North Carolina exam prep gets easier when you stop trying to “study everything” and start training the exact skills the exam rewards: fast code navigation, careful question reading, and calculations you can complete cleanly under a time limit. That’s what this combo is built for.
The 2023 North Carolina Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC) combines practical master-level review with dedicated electrical math practice and the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback—so you can build real exam performance instead of relying on last-minute cramming.
In North Carolina, electrical contracting licenses are issued through the North Carolina State Board of Examiners of Electrical Contractors (NCBEEC) in classifications such as Limited, Intermediate, and Unlimited. The NCBEEC exam handbook explains that the Board develops its own licensing examinations and contracts with PSI to administer and score them. The exam is timed, the content is detailed, and the winners aren’t the people who “read the code the most”—they’re the people who can find answers efficiently and work through calculations without getting stuck.
This combo is a strong fit for candidates who want a 2023 NEC-based study routine, especially those preparing in an environment where the 2023 NEC is permitted as a reference (such as the NASCLA electrical exam option used by many contractors). It is also valuable for building long-term code competency and calculation confidence, which supports real jobsite decision-making well beyond exam day.
Included in this combo: 2023 North Carolina Master Electrician Study Guide, 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide, and National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Paperback.
NCBEEC’s exam handbook describes the core electrical contracting examinations (Limited, Intermediate, and Unlimited) as:
The handbook also states the examinations are administered and scored by PSI, and that candidates must apply and receive approval from the Board before scheduling. NCBEEC’s examinations page similarly explains that you must apply for the exam and receive a Notice of Approval letter before you can schedule with PSI.
North Carolina also includes several Special Restricted classifications with different question counts and time limits (for example, many Special Restricted classifications use 40 questions with 3 hours). If your path is one of the core contracting tiers (Limited/Intermediate/Unlimited), your prep needs to be built for endurance: maintaining focus and accuracy across a long session, managing time, and avoiding the most common score killers—misreading the question, missing an exception, using the wrong table, or restarting a calculation due to a setup mistake.
NEC edition reality in North Carolina: NCBEEC’s handbook specifies that each candidate is required to bring their own copy of the 2020 National Electrical Code as the reference for the Board’s examinations. At the same time, many contractors also pursue the NASCLA electrical exam option (used for multi-state contractor licensing), and a NASCLA/PSI bulletin lists the National Electrical Code (or NEC Handbook) 2020 or 2023 as allowed references and states the examination is open book. This combo is built around the 2023 NEC and is especially useful in testing environments where the 2023 NEC is permitted.
NCBEEC’s exam handbook states the examinations are OPEN BOOK and that candidates are required to bring their own reference materials. For the Board’s examination program, the handbook specifies the NEC reference as the 2020 NEC and also requires the 2013 edition of the National Fire Alarm Code for candidates in certain classifications (Limited, Intermediate, Unlimited, SP-SFD, or SP-FA/LV). The handbook also emphasizes that the listed references are the only references allowed in the exam center and provides rules on acceptable book formats and annotation.
Open book does not mean “lookup everything slowly.” It means your score depends heavily on how well you can:
Closed-book question areas: NCBEEC’s handbook also identifies certain reference materials that are used for “CLOSED BOOK” questions (including the NC Electrical Contractors Licensing Law and Board Rules, and the NASCLA Contractors’ Guide to Business, Law, and Project Management: North Carolina Electrical Edition). In practice, that means strong preparation blends two modes:
How to study for open-book electrical exams with this combo:
NCBEEC’s licensing page describes a clear flow for becoming licensed as an electrical contractor: pass the required examination, then apply for a new license and activate it in the desired classification. Their examinations page also explains that you must apply for the exam and receive Board approval before scheduling with PSI.
A practical way to organize your path looks like this:
This combo supports the stage that matters most: the period when you’re turning knowledge into exam-day execution—faster lookups, cleaner calculations, and fewer preventable mistakes.
Electrical contracting in North Carolina is regulated through the NC State Board of Examiners of Electrical Contractors. The Board’s exam handbook explains it develops its own examinations and contracts with PSI to administer and score them. The handbook also describes reference requirements, exam formats by classification, and exam-center rules for allowable materials.
Key requirements described in NCBEEC’s handbook and Board guidance include:
Because North Carolina testing blends code-driven questions with closed-book law/rules/business content, strong candidates prepare with both speed and understanding: code navigation that keeps them moving, and calculation habits that hold up under pressure.
The most productive exam prep doesn’t feel like reading—it feels like training. Training means repetition, correction, and smarter repetition until the skill becomes automatic.
High-impact skill areas this combo helps you build:
Why a calculations guide matters for North Carolina candidates: Electrical exams are full of problems where the math is simple, but the setup is not. When candidates miss these, it’s usually because of a setup or unit mistake—not because they can’t “do math.” A calculations-focused routine helps you build the habits that prevent rework and protect pacing.
A practical weekly study rhythm (built for working electricians):
When your prep follows a structure like this, you stop feeling like you’re “covering endless material” and start feeling progress: faster lookups, cleaner calculations, and better control of exam-day pacing.
1 Exam Prep supports electrician candidates by making preparation organized, practical, and repeatable. This combo is built to help you develop the exam habits that matter most—without turning study time into guesswork.
This is the kind of preparation that helps you walk into exam day with a method: read clearly, locate efficiently, calculate cleanly, and keep moving.
Yes. This package includes the National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback along with the 2023 North Carolina Master Electrician Study Guide and the 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide.
NCBEEC’s exam handbook states the Limited, Intermediate, and Unlimited examinations consist of 100 multiple-choice questions with a maximum time of 6 hours.
Yes. NCBEEC’s exam handbook states the examinations are OPEN BOOK and outlines the required references and exam-center rules.
NCBEEC’s exam handbook states that each candidate is required to bring their own copy of the 2020 National Electrical Code for the Board’s examinations.
North Carolina provides a NASCLA-qualified licensing pathway, and NASCLA/PSI examination materials list the NEC (or NEC Handbook) as an allowed reference in the 2020 or 2023 editions and state the examination is open book.
Because calculations affect pacing and accuracy. A consistent setup routine helps reduce unit mistakes, prevent rework, and improve speed on multi-step problems—especially under time limits.
No. Exam outcomes depend on your preparation and performance. This combo is designed to strengthen the skills electrical exams reward—code application, navigation habits, and calculation accuracy—so you can prepare with structure and confidence.