Colorado Real Estate CE Courses (2026)

To renew your Real Estate license in Colorado you need to satisfy the Colorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA)'s continuing education (CE) requirement — about 24 hours per 3-year cycle. Below is what the board requires and a comparison of course providers that offer qualifying CE. This is an unofficial guide — confirm any course is board-approved before you buy.

What Colorado requires for Real Estate renewal

CE hours required24 hours per cycle
Renewal cycle36 months
Governing bodyColorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA)

Active brokers must complete 24 hours of continuing education each three-year license cycle. Of these, 12 hours must consist of three different annual versions of the four-hour Annual Commission Update (ACU) course (the ACU covers recent regulatory changes, statutes, and Commission rules/practice issues); the remaining 12 hours may be any Commission-approved elective credit. Proof of completion must be retained at least four years. First-renewal/initial-period rule differs: a newly issued broker license expires December 31 of the year it was issued, and during that initial licensure period the broker has no CE obligation; the three-year cycle and 24-hour requirement begin afterward. If a license has been inactive longer than three years, reactivation requires either passing the state portion of the Colorado Broker's Exam or completing 72 hours (48 hours Colorado Contracts & Regulations plus 24 hours Real Estate Closings).

Full Real Estate renewal guide for Colorado (deadlines, fees & CE) →

Colorado Real Estate CE course providers

Heads-up: These are independent, third-party CE providers — we are not affiliated with them and don't guarantee approval. Always confirm a course is accepted by the Colorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) before purchasing.

Colorado Real Estate CE courses: frequently asked questions

How many CE hours do I need to renew my Real Estate license in Colorado?

Colorado requires about 24 continuing-education hours per renewal cycle. Active brokers must complete 24 hours of continuing education each three-year license cycle. Of these, 12 hours must consist of three different annual versions of the four-hour Annual Commission Update (ACU) course (the ACU covers recent regulatory changes, statutes, and Commission rules/practice issues); the remaining 12 hours may be any Commission-approved elective credit. Proof of completion must be retained at least four years. First-renewal/initial-period rule differs: a newly issued broker license expires December 31 of the year it was issued, and during that initial licensure period the broker has no CE obligation; the three-year cycle and 24-hour requirement begin afterward. If a license has been inactive longer than three years, reactivation requires either passing the state portion of the Colorado Broker's Exam or completing 72 hours (48 hours Colorado Contracts & Regulations plus 24 hours Real Estate Closings).

Do online Real Estate CE courses count in Colorado?

Online courses generally count when the provider is approved by or recognized by the Colorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA). Always confirm a course is accepted before you buy it.

Where do I report my Colorado Real Estate CE?

Colorado generally has you attest to CE at renewal and keep your own documentation in case of an audit. Confirm the current process with the Colorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA).

Requirement last verified 2026-06-01 from the Colorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA). Always confirm current rules with the board before relying on this.

Official Colorado Division of Real Estate (Colorado Real Estate Commission), within the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) site →