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Real Estate Math for Texas

Master real estate math concepts for the TX real estate exam.138+ practice questions with detailed explanations and Texas-specific content.

138+Questions
12%of Exam
11Sub-topics
Real Estate Math β€” Study Card
Real Estate Math study card infographic showing key concepts, exam weight (12%), and memory aids for the Texas real estate exam
AI-generated study card for Real Estate Math. Covers 12% of the real estate exam.

What You'll Learn

Key real estate math concepts for the Texas real estate exam

Commission and fee calculations
Loan calculations (interest, points, payments)
Prorations and closing costs
Area and property measurements
Exam Coverage
How Real Estate Math appears on the TX exam
Exam Weight12%

Calculations for commission, prorations, area, and financing. This topic is essential for both the national and Texas-specific portions of the exam.

Study Tips
How to master Math efficiently
  • Master the T-bar method for proportion problems (total on top, parts on bottom)
  • Commission = Sale Price Γ— Rate; Cap Rate = NOI Γ· Value; GRM = Price Γ· Gross Rent
  • Prorations: Seller pays through closing day; interest paid in arrears, taxes in advance
  • Always check if the question asks for monthly or annual figures before calculating

Real Estate Math: In-Depth Guide for Texas

Real Estate Math is one of the highest-weighted exam topics and the one that causes the most anxiety for test-takers. The good news is that most real estate math uses basic arithmetic with a handful of standard formulas β€” no advanced mathematics required.

The most important formulas to memorize are: Commission = Sale Price Γ— Rate, Cap Rate = NOI Γ· Value (or Value = NOI Γ· Cap Rate), GRM = Price Γ· Annual Gross Rent, LTV = Loan Amount Γ· Appraised Value, and Property Tax = Assessed Value Γ— Tax Rate. The T-bar method (also called the "magic T") is your best friend for solving proportion problems β€” put the total on top and the two parts that multiply to equal it on the bottom.

Prorations at closing are frequently tested and require careful attention to dates and the direction of charges. Remember that the seller is responsible for costs through the day of closing and the buyer from the day after. Interest on mortgage loans is paid in arrears (for the previous month), while property taxes and HOA dues are typically paid in advance. Practice converting between annual, monthly, and daily amounts, and always double-check whether a question asks for monthly or annual figures.

For Texas-specific regulations, consult the Texas exam prep guide and practice with our Real Estate Math practice questions.

How Texas Tests Math

The Texas real estate exam allocates approximately 12% of questions to Real Estate Math. That means roughly 15 out of 125 questions on the salesperson exam will cover this topic. The TREC requires candidates to demonstrate competency in both national math principles and TX-specific regulations.

Texas exam questions on real estate math are typically scenario-based, requiring you to apply concepts to realistic situations rather than simply recall definitions. Focus your study on understanding how math rules work in practice, not just what they are.

Recent Texas Regulatory Updates

  • SB 1968 β€” Buyer Representation Agreement Law β€” Senate Bill 1968 takes effect January 1, 2026, codifying buyer representation requirements into Texas law. Agents must have written agreements before substantive property discussions.
  • TREC Legal Update Courses Revised β€” TREC revised the mandatory Legal Update I and II courses to include NAR settlement changes, SB 1968 requirements, and updated IABS disclosure rules.
View all Texas law updates β†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Real Estate Math typically makes up 8-12% of the Texas real estate exam. You can expect approximately 10-18 questions on this topic, covering both national and Texas-specific concepts.

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138+ questions covering this topic across all states.

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