Maine Real Estate CE Courses (2026)

To renew your Real Estate license in Maine you need to satisfy the Maine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation)'s continuing education (CE) requirement — about 21 hours per 2-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 Maine requires for Real Estate renewal

CE hours required21 hours per cycle
Renewal cycle24 months
Governing bodyMaine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation)

Active licensees (associate brokers, brokers, designated brokers) must complete 21 clock hours of Commission-approved continuing education per 2-year renewal cycle, which must include the mandatory 3-hour core course designated current at the time of renewal (effective April 1, 2025 this is the "Reasonable Care and Diligence Core Course"; the core course topic changes each cycle). The 21-hour CE requirement applies to the renewable broker-tier licenses; the non-renewable Sales Agent license has no ongoing CE renewal because it cannot be renewed (the agent must instead complete the Associate Broker pre-licensing course to upgrade). The Commission stopped maintaining CE records as of January 1, 2002; licensees must retain their own certificates for four years (current and prior renewal terms) in case of audit, and must attest CE completion before submitting renewal.

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

Maine 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 Maine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation) before purchasing.

Maine Real Estate CE courses: frequently asked questions

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

Maine requires about 21 continuing-education hours per renewal cycle. Active licensees (associate brokers, brokers, designated brokers) must complete 21 clock hours of Commission-approved continuing education per 2-year renewal cycle, which must include the mandatory 3-hour core course designated current at the time of renewal (effective April 1, 2025 this is the "Reasonable Care and Diligence Core Course"; the core course topic changes each cycle). The 21-hour CE requirement applies to the renewable broker-tier licenses; the non-renewable Sales Agent license has no ongoing CE renewal because it cannot be renewed (the agent must instead complete the Associate Broker pre-licensing course to upgrade). The Commission stopped maintaining CE records as of January 1, 2002; licensees must retain their own certificates for four years (current and prior renewal terms) in case of audit, and must attest CE completion before submitting renewal.

Do online Real Estate CE courses count in Maine?

Online courses generally count when the provider is approved by or recognized by the Maine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation). Always confirm a course is accepted before you buy it.

Where do I report my Maine Real Estate CE?

Maine generally has you attest to CE at renewal and keep your own documentation in case of an audit. Confirm the current process with the Maine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation).

Requirement last verified 2026-06-01 from the Maine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation). Always confirm current rules with the board before relying on this.

Official Maine Real Estate Commission (Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Department of Professional and Financial Regulation) site →