OhioBothBefore listing

Ohio Real Estate Forms & Disclosures

⏱ Estimated time: Varies by document

Ohio has its own state-specific real estate forms, disclosures, and consumer resources, published by the Ohio Division of Real Estate and Professional Licensing. The link below takes you straight to the official state authority — your one-stop source for Ohio real estate paperwork.

📥 Get the official blank form

The official form is published by Ohio Division of Real Estate and Professional Licensing. Always download from the source — never trust a third-party copy.

Open official source ↗

What you'll find at your state commission

The Ohio Division of Real Estate and Professional Licensing is the official state authority for real estate transactions in Ohio. Their website typically includes:

• The state-required Seller's Property Disclosure form

• The standard Residential Purchase Agreement (in many states)

• Consumer guides for buying and selling without an agent

• Information about state-specific disclosure requirements that vary by state — radon, lead, well, septic, mineral rights, flood zone, methamphetamine history, and more

• Licensing lookups if you want to verify a real estate professional

Pair this with our concept guides

For deeper plain-English explanations of what each document does and what to watch out for, see our concept guides — they cover seller disclosures, purchase agreements, title insurance, home inspections, and deed types in a way that applies to every state. Use those for the 'why,' then come back here for the 'where.'

⚠️ Things to watch out for

Commonly-reported issues people run into with this document. Always verify the specifics with your state's official source or a licensed professional.

  • Using a generic out-of-state form when your state has its own. State forms exist for a reason — your state has specific required disclosures and rights baked in.
  • Downloading forms from random third-party sites instead of the official state commission. Always go to the source.
  • Skipping state-specific disclosures (well, septic, radon, mineral rights, etc.) that aren't obvious from the main seller disclosure form. Your state commission lists them all.

Last reviewed: 2026-04-09 · Auto-generated from state real estate commission directory

This entry is informational only — not legal advice. Frula Homes is an informational platform. We point you to official sources; we don't prepare, review, or interpret legal documents, and we're not your attorney or real estate agent. For legal questions specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state.