RECO C4 Quick Reference
Compact RECO Course 4: Commercial 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 C4. It is not official RECO material. It is a short checklist for property use, lease term, income fact, due diligence, zoning, environmental risk, financing, and document status.
RECO means Real Estate Council of Ontario. This page is for Ontario Real Estate Course 4: Commercial 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 |
|---|---|
| Commercial Representation, Client Services, Due Diligence, and Regulatory Duties | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Commercial Property Types, Construction, Site Factors, and Property-Use Due Diligence | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Commercial Listing, Marketing, Pricing, Valuation, and Financial Evidence | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Commercial Purchase and Sale Agreements, Conditions, Land Development, and Farm Transactions | State the decision rule, then test it with one short practice set. |
| Commercial Leasing, Business Sale Brokerage, and Integrated Commercial 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.