Course 2: Residential Transactions

$48.99 + HST · one-time · 60-day window you activate

Start Studying

Course 2 Real Estate Exam Prep: Residential Real Estate Transactions

The Challenge

Course 2 is the biggest course in the program, and its exam is where the material stops being background knowledge and becomes the job. Representation, disclosure, and the path of a real residential transaction all land at once, and the exam tests them the way they happen in practice: tangled together inside a scenario, with more than one answer that sounds reasonable. Students who breezed through Course 1 often hit their first real wall here, not because they did not study, but because they studied for recall and the exam asks for judgment.

What the Course 2 Exam Tests

Course 2 covers the residential transaction from first contact to closing: agency and representation under TRESA, including who is a client and who is a self-represented party and what each is owed; the RECO Information Guide and when it must be provided; designated and multiple representation and the disclosure and consent they require; seller services from pre-listing through the listing agreement, showings, offers, and what follows an accepted offer; buyer services and buyer representation agreements; and the professional obligations that run through all of it.

The exam's favourite move is to vary the relationship: the same facts with a client produce a different right answer than with a self-represented party. If you cannot identify who you represent and what that means in seconds, the options will look interchangeable.

Where Students Lose Marks

Three patterns dominate. First, mixing up the duties owed to clients versus self-represented parties, especially in friendly open-house and showing scenarios where being helpful crosses a line. Second, missing the moment a situation becomes multiple representation and what must happen before anyone proceeds. Third, getting the sequence wrong: a correct action taken at the wrong point in the transaction is a wrong answer, and Course 2 tests sequence constantly.

How ExamPass Prepares You

This prep is written by a working Ontario real estate broker and educator who teaches exactly these relationships and watches where candidates hesitate. Every question is an original practice question built from public Ontario law and published learning outcomes, with a clear explanation for every answer choice that names the misconception behind each wrong option, including the helpful-but-non-compliant trap Course 2 loves. The AI Tutor is there for the moments a representation scenario will not untangle: ask it why an option is wrong or how a duty applies, right on the question.

Study Readings

Before you drill the questions, the Study layer gives you concise, plain-language readings for each topic, the kind of notes that get straight to the point so you understand the concept before you practice it. They are written from the public law and the published learning outcomes, distilled by someone who has been through the program, never copied or condensed from any provider's course materials.

What Is Included

Study readings for every topic, 1,400+ original Practice Questions for the Course 2 theory exam with a full explanation for every answer choice, a timed Mock Exam in the real format, Drill Wrong Answers, Progress, a Notebook, and the AI Tutor.

Built for Students at Every Approved Provider

ExamPass is written to the standardized, Meazure-administered exams and the public law behind them, not to any one school's materials. It works whether you are studying through Humber Polytechnic, Career College Group, Fleming College, or Algonquin College. Provider names identify the program only; ExamPass is independent and not affiliated with or endorsed by any provider, RECO, or Meazure Learning.

Keep Reading


ExamPass is an independent study aid. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by RECO, Meazure Learning, Humber Polytechnic, Career College Group, Fleming College, Algonquin College, or any other education provider. Provider and exam names are used only to identify the courses students are preparing for.