Watch First: Quick Walkthrough
Kick off with this short video for the big picture. Then use the step-by-step plan below with direct links to the Tennessee Business & Law collection so your materials are always one click away.
What The Tennessee Business & Law Exam Covers
This open-book exam checks your ability to run the business side of construction. Expect questions on organization and licensing, estimating and bidding, contracts and lien rights, job costing and accounting, scheduling and project management, safety and workers’ comp, and employment basics. These topics are predictable, which is why focused exam prep and aligned study guides work so well.
Your 6-Week Study Blueprint
Weeks 1–2: Foundations
- Company structure, licensing, insurance. Read once, outline once.
- Accounting essentials: job cost reports, markup vs. margin, break-even.
- Daily drills using targeted practice exams to build pace.
Week 3: Estimating & Bidding
- Direct and indirect costs, overhead, profit.
- Scope sheets and takeoff checklists to avoid misses.
- Timed “bid-day” math sprints to simulate pressure.
Week 4: Contracts & Law
- Contract types, indemnity, delays, change orders.
- Lien rights timeline and common release forms.
- Notice requirements and documentation that gets paid.
Week 5: People, Safety, and Cash Flow
- Payroll, hiring basics, and recordkeeping.
- OSHA fundamentals and incident documentation.
- Schedules, look-aheads, retainage, and progress billing.
Week 6: Take two full timed practice tests. Review every miss with your references open. Build a one-page “fix list,” retest weak areas, and keep your books arranged exactly how you will use them on exam day. If you need a bundle that pairs well together, grab curated packages.
Build A Fast Open-Book Toolkit
Your setup should make answers jump off the page. Keep it lean and consistent from practice to test day.
- Tabbed primary references with clear section flags.
- A 30-keyword front-page index with page numbers.
- Sticky “quick math” for overhead, break-even, and markups.
- A one-page contract clause checklist to spot traps fast.
Everything above lives in the Tennessee Business & Law collection so you can keep your kit consistent.
Exam-Day Game Plan
- Set your pace. Divide questions by minutes. Use a small buffer.
- Read the ask first. Glance at the last sentence, then scan the choices.
- Index first. Jump to the exact page using your custom index. No wandering.
- Do clean math. Write the formula, plug numbers, circle the result, then match the choice.
- Two passes. First pass answers the easy majority. Second pass tackles flagged items.
High-Yield Topics To Master
Money & Accounting
- Markup vs. margin and overhead allocation
- Percent-complete revenue recognition
- Job cost codes and reports
- Cash flow projections and retainage
Contracts & Law
- Scope, indemnity, delays, differing site conditions
- Change orders and notice requirements
- Lien rights timeline and release types
- Insurance basics: GL, auto, workers’ comp, umbrella
Estimating & Project Management
- Takeoff flow and common misses
- Bid-day checklists and alternates
- Schedules, float, and look-aheads
- Subcontractor buyout and coordination
People & Safety
- Hiring, I-9, payroll taxes
- Toolbox talks and training logs
- OSHA recordkeeping
- Return-to-work plans
Use aligned study guides that include sample problems in each area so practice mirrors the exam.
Practice Problems You Should Sprint
- Markup vs. Margin: Job cost is 92,000. Overhead is 12 percent and desired profit margin is 18 percent. What selling price hits both targets?
- Break-Even: With fixed costs at 220,000 and a contribution margin of 30 percent, what annual revenue meets break-even?
- Lien Timeline: Build a mini timeline for preliminary notices, claims of lien, and releases. Turn it into a one-minute reference.
- Change Order Math: Price labor, materials, and equipment, then apply overhead and profit correctly.
Turn these into ten-minute “flash sprints.” Consistency beats marathon cramming every time.
Your Materials Checklist
- Approved references with tabs and a 30-keyword index
- Calculator with fresh batteries
- Pencils, highlighter, sticky flags, small timer
- Photo ID and exam confirmation
Missing anything? Grab it from the Tennessee Business & Law collection so your kit stays consistent.
Common Pitfalls And Easy Fixes
- Over-highlighting. Fix it with a three-color system and a small legend on the inside cover.
- No index. Fix it by writing your own 30-keyword index with page numbers.
- Changing layouts. Fix it by practicing with the exact book arrangement you will take to the test.
- Unforced math errors. Fix it with a standard formula sheet and unit checks.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Tennessee Business & Law exam open book
+How much time should I study
+What should I bring on exam day
+Where can I get prep tailored to Tennessee’s test
+Conclusion
Passing Tennessee’s 2026 Business and Law Contractor Exam is about systems, not superpowers. Build a repeatable routine: index first, open the right section, confirm the rule, do clean math, and move on. Keep practice short and consistent so your pacing feels natural and your nerves stay calm. Maintain the exact same book layout from your desk to the test center. With aligned study materials, a lean toolkit, and two solid practice exams in week six, you will walk in prepared and walk out relieved.
Summary
This guide gives you a clear plan to pass Tennessee’s Business and Law exam in 2026. Use a six-week schedule, drill predictable topics like accounting, contracts, lien rights, estimating, scheduling, payroll, and safety, and keep an open-book toolkit with tabs and a concise index. Train under the clock, use a two-pass strategy on exam day, and protect a final ten minutes for error checks. Everything you need is in the Tennessee Business & Law collection, including books, study guides, and practice exams. Keep your routine tight and your references tidy, and the score will follow.