a protected class can create fair housing problems, even when the advertiser claims there was no harmful intent.
Protected classes and prohibited practices
| Fair housing point | Test-ready meaning |
| Protected classes | Race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, and disability. |
| Steering | Directing people to or away from areas because of protected status. |
| Blockbusting | Encouraging owners to sell by creating fear about neighborhood change tied to a protected class. |
| Redlining | Denying lending, insurance, or service access based on neighborhood demographics. |
| Discriminatory advertising | Ads that show preference, limitation, or discrimination tied to protected status. |
PSI exam tips for fair housing questions
- If the action treats people differently because of a protected class, it is likely illegal under federal fair housing rules.
- If the ad describes the ideal buyer instead of the property, watch for discrimination.
- If an agent says, “You would feel more comfortable in that area,” think steering.
- Memorize all seven protected classes in one group, not as separate facts.
ADA basics for public accommodations
The Americans with Disabilities Act is not the same as the Fair Housing Act, and the exam may test the difference between them. The ADA primarily covers public accommodations and other commercial spaces open to the public, including real estate offices. That means the office should provide basic access and reasonable accommodation for people using its services.
The Fair Housing Act, by contrast, focuses on housing-related discrimination and disability protections in residential settings. A good exam habit is to link the ADA to public-facing business access and the Fair Housing Act to housing discrimination rules.
Antitrust laws in real estate
Antitrust law protects competition. In real estate, these laws help prevent brokers or firms from colluding in ways that harm consumers or impede fair competition. The exam usually focuses on four classic violations: price-fixing, group boycotts, market allocation, and tie-in arrangements.
Price-fixing occurs when competitors agree on commission rates or fees rather than competing independently. Group boycott means competitors agree not to do business with a certain person or company. Market allocation means competitors divide territory, customers, or business types among themselves. A tie-in arrangement occurs when one product or service is required as a condition of obtaining another service.
PSI exam tips for antitrust questions
- If brokers “agree” on rates, fees, or territory, think antitrust violation.
- Independent business decisions are usually legal; agreements among competitors are the danger point.
- The test may use plain language instead of legal terms, so match the facts to the concept.
Risk management and E&O insurance
Risk management means reducing the chance of complaints, lawsuits, and costly mistakes before they happen. One important tool is errors and omissions insurance, often called E&O insurance, which is a form of professional liability coverage for claims arising from negligent acts, mistakes, or inadequate professional services. NAR explains that E&O coverage can help pay legal defense costs and settlements up to policy limits when claims arise from licensed real estate activities.
E&O insurance does not excuse careless conduct. In fact, some of the most common risk areas involve things licensees can control, such as missed disclosures, inaccurate property descriptions, poor recordkeeping, and giving advice outside the scope of the license. Strong office training, written procedures, and careful documentation reduce those risks.[7][5]
A simple way to remember this topic is with the chart below.
flowchart TD
A [real estate activity] –> B{Was the conduct within licensed activities?}
B –>|Yes| C [E&O coverage may help with defense costs and claims]
B –>|No| D [Coverage may not apply]
D –> E [Examples: acting like a lawyer or inspector]
C –> F [Still use disclosure, documentation, and office policies to lower risk.]
The exam may not ask in-depth insurance questions, but it may ask why E&O matters or which activity poses a risk. If the choice involves misrepresentation, missing disclosure forms, or going beyond licensed duties, it points toward a risk management problem.
Unlicensed practice of law vs. allowed licensee activity
Real estate agents work with contracts, but they are not attorneys unless they are separately licensed as attorneys. This is why the line between normal licensee activity and the unauthorized practice of law matters so much. In general, a licensee may use approved standard forms, fill in factual blanks, and explain business terms in a routine transaction.
Problems begin when a licensee starts drafting custom legal language, interpreting legal rights, advising on lawsuits, or handling complex title and legal disputes without an attorney. NAR also warns that E&O protection may not help when an agent steps outside licensed real estate activities and starts “acting like a lawyer.”
PSI exam tips for UPL questions
- Using standard forms is usually allowed if the agent stays within brokerage practice and state rules.
- Giving legal advice is not allowed.
- If the issue turns on legal rights, title defects, or special contract drafting, the best answer is often to refer the client to an attorney.
How to study this PSI section effectively
This unit becomes easier when studied through scenarios, not just by memorization. Many questions are really asking, “What should the licensee do in this situation?” or “Which rule did the licensee break?” That is why it helps to sort questions into categories such as money handling, discrimination, document handling, confidentiality, and competition issues.
Try using these review steps:
- Memorize the seven federal protected classes as one group.
- Drill commingling versus conversion until the difference is automatic.
- Practice identifying whether a statement is a fair housing issue, an antitrust issue, or a confidentiality issue.
- For every contract or dispute question, ask whether the agent is crossing into legal advice.
- For every offer question, ask what must be presented, to whom, and how quickly.
Helpful outside reading
These sources are useful for extra review of the same topics tested in the PSI outline:
- HUD Fair Housing Act overview for the seven protected classes and core federal rules.
- NAR Errors & Omissions Insurance page for risk management basics and why licensed activity matters.
- PrepAgent fair housing article for exam-style explanations of steering and related topics.
- Study.com’s antitrust violations article provides examples of price-fixing, group boycotts, market allocation, and tie-ins.
- Speicher Group commingling guide for a clear explanation of commingling and conversion.
- Edgewater Academy conversion vs. commingling article for direct exam-style contrast.
- NAR risk and compliance discussion on E&O for common claims and professional limits.
- Avenue Legal Group article on unauthorized practice of law for the line between agent help and legal advice.
- Curley Rothman discussion of realtor UPL liability for examples of activities that can cross the line.
Final exam reminders for the practice of Real Estate
This PSI topic rewards students who think like careful professionals. The strongest answer usually protects the client, protects the public, obeys the law, and stays within the limits of a real estate license. When in doubt, separate trust money, present offers promptly, protect confidential facts, avoid discrimination, do not cooperate in antitrust conduct, and refer legal questions to an attorney.
That approach is not only a good test strategy. It is also how strong real estate careers are built in the real world, and again, you’ve got this!
This article is part of our CRES Real Estate License Exam Prep Series. For more PSI outline topics, visit our course library


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