Oregon is a little different from many states: the “master-level” role most people mean is typically tied to the General Supervising Electrician (S) credential—an advanced license category associated with planning, supervision, and responsibility for permit work and code compliance. If you’re aiming for that next step, your study plan needs to be built around two things: (1) the current code Oregon is using, and (2) the exam-day skill of finding and applying requirements quickly without getting lost in the book.
This combo is designed for exactly that. You’ll get a Oregon-focused Master Electrician study guide paired with the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback and affixable tabs. The result is a practical, code-centered system that helps you study with structure, build faster navigation, and practice applying NEC rules the way exam questions demand.
Oregon’s electrical code program adopted the 2023 Oregon Electrical Specialty Code (OESC) effective October 1, 2023, and it is based on the 2023 National Electrical Code (NEC). That means the 2023 NEC is not just a “nice to have”—it’s the foundation you’re expected to know and use. The state also publishes a table of amendments to the 2023 NEC designed to be used alongside the 2023 NEC because an integrated state codebook is not available.
Master-level exams and supervising-level exams often feel challenging because they aren’t built to reward memorization alone. They reward consistent, accurate code application under time pressure. This combo supports that by giving you the codebook, the organization tools, and a study guide that keeps your prep focused on the skills that matter most.
When you use this combo as a system, your prep becomes more efficient. Instead of “reading more,” you’ll spend more time doing what improves results fastest: practicing questions, locating the supporting code section, and training your brain to apply the right rule consistently.
Oregon electrical licensing is administered through the Oregon Building Codes Division (BCD). Candidates apply first, then receive authorization to test, and schedule their exam based on the instructions provided by the division.
The BCD publishes exam process information that includes:
Because Oregon requires code knowledge plus state law/rule awareness for many license paths, your preparation should include both: a daily NEC workflow and routine review of Oregon electrical laws and administrative rules.
Oregon publishes an approved list of materials that candidates may use while sitting for electrical license examinations. The approved materials include the NEC (with Oregon amendments/errata), Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 479, Oregon Administrative Rules Division 918, and several commonly used electrical references and indexes.
Approved exam materials include, among others:
Oregon’s guidelines also state that the published materials may be altered for candidate use, including the presence or attachment of tabs and personal handwritten or printed notes within margins, but practice tests and class prep materials are not allowed. Any materials not on the approved list may be removed by the proctor.
That’s why a tabbed NEC makes such a difference in a realistic prep routine: you’re not studying to “remember a page.” You’re studying to recognize the topic, go to the right section, confirm the wording, and apply it confidently.
Oregon’s Building Codes Division publishes a straightforward application-to-exam process for electrical individual licenses.
This combo supports the step that most directly affects your outcome: your ability to apply code requirements steadily and efficiently under exam conditions.
For Oregon’s General Supervising Electrician (S) license category, Oregon Administrative Rule OAR 918-282-0140 describes experience expectations that include qualifying experience to become a journeyman (at least 8,000 hours with minimum hours in required areas) plus an additional 8,000 hours of qualifying experience equivalent to journeyman work (for certain applicants relying on equivalent experience).
Oregon also publishes clarifications describing responsibilities commonly tied to the supervising electrician role when working for or as an electrical contractor. These responsibilities include signing permits (prior to requesting inspection), signing for only one contractor, being continuously employed by the contractor they sign for and available during work hours, being available when work they are responsible for is being performed, and being allowed to design, plan, and layout electrical installations for customers of the electrical contractor.
Those responsibilities help explain why the supervising-level credential is treated as “master-level” in practice: it’s a leadership and accountability role. Your study plan should reflect that by balancing code rules, calculations, and Oregon law/rule awareness.
This product includes the NEC 2023 and tabs as stated in the title. Other references listed above are included here because they are specifically identified by Oregon as approved exam materials, but they are not included in this combo unless your offer page states otherwise.
When Oregon allows specific references in the exam setting, your preparation should train the skill the exam rewards: accurate code application with efficient reference navigation. Even strong electricians lose points when they:
How to study effectively with this combo
High-value NEC areas to drill for supervising/master-level readiness
Done consistently, this approach does two things: it improves exam performance and it builds the kind of code confidence that matters when you’re supervising work, signing permits, and ensuring installations meet minimum safety standards.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians by turning a big licensing milestone into an organized, practical study system. Instead of scattered studying and hoping you covered the right sections, you get a trade-focused approach built around consistent practice, code application, and confidence-building structure.
This combo is designed to help you prepare with purpose: learn the code, practice applying it, and build the speed and accuracy that licensing exams reward.
Yes. Oregon’s 2023 Electrical Specialty Code is effective October 1, 2023 and is based on the 2023 NEC. This combo includes the NEC 2023 paperback.
Oregon’s advanced “master-level” role is commonly tied to the General Supervising Electrician (S) license category, which is associated with supervision, permit responsibilities, and ensuring installations meet minimum safety standards.
Oregon publishes an approved list of testing materials that candidates may use during electrical license examinations, including the NEC (with Oregon amendments/errata), ORS Chapter 479, and OAR Division 918.
Yes. Oregon’s exam guidelines state that approved published materials may be altered for candidate use, including the presence or attachment of tabs and personal handwritten or printed notes within margins.
No. Oregon’s exam guidelines state that practice tests and class prep materials are not allowed in the exam setting.
The BCD’s exam information sheet states the passing score for all licensing exams is 75% correct or better.
Oregon’s exam information sheet states the examination must be taken within 60 days of the date of the Letter of Authorization.
OAR 918-282-0140 describes experience expectations that include at least 8,000 hours to qualify as a journeyman (with required minimum hours in specific areas) plus an additional 8,000 hours of qualifying experience equivalent to journeyman work for certain applicants relying on equivalent experience.
Apply the tabs early, then work practice questions with the NEC open and force yourself to locate the exact code section that supports the correct answer. Add timed practice sets and weekly Oregon law/rule review to build exam-day pace and confidence.