Master-level electrical prep is where experience meets precision. You already understand the work—now the goal is proving you can apply code rules consistently, interpret exam-style scenarios correctly, and complete calculations without getting slowed down by rework. That’s exactly what this combo is built to support.
The 2023 New Hampshire Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC) brings together three core tools in one focused package:
This combo is ideal for candidates who want an organized study routine that feels like real electrical decision-making: identify the issue, confirm the governing rule, and calculate correctly when needed. It’s also a strong fit for electricians who want up-to-date NEC knowledge for today’s work, even while preparing for a state exam program that may reference a specific NEC edition.
New Hampshire’s electrician licensing exam program is administered by the State of New Hampshire Electrician Board through the Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC), and the Board contracts with Prov, Inc. to administer licensing examinations. The official Candidate Information Bulletin explains that New Hampshire’s electrician exams are open book, timed, and scored against a 70% cut score. This combo supports the biggest score-makers in that kind of environment: fast code reasoning and clean calculations.
New Hampshire’s electrician examinations are administered through Prov, Inc. under the State of New Hampshire Electrician Board’s licensing program. The Candidate Information Bulletin lists licensing examination costs per attempt as:
The bulletin states that candidates must first complete the appropriate application with the State of New Hampshire Electrician Board and be approved for testing. Once approved, the Board notifies the candidate that they are eligible to contact Prov to schedule the examination, and eligibility to take the exam is valid for one year.
New Hampshire Master Electrician exam format (as listed in the Candidate Information Bulletin):
The same bulletin provides a subject-area breakdown that shows what the master exam emphasizes, including General Electrical Knowledge, Equipment for General Use, Motors and Generators, Control Devices, Services and Service Equipment, Branch Circuits and Conductors, Feeders, Wiring Methods & Materials, and an Administrative category. The practical takeaway is simple: the exam expects you to be comfortable across both the technical NEC-driven side of electrical work and the New Hampshire-specific administrative and rules content.
That’s why a combo approach helps. Many candidates already “know” the material but lose points to avoidable problems—misreading the question, missing a small qualifier, choosing the wrong table, or restarting a calculation. This set is designed to tighten those performance gaps.
New Hampshire’s Candidate Information Bulletin states that all exams are open book and are timed. In open-book testing, the advantage isn’t owning the books—it’s knowing how to use them efficiently.
Open-book exams reward candidates who can:
The New Hampshire bulletin also includes reference rules for open-book exams that influence how you should prepare. For example, it permits permanent tabs and allows highlighting/underlining in pen, but prohibits moveable items like Post-it notes. It also states you cannot mark in your books during the test, and handwritten notes in reference books are not allowed unless authorized by the licensing jurisdiction. These kinds of rules are exactly why your study plan should focus on skill-building (navigation, tables, and calculation process) rather than relying on last-minute notes.
How to use this combo for open-book performance:
New Hampshire’s licensing and testing process is administered through the State of New Hampshire Electrician Board under OPLC, with examination services administered by Prov. While your experience requirements and documentation can vary by license type, the exam pathway described by the official bulletin can be organized into these practical steps:
The official bulletin also outlines retesting rules, including that failed examinations can be retaken as many times as necessary within the one-year eligibility period and that candidates must wait two days between examination attempts before rescheduling.
New Hampshire’s electrician licensing program is overseen by the State of New Hampshire Electrician Board under the Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC). The official Candidate Information Bulletin states the Board contracts with Prov, Inc. to develop and administer the licensing examination program. It also states that all exams are open book and timed, and that exams are graded against a 70% cut score.
The bulletin further describes that candidates must be approved for testing through the Board before scheduling, and that once approved, candidates are eligible to test for one year. These rules matter because they shape the smartest way to prepare: consistent practice, efficient code navigation, and a calm, repeatable calculation workflow.
Master-level exams don’t just test memorization. They test judgment and execution: what rule applies, what detail changes the outcome, and whether you can stay accurate while moving at a steady pace.
The most common reasons candidates lose points:
How this combo helps you fix those patterns:
A calculation workflow that protects points:
A practical weekly study rhythm (built for working electricians):
With a routine like this, prep stops feeling like endless reading. You can measure progress in two ways that matter most on test day: speed and accuracy.
1 Exam Prep is built around organized, practice-driven preparation that supports real exam performance. This combo helps you turn study time into a repeatable system—so you’re not guessing what to do next or bouncing between random topics.
This combo doesn’t promise outcomes. It supports the preparation habits that help you perform your best when it counts.
This package includes the 2023 New Hampshire Master Electrician Study Guide, the 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide, and the National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback.
New Hampshire’s electrician exams are administered through Prov, Inc. under the State of New Hampshire Electrician Board’s licensing program.
Yes. The New Hampshire Candidate Information Bulletin states that all exams are open book and timed.
The official bulletin lists the Master Electrician exam as 125 questions with 5 hours allowed.
The bulletin states that all exams are scored against a 70% cut score, and a score of 70% or higher is a passing grade.
The bulletin states that once you have been approved for testing, you are eligible to take the exam for one year.
Yes. The bulletin states failed examinations can be retaken as many times as necessary within the one-year eligibility period, and candidates must wait two days between attempts before rescheduling.
No. Exam outcomes depend on preparation and performance. This combo is designed to strengthen the skills the exam rewards—code application, efficient rule confirmation, and reliable calculations—so you can prepare with structure and confidence.