EstatePass
Real Estate Career/Connecticut
2026 Guide

Real Estate Career in Connecticut

The Connecticut real estate career path: median income $62,000, licensing through Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection, and the realistic timeline from zero to first commission. Built for 2026 entrants and career changers.

Median salary
$62,000
Connecticut average
Top 10% earn
$155,000+
High performers
Exam format
150 Qs
70% to pass
Exam fee
$65
Per attempt
Connecticut income

Real estate income in Connecticut

Year 1 income is typically half the median while you build a pipeline. By year 3, most successful agents are at or above the state median.

Year 1 typical
$31,000

Most new Connecticut agents close 2–4 transactions in year one.

Year 3 typical
$86,800

Pipeline + referrals support steady monthly closings.

Top 10%
$155,000+

Specialists, team leads, luxury and commercial agents.

Connecticut licensing

Becoming licensed in Connecticut

Connecticut licensing is administered by Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection (DCP). Below are the requirements; full step-by-step instructions are on the Connecticut licensing guide.

Salesperson license requirements

  • 18 years of age or older
  • Complete required pre-license education
  • Pass background check
  • Pass state exam
Exam questions
150
Time limit
195 min
Passing score
70%
Long view

Connecticut real estate career path

The same 4-stage path applies in every state, but Connecticut has its own broker license requirement (Hold active salesperson license) before you can advance to broker-level roles.

Year 1–2
Salesperson
$31,000–$52,700
Year 3–5
Experienced Agent
$74,400–$124,000
Year 5–10
Team Lead / Broker
$111,600–$217,000
Year 10+
Brokerage Owner
$155,000+
Compare

Real estate careers in nearby states

Frequently asked questions

Is real estate a good career in Connecticut?

Connecticut agents earn a median of $62,000/year, with top performers earning $155,000+. The career-change-friendly licensing path (no degree required, license obtainable in 2–6 months) makes Connecticut a viable option for most career stages. Top brokerages cluster in the major metro areas; rural agents typically focus on land and primary residential.

How long does it take to start a real estate career in Connecticut?

Most Connecticut candidates go from zero to licensed in 2–6 months. Pre-license education varies by state requirement; the licensing exam through Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection is 150 questions with a 70% pass requirement. The first commission typically arrives 60–180 days after activation.

What does a Connecticut real estate agent earn first year?

First-year Connecticut agents typically earn $31,000–$43,400. Income tracks transaction volume; agents who close 2–4 deals in year one are at the lower end, while agents who close 6–10 reach the upper end. Year 2 income often doubles year 1 as the referral pipeline compounds.

Do I need a college degree for a real estate career in Connecticut?

No. Connecticut only requires that you be at least 18 years old, complete the state-required pre-license education, pass the DCP exam, and pass a background check. No college degree is required.

Try the Connecticut practice exam

Before paying for a course, take 30 free questions to gauge your fit with the DCP licensing material.