If you’re working toward your North Dakota Master Electrician license, you already know the trade isn’t the hard part—the hard part is proving mastery on a timed exam that tests code knowledge, fundamentals, and North Dakota’s laws, rules, and wiring standards. This combo is built to keep your prep focused and efficient, pairing a state-focused study guide with the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback and affixable tabs so you can build stronger code navigation habits while you study.
Master-level testing rewards two things above everything else:
The NEC is dense by design. The rule you need is often supported by a definition, an exception, a table note, or a cross-reference. That’s why effective prep isn’t just reading—it’s training a repeatable process: learn the topic, practice questions, confirm the supporting rule, and repeat until your understanding becomes reliable.
This combo helps you study with purpose:
Use this combo as a system: the study guide keeps your prep organized, and the NEC plus tabs help you build stronger “find it and confirm it” habits while you practice.
The North Dakota State Electrical Board (NDSEB) publishes that its examinations are based on fundamental electricity, the Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code. The NDSEB also publishes that the passing grade is 70% and that you must test within six (6) months of receiving an exam invite.
NDSEB exam information also outlines the structure of the electrician examinations as a closed portion and an open portion, with different time allowances. For Master-level testing, the published exam lengths are:
NDSEB also lists items provided for the exam, including code books, calculators, and pencils. That’s why your prep should build real understanding—not just “bookmarking” sections. The goal is to know your code well enough to apply it accurately across topics, and to stay calm and consistent through both portions of the exam.
NDSEB also publishes exam waiting periods tied to score ranges. That makes preparation quality matter even more—because avoiding repeat attempts keeps your timeline moving and helps you stay focused on licensure steps instead of re-testing delays.
North Dakota’s Master exam includes an open portion (3.5 hours) as part of the published exam structure. Open-book testing rewards the ability to apply the code accurately while keeping a steady pace—especially when questions require careful reading of exceptions, definitions, and tables.
The most effective open-book study habits look like this:
How tabs help—without turning into a crutch
The tabs in this combo are designed to improve your study workflow by reducing wasted page-flipping and helping you build a mental map of where major topics live. The score still comes from reading and applying the correct section, not from arriving quickly. When you study consistently with the same organized codebook, you build faster lookups, better confidence, and fewer rushed mistakes.
Study tip: train yourself to prove each correct answer. After each question, locate the supporting NEC section (and any relevant definition, exception, or table) and read it carefully. This turns practice questions into real skill-building and reduces repeat mistakes.
North Dakota licensing is administered through the ND State Electrical Board. While your exact path depends on your current license status and category, the Master-level progression generally follows a clear sequence:
This combo supports the part of the process you can control weekly: building reliable code understanding, strengthening accuracy, and preparing to perform confidently under a clock.
NDSEB publishes Master Electrician qualifications and categories. For eligibility, NDSEB states that a Master electrician must have completed one (1) year’s experience as a licensed journeyman and must have at least two thousand (2,000) hours of experience working as a licensed journeyman electrician under the supervision of a contracting master electrician or master of record.
NDSEB also publishes that there are three categories of Master electricians:
Understanding these categories helps you plan not only for the exam, but also for how you intend to work after you’re licensed. The Master credential is tied to responsibility—planning, supervision, and compliance—so it’s worth aligning your exam preparation with the real-world expectations that come with the license.
This combo includes the NEC 2023 as stated in the title. If you’re preparing for the North Dakota Master exam, plan to build study time not only around NEC rules, but also around state laws/rules and wiring standards—especially in the weeks leading up to your test date.
Master-level exam prep works best when you treat it like skill training instead of casual studying. Your goal is to build accuracy, speed, and calm decision-making across a wide range of NEC topics and electrical fundamentals.
A practical weekly study routine
High-value NEC areas to drill for Master readiness
How to use tabs effectively while you study
When you study this way, your improvement becomes measurable: faster lookups, fewer repeat mistakes, and stronger confidence moving through both the closed and open portions of the exam.
1 Exam Prep supports Master Electrician candidates by turning a big licensing goal into an organized, trade-focused study system. Instead of bouncing between random chapters and hoping you covered enough, you get a preparation approach centered on how electricians actually learn and test: structured review, practice-driven repetition, and code-based confidence.
This combo is built to help you study with purpose: learn the code, practice applying it, and build the consistency that master-level testing demands.
Yes. This combo includes the NEC 2023 paperback, and the study guide is designed around the 2023 Code edition referenced in North Dakota’s current code and exam expectations.
NDSEB publishes that examinations are based on fundamental electricity, the Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code.
NDSEB publishes that the passing grade is 70%.
NDSEB publishes exam lengths showing a split structure for Master testing: Master Closed = 1 hour and Master Open = 3.5 hours.
Yes. NDSEB publishes that it provides code books, calculators, and pencils for the exam.
NDSEB states that a Master electrician must have completed one (1) year as a licensed journeyman and must have at least 2,000 hours of experience working as a licensed journeyman under the supervision of a contracting master electrician or master of record.
NDSEB publishes three categories: contracting master, master of record, and non-contracting master, each with specific responsibilities and insurance/supervision expectations.
No. The tabs are affixable, meaning you apply them to your NEC book. They’re designed to help you study more efficiently and build stronger navigation habits.
Apply the tabs early, then study by working practice questions and locating the exact NEC section that supports every correct answer. Add weekly review for North Dakota laws/rules and include timed practice sessions to build exam pacing.