RECO C3 Quick Reference
Compact RECO Course 3: Additional Residential Real Estate Transactions (Real Estate Council of Ontario) quick reference for key terms, formulas, checks, and practice decisions.
Quick reference scope
Use this page as a compact reference while practising RECO C3. It is not official RECO material. It is a short checklist for special fact, disclosure, document status, amendment, condition, client instruction, and broker escalation.
RECO means Real Estate Council of Ontario. This page is for Ontario Real Estate Course 3: Additional Residential Real Estate Transactions.
Core decision filter
| Step | Ask |
|---|---|
| Identify | What exact topic, role, document, product, property, or transaction is being tested? |
| Classify | Is this a rule, calculation, suitability, disclosure, coverage, conduct, process, or timing question? |
| Apply | Which fact in the stem changes the answer? |
| Defend | Can I explain why the best answer is stronger than the distractor? |
Topic reference
| Topic | Quick check |
|---|---|
| Condominium Residential Transactions and Condo Due Diligence | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| New Construction, Builder Sales, Pre-Construction, and Warranty Awareness | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Rural Properties, Land, Services, Environmental Concerns, and Specialized Due Diligence | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Multi-Unit Residential Dwellings, Income Property, and Tenant-Occupied Transactions | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Residential Leasing, Lease Documentation, and Integrated Specialized Residential Compliance | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
Before a timed set
- Review the last five missed explanations.
- Check the official route if you are unsure which exam or course applies.
- Start with a focused drill if one topic is still weak.
- Use timed mixed practice after topic mistakes become less frequent.