When you’re aiming for a Montana Master Electrician license, your preparation needs to do more than “review the Code.” Master-level testing expects you to think like the person responsible for safe, compliant electrical work—planning, layout, supervision, major load calculations, and correct application of electrical rules in the field.
This combo brings together three core tools that support that goal:
Whether you’re testing soon or you’re building long-term readiness as Montana continues to update code cycles, this package is built for electricians who want a structured, practice-forward way to study: targeted review, repeatable problem-solving habits, and confident codebook navigation.
Montana exam note: The Montana State Electrical Board’s exam information states that exams are currently based on the 2020 NEC (as of June 10, 2022). The Board’s exam information sheet also lists the NEC 2020 as the code reference allowed in the exam room for Montana electrical exams. This combo is based on the 2023 NEC for updated code study and code-cycle readiness.
Montana electrical licensing is administered through the Montana State Electrical Board under the Montana Department of Labor & Industry. Applicants must be approved by the Board before they can register for an exam, and the Board uses PSI as its exam vendor.
Montana’s published exam information sheet includes the following master exam format details:
The same exam information sheet describes the master exam content areas as:
Montana law also outlines the master electrician examination expectations. Under Montana Code Annotated, the master electrician examination must consist of at least 80 questions and is designed to test knowledge and technical application skills in the national electric code and board rules and applicable laws under Title 37.
Montana’s published exam information sheet states that the examinations are OPEN BOOK. For the Residential, Journeyman, and Master exams, the sheet lists the materials allowed in the exam room, including the National Electrical Code (2020 Edition) (tabs and/or indexes may be used) and the Montana Building Codes Amendments. It also lists “Printreading,” by David L. Hittinger (based on the 2020 NEC) among the allowed materials.
Open-book testing rewards a different skill set than closed-book testing. It’s not about memorizing entire sections of the NEC—it’s about knowing how the NEC is built and learning how to get to the right answer efficiently:
Montana’s exam information sheet also includes calculator restrictions for the exam site (silent, nonprinting, nonprogrammable, and not designed for preprogrammed electrical calculations). It notes that candidates may have personal highlighting, underlining, and notes in approved reference material, and that additional papers are not permitted with approved references.
Montana’s process is built around Board eligibility and exam scheduling through PSI. While each applicant’s situation is unique, the published Board process follows a clear flow:
This is why a combo approach works so well: you’re building master-level skill across the same core areas used on the exam—Code knowledge, trade theory, and calculations—while also training the open-book navigation habits that matter on test day.
Montana Code Annotated lists qualification pathways for a master electrician license. The statute states that an applicant must furnish written evidence of at least one of the following:
The statute also states that an applicant must file an application on a form furnished by the department, submit appropriate fees, and satisfactorily pass an examination prescribed by the Board.
Montana’s master exam framework emphasizes NEC knowledge, general trade knowledge & theory, and major load calculations. The best results come from preparing these as connected skills rather than isolated topics.
1) NEC mastery through navigation drills
In an open-book environment, the electrician who moves confidently through the Code has an advantage. Build your skill around “where” as much as “what”:
2) Calculations that stay consistent under time pressure
Major load calculations are listed as a master exam content area in Montana’s exam information sheet, and calculations show up across many NEC-driven topics. A reliable setup method helps keep you accurate when the clock is running:
3) Trade knowledge & theory that supports Code application
Many master-level questions are designed to test whether you understand the “why” behind the rule. When you strengthen trade knowledge and theory alongside the NEC, you become more efficient at interpreting questions and eliminating wrong answer choices:
How to use this combo effectively
This routine builds confidence the right way: not by guessing what will be on the test, but by strengthening the core skills the exam is built to measure.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians with a study structure that’s built for trade exams: organized review, practice-forward learning, and consistent skill-building. Instead of relying on scattered notes and random online searches, you get a focused path that helps you develop the habits that matter most for a master exam—code navigation discipline, calculation accuracy, and trade-knowledge readiness.
The result is a more reliable study rhythm—and a stronger level of readiness for master-level responsibilities, both on the exam and on the job.
Yes. Montana’s published exam information sheet states that the examinations are OPEN BOOK and lists the allowed materials for the Residential, Journeyman, and Master exams.
Montana’s exam information sheet lists the Master Electrician exam as 80 questions, with 240 minutes allowed and a minimum passing score of 75% correct.
Montana’s exam information sheet describes the master exam content areas as the National Electrical Code, General Trade Knowledge & Theory, and Major Load Calculations. Montana law also describes the exam subjects as the national electric code and board rules and applicable laws under Title 37.
Yes. The Montana State Electrical Board’s exam information states that only applicants approved by the Board will be allowed to register for an exam, and PSI is the exam vendor.
Montana law lists qualification pathways that include being a graduate electrical engineer with at least 2,000 hours of legally obtained practical electrical experience, or having at least 8,000 hours of legally obtained journeyman-level experience in planning, laying out, or supervising electrical installation and repair work.
Yes. Montana’s exam information sheet lists Major Load Calculations as a master exam content area, and the calculations study guide is included to help you practice electrical math and build a consistent problem-solving method.
The NEC 2023 paperback supports modern code knowledge and long-term code-cycle readiness. It’s also valuable for building strong navigation habits (definitions, structure, tables) and reinforcing how code rules apply to real installations.
Yes. Retake preparation is often most effective when you focus on the same core skills the exam is built on—faster code navigation, stronger trade knowledge, and more consistent calculations. This combo is designed around that skill-based approach.