Colorado’s Journeyman Wireman exam is designed to confirm what the trade demands every day: safe decision-making, accurate code application, and the ability to solve real electrical scenarios without guessing. On exam day, though, you’re doing it under a timer, in a testing center, with questions written to test precision—especially when multiple answers look “close.”
This Colorado 2023 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built around the most reliable way electricians sharpen exam performance: repeated, realistic practice. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams to help you build speed, accuracy, and confidence across the same job-task areas Colorado tests.
Trusted by 50k electricians, this prep approach focuses on practical improvement—learning how to read questions the way the exam expects, locating the right NEC section efficiently, avoiding common “exception” mistakes, and tightening up calculations so you don’t lose points to setup errors.
Whether you’re testing soon or building toward your exam window, your goal is the same: make the exam environment feel familiar. When you’ve practiced enough exam-style questions, you stop feeling surprised by wording, you stop wasting time searching for code sections, and you start performing with a steady pace from the first question to the last.
Built for Colorado’s exam style: mixed-topic, NEC-driven questions with dedicated coverage for motors, transformers, PV, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, and calculations—supported by repeated practice for real test-day pacing.
Colorado’s Journeyman Wireman licensing exam is administered by PSI. The Candidate Information Bulletin outlines the structure as:
The bulletin also provides a clear, job-task-style content outline for Journeyman Wireman. Your prep should reflect that by training across the full exam mix instead of only drilling favorite topics. This study guide supports that approach by giving you multiple rounds of practice—so the big categories show up repeatedly and your performance becomes more consistent over time.
Colorado’s Journeyman Wireman exam content areas (as outlined by PSI) include:
This guide is designed to help you develop a repeatable test-day process: read carefully, identify the topic, use the code effectively when you need it, and keep your pace steady so you don’t burn time on a few difficult items.
Yes—Colorado’s Journeyman Wireman exam is open book in the sense that you are allowed to use code references during the exam. Colorado’s PSI bulletin states the National Electrical Code (NEC) book and a Formula Page are provided at the test center.
Colorado also lists strict reference rules that matter for how you prepare:
That’s exactly why an “open book” strategy must be trained—not assumed. Open book doesn’t remove pressure; it shifts it. The exam rewards electricians who can:
One important Colorado detail for 2026 candidates: PSI indicates that the exams reference the 2023 NEC now, and states Effective 8/1/2026, all exam questions are consistent with the 2026 NEC. This guide’s practice-first design helps you prepare the skill that matters either way—fast, accurate code use—while you align your final study push to the NEC edition being used for your specific test date.
Colorado’s licensure path is overseen by the Colorado State Electrical Board (under the Department of Regulatory Agencies). The general sequence is:
This study guide supports the step where performance matters most: the exam itself. When you’ve practiced enough exam-style questions, you reduce surprises and increase consistency—two of the biggest factors in successful testing outcomes.
Colorado publishes journeyman licensure requirements through the Electrical Board’s applications and forms page. For the Journeyman path by examination, Colorado lists key requirements including:
These requirements are more than paperwork—they shape your prep timeline. If you’re nearing eligibility, it helps to build a study routine that fits your schedule so you can test when you’re ready, not when you’re rushing. If you’re already eligible and scheduled, a practice-exam plan keeps your progress measurable: you can see weak areas, target them, and then confirm improvement with the next round of exams.
Colorado’s exam is broad by design. Even if you work primarily in one environment, the test expects entry-level journeyman competence across multiple job-task areas. The smartest way to prepare is to train like the exam behaves: mixed topics, repeated NEC lookups, and consistent calculation methods.
Here’s a practical way to use your 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams as a complete prep system:
What practice exams do especially well is expose “small leaks” that cost big points: mixing up similar code rules, overlooking a single word like “where required,” missing an exception, or setting up a calculation incorrectly. Once you see those patterns, you can correct them—and then prove the correction by performing better on the next exam.
1 Exam Prep is designed for electricians who want preparation that feels trade-relevant and organized—without wasted time. Instead of guessing what to study next, you follow a practice-driven structure that helps you improve in measurable ways.
The goal is realistic readiness: stronger code navigation, cleaner calculations, fewer avoidable mistakes, and a steady test-day process that helps you perform at your best.
Yes. Colorado’s PSI bulletin indicates the NEC book and a Formula Page are provided at the test center for use during the exam. Colorado also lists strict rules for the provided references, including no writing, highlighting, underlining, or indexing on the materials.
Colorado’s Journeyman Wireman exam is listed as 90 scored items, with up to 10 non-scored items included.
The bulletin lists 240 minutes for the scored portion, plus 30 minutes allotted for the non-scored items time added to the exam session.
Colorado lists a 70% passing requirement, shown as 63 items correct to pass for the scored portion.
PSI indicates the exams reference the 2023 NEC currently, and states that effective 8/1/2026, all exam questions are consistent with the 2026 NEC. Your final prep should align to the NEC edition used for your exam date.
Colorado’s Electrical Board applications page lists 8,000 hours of experience earned in no less than 4 years, including 2,000 hours in commercial/industrial work, plus 288 hours of classroom education required for all applicants. Experience must be documented on the Board’s Affidavit of Experience form completed by the supervising electrical contractor.
Speed comes from repetition with intention. When you miss a code-based question, review it by locating the exact NEC section that supports the correct answer, then practice finding that location again later. Over time, you’ll recognize where information lives in the code and you’ll waste less time searching.
Start with one timed diagnostic exam, track your missed-question patterns, and then use the remaining practice exams to target weak areas while building pace. Save the two final exams for full test simulations near the end of your prep.