If you’re prepping for the Rhode Island Journeyperson Electrician exam, you already know the challenge isn’t just “knowing electrical.” It’s knowing how to apply the right rule, at the right time, under exam pressure—without second-guessing yourself.
This combo brings together two essentials you’ll use again and again while you study:
Rhode Island incorporates the NEC 2023 as the Rhode Island Electrical Code, so studying from the 2023 NEC is the right foundation for code-based preparation in the state.
Whether you’re tightening up your code lookups after work, running timed practice on weekends, or rebuilding confidence in the areas you’ve historically missed (grounding and bonding, services, feeders, calculations, wiring methods), this set is designed to keep your prep structured and efficient.
Why this combo works for busy apprentices and working electricians:
This is a smart option if you want an all-in-one prep setup that keeps your study time focused on what matters most: understanding the NEC, improving accuracy, and training yourself to work through exam-style scenarios with a clear plan.
Rhode Island’s electrician examinations are conducted in writing and are based on the edition of the National Electrical Code adopted by the Rhode Island State Building Code Standards Committee at the time of the examination. Rhode Island’s Board rules also state that a score of at least 70% is required to obtain a license, and that examination applications must be received 15 working days prior to the examination date.
The NEC matters in Rhode Island beyond exam day: Rhode Island’s Electrical Code incorporates the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 edition (with Rhode Island amendments and related building code requirements), so the 2023 NEC is a core reference for Rhode Island electrical work and code understanding.
Rhode Island’s Board of Examiners of Electricians rules state that any person found referring to notes or books during an examination—except by permission of the Board—will be disqualified. That means you should prepare as if the exam environment requires you to rely on your understanding of Code structure, careful reading, and fast, accurate decision-making under pressure.
This combo supports that reality by helping you build two skills at once: (1) knowing where the NEC rules live and how they connect, and (2) practicing exam-style questions so you’re not learning timing for the first time on test day.
Licensing pathways can vary depending on your background, training program, and trade history, but Rhode Island’s journeyperson (Certificate B) framework is built around documented apprenticeship experience, applying to the Division of Professional Regulation, and passing the required examination.
If you’re nearing your exam window, this combo can help you turn your remaining time into a clear routine: code-navigation reps, targeted practice exams, and consistent review of the articles you’ll reference most often.
Rhode Island’s Board of Examiners of Electricians rules describe key requirements for the journeyperson (Certificate B) level, including experience expectations and examination requirements. The rules reference 8,000 hours (4 years) of experience as a registered apprentice for Certificate B, and they also address examination procedures and passing-score requirements.
Separately, Rhode Island’s Electrical Code incorporates the NEC 2023 edition as the foundation of electrical code requirements in the state, with Rhode Island amendments and related building code requirements applying alongside the NEC.
The most productive way to prepare for a code-based journeyperson exam is to combine targeted practice with real code navigation. Here’s how to get the most out of this combo—without wasting study hours:
This combo is ideal for building a repeatable study system that fits real schedules: shorter weekday sessions for steady progress, plus longer weekend sessions for deeper review and full practice runs.
1 Exam Prep is built for tradespeople who want a clear, organized path to exam readiness. Instead of scattered studying, you get a structured approach that supports the skills journeyperson candidates actually need—accurate code application, confident decision-making, and the discipline to work through exam-style questions without rushing or guessing.
This combo supports your prep in practical ways:
Yes. The package is built around the 2023 NEC, and it includes the NEC 2023 paperback with tabs plus a 2023-based Rhode Island journeyman study guide.
Rhode Island incorporates the NEC 2023 edition as the Rhode Island Electrical Code (with amendments and related requirements). Studying from the 2023 NEC is a strong foundation for Rhode Island code preparation.
Rhode Island’s Board rules state that referring to notes or books during the examination—except by permission of the Board—can result in disqualification. Many candidates prepare with a closed-book mindset so they’re ready for stricter exam conditions.
Rhode Island’s Board rules state that applicants must obtain an average of at least 70% in order to obtain a license.
Tabs help you study faster and build stronger familiarity with where information lives inside the NEC. Even when you can’t use a book during an exam, that repeated navigation practice helps you retain structure, spot the right rule faster, and avoid common misreads.
This set is a great fit for Rhode Island apprentices approaching journeyperson testing, electricians returning to testing after time away, and candidates who want a structured way to practice code-based questions while tightening NEC understanding.
A solid approach is short, consistent practice during the week (timed question sets plus review), then longer weekend sessions for deeper NEC work and full practice runs. Keep a mistake log and retest weak areas weekly.
No exam prep can guarantee a passing result. This combo is designed to help you study with structure, improve NEC familiarity, and build stronger test-day performance through practice and review.