Do I need a real estate license to be a TC?
In most states, no. Transaction coordinators who perform administrative and clerical work do not need a license. California has stricter guidelines — the Starter Kit includes a state-by-state breakdown so you know exactly what applies to you.
How fast can I start making money?
Most people who work the process consistently land their first client within 30–90 days. Your first file could come faster if you already know people in real estate. This is a real business — it takes real work to build, but the timeline is much shorter than most side hustles.
What's the difference between the three kits?
The Starter Kit ($17) is your foundation — it explains what a TC is, whether you need a license, and gives you the 72-task checklist and 64-term glossary to understand the business before committing. The Process Guide ($27) walks you through a complete real transaction day by day, with communication templates and crisis scenarios so you can see exactly how a deal runs. The Full Guide ($47) is the business-launch kit — LLC setup, E&O insurance, pricing, 5 client acquisition scripts, a 30-day launch roadmap, and a complete launch checklist. Buy all three together for $91 and have everything from understanding the concept to landing your first client.
Is this a course or a PDF?
Both kits are delivered as polished, interactive PDF guides — designed to be read, referenced, and used repeatedly. Not a video course. Not a membership. Just the files you need, yours to keep forever.
What if I have no real estate experience at all?
That's exactly who these kits are built for. The File Girl guides assume zero background and build your understanding from the ground up — what the documents mean, what the deadlines are, and how the whole process works.