Can You Work Full Time While Taking Real Estate Classes in Delaware?

If you’re thinking about getting your real estate license, there’s a good chance you’re also asking this question: Can I actually do this while working full time?

For most people, the answer is yes. But it depends less on how busy you are and more on how your course is structured and how you manage your time.

Many students are balancing jobs, families and other responsibilities while completing the required 99 hour pre-licensing course.

Here’s what that actually looks like.

Two circles, overlapping. One circle says Work, one says Life. The overlap says Balance.

Can you work full time while taking real estate classes in Delaware?

Who This Works For

Working full time while taking real estate classes is realistic for many people, especially those who are:

  • Used to managing a schedule

  • Willing to commit a few evenings each week

  • Looking for a clear path into a new career

  • Ready to stay consistent over several weeks

Most students are not stepping away from their current job to pursue real estate or at least not right away. They are building toward something new while maintaining their current responsibilities.

If you’ve ever taken a class, certification, or training while working, this process will feel familiar. For the full step by step on licensing visit our How to Become a Delaware Real Estate Agent guide.

What a Real Schedule Looks Like

In Delaware, the 99 hour pre-licensing course is typically structured to support working adults.

Most instructor led programs follow a schedule like:

  • 3 days per week

  • 3 or 4 hour class sessions

  • Evening time slots

This type of structure allows you to:

  • Keep your daytime work schedule intact

  • Build a routine around learning

  • Stay on track week after week

In addition to attending class, most students spend a few extra hours each week:

  • Reviewing notes

  • Studying key concepts

  • Preparing for exams

It is a consistent, manageable commitment over time.

It is a consistent, manageable commitment over time.

Why Structure Matters for Adult Learners

When you are working full time, your time is already spoken for. The last thing you need is a system that requires you to figure everything out on your own.

Structured programs help because they:

  • Tell you exactly when to show up

  • Break the material into manageable pieces

  • Keep you moving forward without overthinking

  • Provide accountability

Without structure, it’s easy to fall behind. With structure, it becomes part of your weekly routine.

Common Challenges (and How to Handle Them)

Even though this is doable, it’s still a commitment. Most students experience a few common challenges along the way.

1. Feeling tired after work

Solution: Treat class like an appointment, not an option. Once it becomes part of your routine, it feels less like an extra task.

2. Staying consistent

Solution: Consistency matters more than intensity. You don’t need to study for hours every night. You just need to keep showing up.

3. Balancing responsibilities

Solution: Look at your schedule ahead of time. Block out class time and protect it. Let family or coworkers know what you’re working toward.

What Successful Students Do Differently

The students who complete the course while working full time usually do a few things well:

  • They commit to a schedule

  • They treat class time as non-negotiable

  • They stay engaged and present during lessons

  • They ask questions when they don’t understand something

They don’t try to do everything perfectly. They focus on progress.

They don’t try to do everything perfectly. They focus on progress.

What Happens After the Course

Once you complete the 99-hour course, you’re eligible to take the Delaware real estate licensing exam. For more details on the post graduation process check out our full guide on How to Become a Real Estate Agent in Delaware.

At that point, many students:

  • Schedule their exam within a week or two

  • Begin conversations with brokerages

  • Continue working while transitioning into real estate

This means you can go from:
working full time → getting licensed → starting a real estate career
without needing to pause your income.

Is This the Right Time for You?

If you’ve been thinking about real estate for a while, the bigger question may not be can you do it, but when will you start.

The process is structured. The timeline is manageable. And thousands of agents have started exactly where you are now.

The key is choosing a format that fits your life and committing to it.

About the Author

Danielle Smith is a Delaware native and the Owner of Central Delaware Real Estate Academy. She started her real estate journey in 2007 with a local brokerage where she continues to serve today. As a local real estate leader, she helps professionals build profitable businesses through the right relationships, clear strategies, and proven systems.

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