What would cause my MN real estate salesperson license to go inactive?
Your real estate license will go inactive if you fail to complete the continuing education requirements before the June 30th deadline. If you end your association with a licensed broker, your license will also become inactive. If your associated broker’s license goes inactive, yours, by default, also will become inactive. Licenses can also be inactivated as part of an enforcement action, or it can be suspended for outstanding tax or child support obligations.
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During the two years your license is active, you must complete at least 30 hours of continuing education. 15 of those hours must be in the year before your renewal. You must also take one hour of anti-discrimination laws training and one hour on laws or regulations concerning agency representation.
Your Minnesota real estate broker will submit your renewal application on your behalf. The renewal fee for a salesperson license totals $70. The Department of Commerce will notify your broker when the renewal application is approved.
The fee for renewal is $70. The fee breakdown is $40 for the renewal, $20 for the real estate education, research, and recovery fun, and a $30 technology surcharge.
Your license is expired if not renewed by the due date. If you do not renew your salesperson license within two years of your license expiration, your license will be canceled.
Ask your broker about missing requirements. You must meet these requirements before applying to reactivate your license. You’ll need to pay the $70 renewal fee plus a $20 reactivation fee. This must be done before two years lapse, or you will need to begin the Minnesota salesperson licensing process again.
Your real estate license can become inactive for failing to complete continuing education, ending your association with a licensed broker, for outstanding tax or child support obligations, an enforcement action, or if your associated broker’s license becomes inactive.
Ask your new Minnesota licensed real estate broker to apply for a transfer of license. You can transfer your license as long as your renewal deadline has not passed.
Your Minnesota real estate salesperson license is good for two years. You must stay associated with an actively licensed Minnesota real estate broker and meet the continuing education requirements.