Preparing for the Hawaii General Building Contractor (B) trade exam means mastering a wide range of building knowledge—from plan reading and estimating to concrete, carpentry, roofing, safety, and moisture protection. Because the B exam is broad, the biggest challenge for many candidates isn’t effort—it’s organization. You can spend hours reading and still feel unsure if you don’t have a clear way to find, connect, and retain the most test-relevant ideas.
This Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package is designed to make your study time more efficient by helping you stay structured as you work through the official reference materials used to develop the exam. The books in this package are the same titles listed for the Hawaii B exam references, and your set is prepared to support faster review and clearer topic separation while you study. Highlighting helps key definitions, rules, and best-practice concepts stand out. Tabbing helps you break large references into predictable sections so you can move through topics with less friction during review.
Important: The Hawaii B – General Building Contractor exam is a closed-book exam. That means these references are for study and preparation only—they are not used in the testing center. Highlighting and tabbing are still extremely valuable for closed-book preparation because they improve learning efficiency, help you build cleaner summaries, and make repeated review easier. Instead of hunting through dense chapters every time you revisit a topic, you can focus on the most important information quickly and reinforce recall through repetition.
If you want a book package that supports a disciplined study routine—learn, summarize, recall, and repeat—this set is built for you.
The Hawaii B – General Building Contractor trade exam is published with the following format:
The published exam content areas and item counts are:
Because the exam spans multiple building systems, you get the best results when you study by exam category rather than reading one book cover-to-cover. A focused plan trains consistent performance across all areas, which is usually what drives passing scores on broad contractor exams.
This is a closed book examination. The reference materials used to develop the exam questions are not allowed in the examination center. That makes your study strategy different from open-book trade tests: you’re not training “lookup speed,” you’re training understanding and recall.
That’s where a Highlighted & Tabbed package helps. Even though you won’t use the books during the test, you will use them repeatedly while studying. When content is organized and key ideas stand out, you can:
The goal is to reach a point where you can answer most questions from stable fundamentals—without hesitation and without second-guessing.
Hawaii contractor licensing is overseen by the Contractors License Board under the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA), Professional and Vocational Licensing (PVL) Division. The trade exam is one part of the licensing process, and exam scheduling occurs after application approval.
While licensing pathways can differ by situation (new license vs. adding a classification, entity vs. sole proprietor, and responsible managing employee arrangements), most candidates follow an exam-related sequence like this:
Because the B exam is closed book, it’s wise to begin studying early—even before your exam date is booked—so you can use repetition (the real driver of recall) instead of relying on last-minute cramming.
Hawaii contractor licenses renew on a fixed biennial schedule. All licenses are subject to renewal by September 30 of every even-numbered year, regardless of issuance date. Once you are licensed, keeping renewal timing on your calendar helps you stay compliant and avoid lapses that can affect your ability to legally contract.
For exam planning, the approval-first process matters. Since you cannot register until your application is approved, many candidates study while their application is in process. That approach gives you more time for repetition and helps you avoid compressing a broad exam into a short, stressful study window.
The Hawaii B – General Building exam reference list includes the following titles as study references (not allowed in the examination center). This package includes the books you specified:
Edition alignment note: The published Hawaii B reference list specifies editions for some titles. If your package uses a different edition than the edition listed in the bulletin (for example, a newer textbook edition), it can still be helpful for learning, but it’s best to confirm your study materials match the current exam bulletin so terminology and emphasis align.
Study by exam category (not by book). The B exam is broad, so studying one book at a time can feel scattered. A better approach is to build a simple study binder or notes system with the same categories as the exam outline:
Use the “Learn → Summarize → Recall” routine. Closed-book success improves when you train recall consistently:
Why highlighting and tabbing helps for closed-book exams. When content is organized, your study becomes more repeatable. Instead of spending time relocating information, you spend time reinforcing it. That supports:
Train “best answer” reasoning. Many contractor exam questions are not asking what is merely possible—they’re asking what is most appropriate, safest, or best practice. During study, ask yourself:
Build pacing comfort. With 80 questions in 240 minutes, you can maintain a calm rhythm. Don’t allow one uncertain question to consume too much time. Make your best decision based on fundamentals and move forward—consistent performance across all categories is what usually drives passing scores.
1 Exam Prep helps you reach your Hawaii General Building (B) goal by supporting a structured, trade-focused approach to closed-book exam preparation. Instead of relying on reference lookup strategies, you build stable understanding and recall through organized topic review, practice-oriented preparation, and confidence-building repetition.
Our approach emphasizes:
Results depend on your effort and exam-day performance, but a realistic study structure and consistent repetition can make your preparation time more productive and help you feel ready when it’s time to test.
Yes. The published exam information states the B – General Building Contractor trade exam is closed book and the reference materials are not allowed in the examination center.
The published exam format lists 80 questions with 240 minutes allowed.
The minimum passing score is published as 75%.
The published content areas include plan reading and estimating, sitework and foundations, concrete, carpentry, associated trades, roofing, safety (OSHA), and thermal and moisture protection.
No. Because the exam is closed book, reference books are not used in the testing center. Highlighting and tabbing are study tools designed to make preparation more efficient.
Yes. It helps you study faster by making key concepts stand out and keeping topics organized for repeated review. That supports better summaries, stronger recall drills, and more efficient study cycles.
Whenever possible, yes. Matching editions helps ensure terminology and emphasis align with the reference framework used to develop the exam questions.
Hawaii contractor licenses renew on a fixed schedule and are subject to renewal by September 30 of every even-numbered year, regardless of issuance date.