Survey Results on Study Hours for Land and House Investigator Exam: "Most Successful Candidates Studied 800 to Less Than 1,000 Hours"
Agaroot Academy conducted a survey on study hours for successful Land and House Investigator exam candidates. The most common study duration among successful candidates was between 800 and less than 1,000 hours, highlighting the passing trends among users of their courses.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 9, 2026 at 00:00
- 🔍 Collected: April 8, 2026 at 15:30
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 20, 2026 at 16:32 (289h 1m after Collected)
Agaroot Co., Ltd. (Headquarters: Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo; Representative Director: Hokuto Iwasaki; hereinafter "Agaroot"), through its "Agaroot Academy," conducted a survey on study hours for users who passed the Land and House Investigator exam using Agaroot's courses.
## Overview of the Survey on Successful Land and House Investigator Exam Candidates
Survey Period: February 13, 2026 – March 22, 2026
Survey Institution: In-house survey
Survey Method: Questionnaire survey within Agaroot Academy
Survey Target: Users who passed the Reiwa 7 Land and House Investigator exam using Agaroot's courses
Valid Responses: (*)150
Survey Area: Japan
*Conducted only for a portion of respondents who consented to the survey.
### Attributes of Survey Respondents
(Table content follows, similar to Japanese structure)
(The original text ends here, so the translation also ends here.)
## Overview of the Survey on Successful Land and House Investigator Exam Candidates
Survey Period: February 13, 2026 – March 22, 2026
Survey Institution: In-house survey
Survey Method: Questionnaire survey within Agaroot Academy
Survey Target: Users who passed the Reiwa 7 Land and House Investigator exam using Agaroot's courses
Valid Responses: (*)150
Survey Area: Japan
*Conducted only for a portion of respondents who consented to the survey.
### Attributes of Survey Respondents
(Table content follows, similar to Japanese structure)
(The original text ends here, so the translation also ends here.)