When you’re working toward a master-level role in New Mexico—whether that means stepping into electrical contractor responsibilities, qualifying party duties, or simply operating at a higher standard of supervision—exam prep has to do more than “review the trade.” You need to be able to apply code language to real scenarios, make the safest code-backed choice quickly, and complete calculations without losing time to rework.
The 2023 New Mexico Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC) is built for electricians who want a structured way to study, practice, and build confidence. It combines master-focused review, dedicated calculations practice, and the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback so your study sessions stay organized, consistent, and practical.
This set is designed around the skills that separate “I’ve done this work” from “I can pass the test and lead the work”:
If you’ve ever missed questions because you misread a qualifier, grabbed the wrong table, or had to restart a calculation, you already know the truth: passing isn’t just knowledge—it’s execution. This combo helps you train execution.
In New Mexico, electrical licensing and testing is administered through the Construction Industries Division (CID) within the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department, and PSI is the contracted testing provider for contractor examinations. New Mexico’s contractor candidate bulletin explains that candidates must be preapproved to take any examination and must test within six months of the eligibility date.
Electrical contractor testing in New Mexico commonly includes the EE-98 Residential and Commercial Electrical examination, which is a three-part test:
These numbers matter because they show how the exam is won: pace and accuracy. Even with an open-book format, you do not have time to search slowly for everything. Your best advantage comes from a study routine that builds speed-to-section, table confidence, and clean calculations.
Important note about code editions: New Mexico’s contractor exam reference list for electrical classifications such as EE-98 specifies NFPA 70 (National Electrical Code), 2020 (or the NEC Handbook) and also references the New Mexico Electrical Code (NMAC 14.10.4), 2020 for certain electrical exams. This combo is based on the 2023 NEC and is ideal for candidates building modern NEC proficiency and structured exam skills with the 2023 edition, while also strengthening calculations and code application habits that carry over across editions.
New Mexico’s PSI contractor bulletin states that the electrical examinations (including EE-98 parts) are OPEN BOOK. Open book is a major advantage—when you prepare the right way. The exam is still timed, and your score depends on how efficiently you can do three things:
The New Mexico contractor bulletin also describes practical reference rules that can affect how you train:
How to study for an open-book electrical exam with this combo:
New Mexico’s licensing path depends on the credential and the type of work you plan to perform, but contractor licensing and exam administration follows a consistent structure described in the PSI contractor bulletin and CID processes. A practical way to organize your plan looks like this:
This approach keeps your preparation realistic. You’re not trying to memorize every page—you’re training a method that works under a clock.
New Mexico electrical contractor licensing and examinations are administered through the Construction Industries Division (CID) of the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department, with PSI handling exam approval and testing services under contract. The New Mexico contractor bulletin emphasizes that candidates must be preapproved and must test within six months of eligibility.
For electrical contractor classifications, the PSI bulletin provides exam outlines and reference lists, including the EE-98 three-part exam structure and the open-book format with approved reference materials. Because New Mexico electrical contractor exams commonly rely on NEC-based reasoning plus New Mexico code amendments, the strongest preparation focuses on code application habits, careful reading, and calculations discipline—exactly what this combo is designed to support.
New Mexico’s electrical contractor exam structure is a strong reminder that “studying” isn’t enough—you need training that builds performance. In the EE-98 series, Part 1 focuses heavily on commercial/industrial installation topics (including services, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, conductors and cables, raceways and boxes, and special occupancies/equipment). Part 2 emphasizes residential work (including residential circuits, protection, pools, lighting, general-use equipment, and state code). Part 3 covers specialty systems such as low voltage (including alarms), signs and outline lighting, lightning/cathodic protection topics, telephone/computer systems, and sound/communication systems.
That mix of topics creates three common score killers:
How this combo helps you beat those score killers:
A practical calculation workflow that improves accuracy quickly:
A simple weekly study rhythm (built for working electricians):
This routine is effective because it mirrors how passing scores are earned: correct decisions, clean math, and steady pacing. When you train those habits consistently, your confidence rises because your process becomes reliable.
1 Exam Prep is built around one idea: strong exam performance comes from organized practice. This combo supports electricians by turning preparation into a repeatable system—so your study time actually translates into points.
No shortcuts—just the right training, in the right order, built around the skills electricians are expected to demonstrate.
Yes. This package includes the National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback along with the 2023 New Mexico Master Electrician Study Guide and the 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide.
Yes. New Mexico’s contractor candidate bulletin states the electrical examinations (including EE-98 parts) are OPEN BOOK and lists the approved reference materials allowed in the exam center.
The PSI contractor bulletin lists EE-98 as a three-part exam: Part 1 (80 questions / 200 minutes), Part 2 (40 questions / 100 minutes), and Part 3 (50 questions / 135 minutes), each requiring 75% to pass.
The contractor bulletin’s content outline for Part 3 includes specialty areas such as low voltage (including alarms), electrical signs and outline lighting, cathodic/lightning protection topics, telephone and computer systems, and sound/communication systems.
The New Mexico contractor bulletin states candidates may use a silent, non-printing, non-programmable calculator in the examination center.
Yes. The contractor bulletin states that candidates must be preapproved to take any examination, and eligibility is required before scheduling.
No. Exam outcomes depend on your preparation and performance. This combo is designed to strengthen the skills electrical exams reward—code application, steady calculations, and reliable exam habits—so you can prepare with structure and confidence.