Texas Master Electrician candidates don’t just need “more studying.” They need the right kind of studying—practice that builds speed in the code book, consistency in calculations, and confidence answering questions the way the Texas exam is actually structured. This combo is designed to help you do exactly that with three essentials in one coordinated set:
The best part about preparing for an open-book exam is that you don’t have to memorize every line of the NEC—you have to get good at using it. The challenge is time pressure and precision: choosing the right article quickly, reading carefully, catching the small conditions that change the answer, and completing calculations without wasting minutes on the setup.
This combo supports a practical, repeatable study routine that fits real electrician schedules:
If you’ve ever felt confident in the field but frustrated by exam questions, you’re not alone. The exam measures how well you apply rules under controlled conditions, not how quickly you can rough-in a house or troubleshoot a real jobsite issue. This set helps you practice the exam skill: consistent performance under the clock, with the NEC in hand.
Texas electrical licensing is regulated by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). TDLR requires eligibility approval before scheduling the licensing exam, and the exam is administered through PSI. The PSI Candidate Information Bulletin for Texas Electricians (updated April 20, 2026) explains that the Master Electrician written exam is split into two portions: NEC Knowledge and Calculations. You must pass each portion with at least 70%. The time for one portion does not roll over to the other portion.
TDLR also states that exam scores are provided at the test center and transmitted to TDLR electronically, and that candidates may retake the exam as many times as needed (with additional exam fees per attempt).
Texas makes it clear: the electrician examination is OPEN BOOK. TDLR states candidates may reference the National Electrical Code®, 2023 Edition and are responsible for bringing their own NEC to the test site. TDLR also notes that soft-bound editions are allowed, while loose-leaf, spiralbound, or ring-bound copies are not allowed.
The PSI Candidate Information Bulletin adds important details about what is and isn’t allowed with your NEC:
That “open-book” label doesn’t make the exam easy—it changes what the exam rewards. The top skill is fast, accurate navigation:
This combo supports that open-book reality by pairing a Master study guide with a calculations guide and the exact NEC edition TDLR identifies for the exam.
TDLR outlines a straightforward path for the Master Electrician license. In practical terms, the process typically looks like this:
This combo is built to make the testing part more manageable—because once you’re approved to test, performance comes down to preparation: your lookup speed, your calculation process, and your ability to stay consistent across both portions.
TDLR publishes clear eligibility requirements for Master Electrician applicants. To apply for a Texas Master Electrician license, TDLR states you must:
TDLR explains that experience must be documented and signed by each supervising Master Electrician on an Experience Verification Form, and that TDLR may contact individuals to verify experience. TDLR also states that applicants must apply by mail for the initial license application and submit a completed Master Electrician License Application Form with a non-refundable $45 application fee. Electrician licenses are valid for one year from the date of issuance and must be renewed annually (renewals may be completed online).
These requirements tell you something important about the Master level in Texas: the state expects depth of hands-on experience and exam-ready competency. Your study routine should match that expectation—especially on service work, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, wiring methods, motors, and special conditions.
Texas exam rules emphasize bringing the correct NEC format to the testing center. TDLR states the exam is open book and allows referencing the NEC 2023. PSI’s bulletin also details compliance expectations (soft-bound only, no homemade tabs, no additional papers, and no NEC Handbook).
The PSI Candidate Information Bulletin doesn’t just confirm the two-portion format—it also lists a detailed content outline for each portion. Use that outline to focus your prep where it counts.
Master NEC Knowledge portion (75 items / 150 minutes): The bulletin outlines topics including:
Master Calculations portion (33 items / 170 minutes): The bulletin outlines calculation coverage across many of the same categories, including services and separately derived systems, feeders, branch circuits, motors/generators, and more.
How to study with this combo (a proven, electrician-friendly routine):
1) Train your open-book workflow (NEC practice days)
Open-book success comes from disciplined navigation. Practice with your NEC paperback in front of you:
2) Build a repeatable calculation process (calculation practice days)
Calculation questions become manageable when the setup becomes consistent. Use the Electrician Calculations Study Guide to train a standard method:
3) Use a weekly schedule that’s realistic
That last step is the difference-maker. Most people keep doing what they’re already good at. The fastest improvement comes from reworking what you missed until those weak topics become dependable.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians with preparation that matches how Texas tests: open-book NEC navigation, clear rules-based decision-making, and calculations that must be solved consistently under time limits. This combo is designed to help you build repeatable skills instead of relying on scattered studying.
The goal is simple and realistic: help you prepare with consistency so your exam performance reflects your experience and your practice.
Yes. This combo includes the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback along with the 2023 Texas Master Electrician Study Guide and the 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide.
TDLR states the electrician examination is open book and allows candidates to reference the National Electrical Code®, 2023 Edition. PSI’s Candidate Information Bulletin also describes open-book reference rules for the NEC.
TDLR states candidates may reference the National Electrical Code®, 2023 Edition for the examination, and PSI’s bulletin lists the NEC 2023 as the allowed reference.
PSI’s Candidate Information Bulletin states the Master Electrician written exam has two portions: NEC Knowledge and Calculations, and you must pass each portion with a minimum score of 70%.
PSI’s Candidate Information Bulletin lists 75 items and 150 minutes for the NEC Knowledge portion, and 33 items and 170 minutes for the Calculations portion. The bulletin also notes some items are non-scored and that time for one portion does not roll over to the other.
TDLR states you must have held a Journeyman Electrician license for at least two years and must be able to show completion of 12,000 hours of on-the-job training under the supervision of a Master Electrician licensed in Texas.
Yes. TDLR states soft-bound NEC copies are allowed and that loose-leaf, spiralbound, or ring-bound copies are not allowed. PSI’s bulletin adds rules such as no homemade tabs, no additional paper attached to the code book, and that the NEC Handbook is not allowed.
No prep product can guarantee an outcome. This combo is designed to help you prepare with structure, improve NEC navigation speed, strengthen calculations, and build consistent exam-ready habits that support strong performance.