If you’re preparing for a master-level electrical exam track in South Dakota and want a study setup that’s built around the code you’ll actually use, this combo keeps your preparation simple and practical: a South Dakota-focused Master Electrician study guide paired with the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback and affixable tabs.
At the master/contractor level, most missed points come from two problems: (1) getting rushed and choosing answers without confirming the exact NEC language, and (2) losing time flipping through the code when questions move quickly from services to feeders, branch circuits, wiring methods, motors, special occupancies, and calculations. The NEC is the foundation of the exam, but your biggest advantage comes from learning how to navigate it efficiently and apply it accurately under time pressure.
This combo is designed to help you build that advantage in a repeatable way:
Whether you’re moving from journeyman into an electrical contractor/master-level role or you’re tightening up your exam strategy before scheduling, this set supports the day-to-day work that matters: consistent study, faster lookups, and sharper code application.
This combo is especially helpful if you’re already strong in the field but want your studying to feel more targeted. Instead of rereading chapters, you can treat the NEC like a tool: find the rule, confirm the exception, work the table, and move on.
South Dakota electrical licensing is overseen by the South Dakota Electrical Commission. The Commission publishes that starting December 2, 2024, all tests will be on the 2023 NEC, and that candidates must submit an application to the Commission office and receive written approval before testing. After approval, candidates have 90 days to make arrangements to sit for the exam.
For the master-level track commonly associated with the South Dakota Electrical Contractor examination, the International Code Council (ICC) South Dakota Contractor/Trades Examination Information Bulletin (published August 19, 2025) lists the following for the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam:
The same ICC bulletin also provides a content breakdown for the Electrical Contractor exam, reinforcing that the exam is broad and code-driven. Major tested areas include:
That range is exactly why an NEC-centered study approach matters. The goal is not to “learn one chapter.” The goal is to become fast and accurate across the code areas that show up repeatedly, while staying steady on the questions that require careful reading and table use.
The ICC South Dakota bulletin lists the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam as open book. Open book changes how you should prepare: the strongest strategy becomes building a repeatable process for locating information quickly and confirming the exact code language before choosing an answer.
Open-book success comes from three habits:
This combo supports those habits. The NEC tabs help you build a consistent “map” through the code while you study. The study guide supports practice and repetition so you’re not only learning concepts—you’re training the exam skill of finding and applying the correct NEC section efficiently.
South Dakota requires applicants to meet experience requirements before sitting for exams, and candidates must apply and receive approval before testing. A practical, exam-centered approach to the process looks like this:
This combo is designed to support the part you can control every week: building a real study routine that improves speed, accuracy, and confidence with NEC-based questions.
South Dakota publishes experience requirements through the South Dakota Electrical Commission. On the Commission’s licensing guidance, the experience path to the electrical contractor exam is described in stages:
The Commission also notes that experience hours must be licensed for working time to count toward the hours required to take exams. In addition, the Commission publishes continuing education expectations for license renewal, including a requirement to attain 16 hours of continuing education (with a minimum of 8 code hours) as part of renewal requirements.
For bonding, the Commission’s licensing page indicates that applicants for an Electrical Contractor or Class B Electrician license must submit the Electrical Contractor and Class B Electricians’ Bond Application as part of that process.
These requirements matter for your study plan because they shape your timeline. Many candidates choose to begin serious exam prep before they file, so once approval arrives they can schedule and test with confidence.
This combo focuses on the core codebook and the organization tools that help you use it effectively. If you already have Ugly’s, it pairs well with NEC-based practice for calculations and quick reference work.
Master-level testing is less about memorizing trivia and more about applying code rules across many scenarios. A strong study plan uses the code the same way you’ll use it during real questions: locate, confirm, apply. This combo supports that approach by giving you the NEC 2023 and a study guide that keeps you organized.
How to study with this combo (a realistic weekly structure)
High-value NEC areas to drill for South Dakota Electrical Contractor readiness
How to use the tabs during study
When you approach preparation this way, you get two benefits: better exam performance and stronger day-to-day code confidence in the field.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians by turning a big licensing goal into a clear, workable study system. Instead of scattered studying and hoping the right topics show up, you get a trade-focused approach that keeps your preparation anchored to the code and the skills exams actually measure.
Your goal is mastery: strong understanding, accurate application, and the ability to prove it in an exam setting. This combo is built to help you study with purpose and build momentum.
Yes. South Dakota’s Electrical Commission publishes that testing is based on the 2023 NEC, and this combo includes the NEC 2023 paperback.
South Dakota’s master-level track is commonly associated with the Electrical Contractor level. The ICC South Dakota bulletin lists the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam as a 100-question, open-book exam with a 5-hour time limit.
Yes. The ICC South Dakota bulletin lists the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam as open book.
The ICC South Dakota bulletin lists 100 multiple-choice questions for the 530 Electrical Contractor exam.
The bulletin lists a 5-hour time limit for the open-book Electrical Contractor exam.
The primary reference listed is NFPA 70: National Electrical Code, 2023. The bulletin also lists Ugly’s Electrical References (any edition) as an additional reference used in exam development.
Tabs help you build faster navigation by organizing major code areas so you can locate Articles, sections, and tables more efficiently while practicing questions. Over time, repeated lookups turn into “muscle memory,” which improves speed and confidence.
The South Dakota Electrical Commission describes a progression that includes 8,000 hours as a licensed apprentice to write the journeyman exam, then an additional 4,000 hours as a licensed journeyman (including a minimum of 2,000 commercial hours) to write the electrical contractor exam.
Focus on short, consistent sessions. Apply the tabs, work a small set of practice questions, and always locate the NEC section that supports the correct answer. Consistency plus code lookups usually produces better results than long, infrequent study sessions.