Hawaii 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

Hawaii 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

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Hawaii 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

Hawaii 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams + 2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

Hawaii calls it the Journey Worker Electrician license, but the goal is the same: prove you can work to code, make safe decisions, and apply the NEC with confidence. The exam is timed, detail-heavy, and designed to test how you perform under pressure—not just what you’ve seen on the job.

This Hawaii 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built for electricians who want a clear plan and measurable progress. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to help you sharpen the skills that most often decide pass/fail:

  • Fast code navigation so you can locate the controlling rule without wasting minutes.
  • Clean accuracy so you avoid misses caused by misreads, missed exceptions, and rushed calculations.
  • Steady pacing so you keep collecting points from start to finish—even when a question tries to slow you down.

Practice exams turn study time into performance training. Instead of re-reading code hoping it sticks, you build the exact test-day rhythm the exam rewards: read the scenario, identify the topic, confirm the rule, answer, and move on. After enough repetition, the exam stops feeling unfamiliar and starts feeling like something you’ve already done.

Trusted by 50k electricians reflects a simple truth: repetition works. When you complete multiple exam-style runs, you learn the patterns in how questions are written, where the answers live, and what details the test is trying to make you overlook.

Exam Details

Hawaii’s Electrician Examinations Candidate Information Bulletin (PSI) lists the Journey Worker Electrician exam as a computer-based test with the following structure:

  • Exam fee: $95
  • Number of questions: 70
  • Minimum passing score: 70%
  • Time allowed: 180 minutes
  • Testing format: Computer-based testing at PSI test sites

The bulletin also provides the test content breakdown for Journey Worker Electrician candidates, including:

  • General Electrical Knowledge (10)
  • Service, Feeders, and Branch Circuits (10)
  • Grounding and Bonding (10)
  • Conductors and Cables (10)
  • Raceways and Boxes (6)
  • Special Occupancies, Conditions, and Equipment (6)
  • Electrical Power, Motors, and Equipment for General Use (6)
  • Low Voltage and Communication Circuits (4)
  • Lighting (4)
  • Safety Information (4)

This mix is exactly why practice tests are so effective: your score depends on performing across a broad blueprint—code knowledge, safety rules, and installation decisions—under a clock.

Open Book Test

Yes—the PSI bulletin states: “This examination is OPEN BOOK.” It also states the examination center will provide the reference material used during the test. Open book is an advantage only if you’ve trained for it the right way. If you try to “look up everything,” the clock will beat you. If you practice smart, open book becomes a speed tool.

Open-book success is built on repeatable habits:

  • Keyword recognition: Identify the key term(s) that point to the right code area before you touch the book.
  • One-purpose lookups: Use the book to confirm the controlling requirement—then answer and move on.
  • Exception awareness: Many misses happen when an exception flips the rule. Practice trains you to check exceptions consistently.
  • Time discipline: Don’t let one time-sink question steal three easy ones. Keep momentum, then return if time allows.

This guide’s practice-first structure is designed to build those habits through repetition. Each practice exam helps you get faster at identifying where to look, how to confirm quickly, and when to move forward.

Licensing Steps

Hawaii’s electrician licensing is handled through the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) Professional and Vocational Licensing Division. PSI’s bulletin explains you cannot schedule until the Board approves your application, and it notes that eligibility is valid for 2 years once approved.

A practical path to the Hawaii Journey Worker Electrician license typically looks like this:

  1. Meet the minimum experience and education requirements for the Journey Worker Electrician examination.
  2. Submit your application to DCCA PVL for Board review.
  3. Receive approval to test (you cannot register until you are approved).
  4. Pay the exam fee and schedule with PSI for a test site date and time.
  5. Prepare with timed, open-book practice exams so your navigation and pacing are exam-ready.
  6. Take and pass the examination and complete any final licensing steps required for issuance.

This prep product supports the step that most directly impacts your timeline: passing the exam by improving how you perform under time pressure.

State Requirements

Hawaii’s minimum requirements for the Journey Worker Electrician examination are set in state law. Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) Chapter 448E describes eligibility that includes:

  • Age requirement: at least 18 years of age.
  • Experience requirement: at least five years full-time (or equivalent), but not less than 10,000 hours, in residential or commercial wiring work under the supervision of a journey worker or supervising electrician.
  • Education requirement: satisfactory completion of 240 hours of electrical academic coursework accepted by a University of Hawaii community college offering an appropriate program of study.

Once you’ve earned the experience and schooling, your next job is to demonstrate exam-ready performance: accurate interpretation, efficient lookups, and steady pacing. That’s exactly what practice exams train.

Reference Books

  • National Electrical Code (NEC), 2020 edition
    Listed by PSI as a reference that will be provided by the examination center for the Journey Worker Electrician open-book exam.
  • Code of Federal Regulations – 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), with latest available amendments
    Listed by PSI as an exam reference option for safety-related content.
  • Code of Federal Regulations – 29 CFR Part 1926 Selections by PSI, with latest available amendments
    Listed by PSI as an alternative reference option for OSHA content.

Test Information and Study Materials

The fastest way to get ready for a timed open-book exam is to practice in the same format you’ll face on test day, then review what you miss until you stop missing it. That’s why this guide includes 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams: repeated reps that build speed, accuracy, and consistency.

Use the exams in a score-building progression:

  • Phase 1: Baseline + weak-area map (Practice Exams 1–4). Take your first exams at a steady pace. Track what you miss and what takes too long. Don’t just mark “wrong”—mark why: misread wording, missed exception, slow lookup, wrong table, or rushed math.
  • Phase 2: Build your open-book rhythm (Practice Exams 5–8). Tighten your routine: identify the topic → locate the likely NEC location → confirm the controlling rule → answer → move on. The goal is fewer “wandering lookups.”
  • Phase 3: Train pacing under pressure (Practice Exams 9–12). Add realistic timing. Practice protecting the clock and keeping momentum when a question tries to turn into a time trap.
  • Phase 4: Prove readiness (2 Full Final Exams). Treat these as dress rehearsals: timed, uninterrupted, exam-like conditions. Then review every missed question and fix the pattern before your scheduled test date.

High-impact review routine (the part that raises your score):

  • Find the controlling rule for every missed question and read it carefully, including exceptions.
  • Label the cause so you stop repeating it: misread, missed exception, slow search, wrong table, rushed calculation.
  • Redo the lookup until you can find the answer quickly and confidently.
  • Retest soon so the correction becomes a habit.

Where Journey Worker candidates often gain points fastest:

  • Grounding and bonding: practice builds consistency because many questions hinge on one condition or exception.
  • Services, feeders, and branch circuits: speed improves when you know where the common rules and tables live.
  • Conductors and wiring methods: repeated exposure reduces detail-based misses.
  • Safety: treat safety questions as a scoring opportunity—familiarity makes them faster.
  • Special occupancies and conditions: practice prevents surprise and reduces overthinking.

By the time you reach the final exams, the goal is simple: the test should feel familiar—familiar pacing, familiar question style, and a workflow you’ve practiced enough times to trust.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep supports Hawaii Journey Worker candidates with preparation that is structured, practical, and performance-focused. You already have trade experience—this guide helps you show it under exam conditions.

  • Organized study guidance: a clear practice-and-review routine so you always know what to do next.
  • Trade-focused review: reinforces applied understanding and code-based decision-making.
  • Practice-oriented preparation: repeated exams build speed, accuracy, and pacing together.
  • Reference navigation support: open-book skill improves through repetition and intentional lookups.
  • Confidence-building structure: full exam simulations reduce surprises and help you stay calm on test day.

This is prep built for working electricians: practice like the exam, review what you miss, correct the pattern, repeat—then prove readiness with full finals.

FAQ Section

Is the Hawaii Journey Worker Electrician exam open book?

Yes. PSI’s Hawaii Electrician Candidate Information Bulletin states: “This examination is OPEN BOOK,” and it indicates the exam center provides the listed references.

How many questions are on the exam and how long do I get?

The PSI bulletin lists the Journey Worker Electrician exam as 70 questions with 180 minutes allowed and a 70% minimum passing score.

What is the exam fee?

The PSI bulletin lists the examination fee as $95.

What experience is required to qualify for the Journey Worker Electrician exam?

Hawaii law requires at least five years full-time (or equivalent), but not less than 10,000 hours, in residential or commercial wiring work under supervision, along with 240 hours of accepted electrical academic coursework.

What content areas should I expect on the exam?

The PSI bulletin lists content areas such as general electrical knowledge; services, feeders, and branch circuits; grounding and bonding; conductors and cables; raceways and boxes; special occupancies/conditions/equipment; motors and equipment; low voltage/communication circuits; lighting; and safety information.

How should I use the 2 full final exams?

Use them near the end of your prep as full dress rehearsals. Take each final timed and uninterrupted, then review every missed question and retest the topics that cost you points.

Does this guide guarantee I will pass?

No. Results depend on your preparation, experience, and test-day performance. This guide is designed to make your prep more effective by improving open-book speed, accuracy, and pacing through realistic practice exams.

Where can I find more electrician exam prep?

You can find additional electrician exam prep resources at 1examprep.com.