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15-Hr. NH CE Package

$159
This product includes:
LICENSE RENEWAL PERIOD: 2 YEARS Elective Hours: 12 Mandatory Hours: 3 Total Hours: 15
Description
Package content and courses
State Requirements

This package includes all 15 hours required for active license renewals.

Courses included in this package:

  • New Hampshire Core Course (3 core hours)
  • Lead Awareness and Compliance (3 elective hours)
  • Personal Safety (3 elective hours)
  • Section 1031 Tax-Deferred Exchanges (3 elective hours)
  • Wholesaling in Today’s Market (3 elective hours)

Package Content:
New Hampshire Core Course

When you first earned your real estate license, you undoubtedly spent many hours learning the laws and rules pertaining to real estate practice in New Hampshire. Do you remember everything that you learned? Probably not—you're human, after all. For this reason, and because the laws and rules that apply to the real estate industry are constantly changing, New Hampshire requires that licensees complete a three-hour Core course every two years. The New Hampshire Core Course fulfills this requirement.

This course provides a refresher on the must-know rules applying to real estate professionals. It also highlights recent changes to the state's license law and key rulings by the New Hampshire Real Estate Commission. 

Course highlights include:

  • A detailed look at agency relationships
  • Required disclosures by licensees, sellers, and landlords 
  • Recent rulings by the New Hampshire Real Estate Commission
  • Procedures that must be followed when handling client funds
  • Federal and state fair housing laws and prohibitions
  • How to stay safe while conducting showings
  • Activities and scenarios to reinforce key concepts

Lead Awareness and Compliance

Lead hazards aren’t just a concern for homeowners—they’re also a big deal for real estate professionals. If you're listing a home built before 1978 or guiding buyers through disclosures, understanding the risks of lead exposure isn’t just helpful—it’s essential. Federal laws require specific disclosures and safety measures and skipping them can lead to hefty fines and legal trouble.

This course helps you recognize where lead hazards lurk, stay on top of your legal responsibilities, and follow safe practices help protect you, your clients, and your transactions. But beyond compliance, having a strong grasp of lead safety makes you a trusted advisor. When clients see that you take their health and safety seriously, it strengthens your reputation and sets you apart as a knowledgeable, reliable real estate professional. Ultimately, keeping people safe, reducing risk, and staying compliant aren’t just obligations—they’re smart business moves supporting long-term success.

Course highlights include:

  • Common sources of lead in residential properties
  • Health risks of lead exposure
  • Community-based approaches to lead hazard prevention
  • Review of federal lead disclosure laws
  • Compliance with lead disclosure laws
  • Consequences of non-compliance with disclosure requirements
  • Mitigating lead hazards
  • Lead-safe work practices for renovations and repairs
  • EPA’s Renovation, Repair, and Painting Program
  • Preventing lead hazards long-term

Personal Safety

Attacks on real estate professionals have made headlines at an alarmingly more frequent rate in recent years. After an incident where a licensee is harmed, everyone vows to do better, and the topic of safety is pushed to the front of training schedules. Then complacency sets in.

Criminals count on complacency.

This course reviews studies and statistics of safety issues in the real estate industry, and best practices for personal safety.       

Course highlights include:

  • Crime statistics and studies that challenge preconceived notions
  • Risk factors and vulnerabilities that unique to real estate professionals
  • Case studies to illustrate how criminals target their victims
  • How to develop a personal warning system and trust your instincts when something feels “off”
  • Activities and scenarios to provide real-world context for course content

Section 1031 Tax-Deferred Exchanges

Chances are good that, if it hasn't happened yet, you will one day work on a transaction involves a property that’s part of a tax-deferred exchange. When this happens, will you be ready to guide your client through the process and ensure they meet the critical deadlines?

With an appropriately formed exchange, an investor can defer paying taxes on the profit from one investment and instead use all of the profits to fund another investment. 

This course helps licensees become more comfortable with guiding clients through a 1031 tax-deferred exchange transaction and ensuring critical deadlines are understood and met.  

Course highlights include:

  • Section 1031 tax-deferred exchange definitions
  • Starker’s Exchange background and application
  • U.S. Internal Revenue Code requirements
  • IRS Safe Harbor Guidelines
  • Investor taxes advantages
  • Setting up an exchange
  • Selecting a Qualified Intermediary
  • Licensee role in a Section 1031 tax-deferred exchange
  • The non-exchanger's role in a Section 1031 transaction
  • Reverse exchanges
  • Rare exemptions to exchange deadlines

Wholesaling in Today's Market

Real estate wholesaling is not a new concept. However, the practice, regulation, and public perception of wholesaling have changed significantly in recent years. For real estate professionals navigating a market where wholesaling is becoming more popular and increasingly problematic, understanding its legal, ethical, and professional implications is more important than ever.

This three-hour course provides a straightforward examination of wholesaling: how it operates, when it crosses legal and ethical boundaries, and why it faces greater scrutiny from lawmakers and the public. You’ll examine how some investors use wholesaling as a legitimate and transparent strategy to build wealth, while others exploit it to bypass licensing requirements, mislead sellers and buyers, and disrupt housing stability, particularly in vulnerable communities.

Whether you are new to wholesaling, advising clients involved, or simply looking to avoid legal issues, this course is designed for you.

Course highlights include:

  • Foundational principles of wholesaling
  • Strategic uses of wholesaling
  • State laws and licensing implications of wholesaling
  • Red flags to indicate predatory wholesaling practices
  • When wholesaling becomes illegal
  • Ethical wholesaling
  • Collateral damage of wholesaling
  • Legal and civil penalties
  • Effects of predatory wholesaling on housing market
  • Real-world cases, interactive scenarios, and activities to understand wholesaling in your real estate practice

State Requirements For New Hampshire

New Hampshire State Requirement Details for Real Estate Continuing Education

Renewal Date: Every 2 years by license anniversary

Hours Required: 15 hours

  • 3 hours – Core
  • 12 hours – Elective hours

The CE Shop’s Offering: 15 hours

  • 3 hours – Core
  • 12 hours – Elective hours

Reporting: The state requires course completions to be reported to the state. We will report your course to the state upon completion.

Expiration Date of Course: Course expiration dates vary by course. Each individual course will have an expiration date listed in your account. See Terms & Conditions for more details.

Certificates: Immediately upon course completions, The CE Shop will provide students with an electronic copy of the course certificate of completion. Certificates will remain in your account for a minimum of five years, should you need additional copies at a later time. Please refer to your application to determine if you need to submit your certificate(s) of completion. Course completion dates are recorded using Central Standard Time. Please note that the date on your certificate of completion will reflect this.

Final Exams: Final exams must be passed with a minimum of 80% for core courses and 70% for electives. Final exams may be taken as many times as necessary to pass.

Seat Time: It is required that all students spend a minimum amount of seat time engaged in the course content. Our online course delivery system manages this requirement for you.

Post-Licensing: New salesperson licensees must complete 12 hours of approved post-licensing courses during their first renewal cycle in addition to the core course. These courses are not currently offered by The CE Shop.

License Renewal Process: The process to renew in this state is to log in to the licensing system online and follow the prompts to renew.

Please enter your individual license number correctly and fully when prompted in the registration process.

Still have questions? Visit our Frequently Asked Questions or Contact Us.

New Hampshire Real Estate Commission

Street Address: 7 Eagle Square, Concord, NH 03301

Telephone: 603.271.2152

License Renewal Website

License Lookup Website

Contact NHREC

Contact NHREC via Email