Master-level electrical prep is different from “just studying the code.” At the higher levels, the exam (and the job) expects you to make confident decisions with code-backed reasoning, move through references fast, and complete calculations without getting bogged down in setup mistakes. That’s exactly what this combo is built to support.
The 2023 South Carolina Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo brings three essentials into one focused package:
This matters because in South Carolina, electrical candidates can be on different exam paths depending on the license classification and the testing option selected. For example, South Carolina’s contractor testing materials show that Electrician – Commercial Contractor candidates must pass Business Management and Law and a trade exam, and that candidates may have a choice between a state-specific electrician exam and a NASCLA Accredited Examination Trade Examination for electrical contractors. This combo is designed for students who want to build strong, exam-ready skills using the 2023 NEC—especially useful when your selected trade exam reference list allows the 2023 NEC option.
Most candidates don’t struggle because they “don’t know electrical.” They struggle because they lose time: flipping aimlessly through the code, second-guessing which table applies, or restarting a calculation after realizing a small assumption was wrong. With the right structure, you can turn those weak spots into repeatable strengths.
Best for: South Carolina electrician candidates who want a 2023 NEC-based study routine for code navigation + calculations practice, including candidates preparing for an electrical contractor trade exam option that permits the 2023 NEC.
South Carolina regulates contractor licensing through the South Carolina Contractor’s Licensing Board under the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (LLR). The Contractor’s Licensing Board uses PSI Services LLC as its examination provider for the commercial contractor exam program.
In the PSI Candidate Information Bulletin for South Carolina commercial contractors, the Electrician (Commercial Contractor) trade exam is described as:
That same bulletin also states that SC Electrician – Commercial Contractor candidates have a choice of trade exams: either the NASCLA Accredited Examination Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors (accepted by multiple state agencies) or the South Carolina state-specific electrician exam.
Important note about NEC editions: In the bulletin’s reference list, the South Carolina state-specific electrician exam references the 2020 National Electrical Code (NEC) with SC modifications (or the 2020 NEC Handbook). The NASCLA Electrical Contractor exam reference list in the bulletin indicates the NEC may be the 2020 or 2023 edition. If you are taking the NASCLA electrical exam option, this combo supports the 2023 NEC pathway with the included NEC 2023 paperback and study guides built around 2023 NEC use.
Because exam requirements and reference lists can differ by classification and testing option, the most effective strategy is to align your study edition to the exact exam option you’re registered for. Once your edition is set, your job becomes simple (not easy): practice code navigation and calculations until you can do them reliably under time limits.
For South Carolina commercial contractor examinations, PSI’s bulletin states the examinations are open book and that candidates may bring the reference books listed in the bulletin. It also explains reference-book rules that can affect your exam-day strategy, including:
Open-book exams reward a specific kind of preparation. Memorization helps, but speed and accuracy come from your ability to:
How to study for an open-book electrical exam with this combo:
South Carolina licensing can vary based on the type of electrical work and the credential you’re pursuing. For contractor licensing through the Contractor’s Licensing Board exam path, PSI’s bulletin describes a structure that includes Business and Law plus a technical/trade exam for many classifications, including Electrician – Commercial Contractor.
A practical way to organize your path looks like this:
Once your plan is set, your study becomes much easier to manage. You stop bouncing between topics and start building momentum: lookup speed, cleaner calculations, fewer mistakes, and better pacing.
South Carolina’s licensing framework for contractors operates through the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (LLR) and the Contractor’s Licensing Board. The PSI bulletin for the Board explains that PSI conducts the examination program and that licensure requires passing required exam(s) mandated by the state.
South Carolina also has information for residential-focused licensing and pathways where an examination may be waived under specific conditions. For example, South Carolina’s Residential Builders Commission electrician instructions describe circumstances where a license may be obtained without examination if certain qualifications are met (while noting that a business management and law exam may still be required). If you are pursuing a specific license type, it’s worth confirming whether your path uses a state-specific electrician exam, NASCLA, or another accepted credential.
Regardless of pathway, the skills in this combo travel well across exam types because they are the same skills you rely on in real work: interpreting code intent, confirming requirements, and completing calculations in a disciplined, repeatable way.
When people say they’re “studying the NEC,” they often mean they’re reading. But open-book electrician exams reward a different behavior: retrieval. The skill is locating the right rule fast and applying it correctly—then proving it with clean math when needed.
High-value areas to train with this combo:
A simple, repeatable weekly study rhythm:
Why candidates like the combo approach: It keeps your study balanced. The NEC book supports code lookups and verification, the master study guide supports application and interpretation, and the calculations guide strengthens the math that can make or break your pacing.
1 Exam Prep is designed to help electrician candidates study with structure and confidence. Instead of trying to “cover everything” in a stressful, scattered way, you build a method that produces real exam-day improvement.
This approach doesn’t promise outcomes. It supports the work that earns them: better pacing, cleaner calculations, and faster, more confident NEC navigation.
Yes. PSI’s South Carolina Contractor’s Licensing Board candidate bulletin states the commercial contractor examinations are open book and explains what reference books and tabbing/highlighting rules apply.
The PSI bulletin describes the Electrician examination as 80 questions with 5 hours allowed, and 56 correct answers required to pass.
For Electrician – Commercial Contractor candidates, PSI’s bulletin notes you must pass the Business Management and Law for Contractors examination along with the electrician trade exam.
PSI’s bulletin notes that SC Electrician – Commercial Contractor candidates may choose the NASCLA Accredited Examination Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors or the South Carolina state-specific electrician exam.
South Carolina’s PSI bulletin shows that the state-specific electrician exam references the 2020 NEC with SC modifications, while the NASCLA electrical trade exam reference list includes an NEC option that may be the 2020 or 2023 edition. This combo supports candidates who are preparing on a 2023 NEC-based pathway and want to build strong code-navigation habits with the 2023 edition.
You don’t need to love math—you need a consistent setup process. The calculations study guide is designed to help you build step-by-step habits that reduce mistakes and improve speed over time.
No. Exam outcomes depend on your preparation and performance. This combo is designed to strengthen the skills that open-book electrical exams reward—NEC navigation, application, and reliable calculations—so you can study with structure and confidence.