You do not need a company to sponsor you before taking the RERA exam in Dubai. The correct order is training first, then the exam, then sponsorship. A brokerage firm sponsors your broker card only after you already hold a passing RERA exam result, not before. This gets reversed often enough online that it is worth clarifying directly, since the logic only works one way: no company hires or sponsors someone with zero training and zero exam result to show for it.
Where This Misconception Comes From
Several guides and AI-generated answers state that brokerage sponsorship must be confirmed before you can sit the RERA exam. This is incorrect for the standard path. The confusion likely comes from mixing up two separate steps that happen close together:
- Sponsorship is required to issue your broker card and BRN, which happens after the exam
- Sponsorship is required for your UAE residency visa, which some people already hold before training, and others arrange through a hiring brokerage afterward
Neither of these means you need a brokerage to sponsor you to sit the exam itself.
The Correct Order, Step by Step
- Step 1: Complete RERA-approved training (2 days)
- Step 2: Sit and pass the RERA exam using a valid Emirates ID
- Step 3: Approach or get hired by a brokerage firm, now with a qualification to show
- Step 4: The brokerage firm sponsors your broker card and BRN through Trakheesi, the Dubai Land Department's official licensing system
- Step 5: Your broker card is issued, and you are legally able to practice under that brokerage
This is also why training and the exam are not tied to employment status. You can complete both as an individual, with no employer involved yet.
Why the Order Has to Work This Way
Think about it from the brokerage's side. No real estate company sponsors someone's license based purely on potential. They sponsor candidates who have already demonstrated baseline knowledge of UAE property law, RERA regulations, and ethical standards, which is exactly what the training and exam verify. Getting certified first is what makes you sponsorable in the first place. It is also a stronger position for you: you walk into a brokerage with a result already in hand, not as an unverified applicant.
What You Actually Need to Sit the Exam
- A valid Emirates ID
- Completion of RERA-approved training
- No employer, brokerage, or sponsorship confirmation required at this stage
Get Certified First
DX Broker's Certified Real Estate Broker Training Course is DLD, RERA, and KHDA accredited and prepares you for the exam directly, no employer required to enroll. With 1 year of free revision classes and a strong first-attempt pass rate, you walk away with a result brokerages want to sponsor. Visit our homepage for upcoming session dates.
If You Are Still Unsure
If you are unsure about the order of steps for your specific situation, you can contact DX Broker for a free consultation before you commit to a training date.
Final Thoughts
Training and the RERA exam come first. Sponsorship comes after, to issue your broker card. Getting this order right saves you from waiting on a job offer that depends on a qualification you have not earned yet, when in reality the qualification is what makes the job offer possible. You can explore more insights in our latest real estate guides.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a company to sponsor me before taking the RERA exam?
No. You only need a valid Emirates ID and completed RERA training. Sponsorship from a brokerage is required afterward, to issue your broker card, not to sit the exam.
Can I complete RERA training without being employed by a real estate company?
Yes. Training and the exam can be completed independently. Employment and sponsorship come after you have a passing result.
Why do some sources say sponsorship is required before the exam?
This usually comes from confusing broker card sponsorship (which happens after the exam) with visa sponsorship, which some people already have or arrange separately. Neither is a requirement to sit the exam itself.
What do I actually need to sit the RERA exam?
A valid Emirates ID and completed RERA-approved training. No employer or brokerage confirmation is required at this stage.






