If you’re preparing for the Michigan Journeyman Electrician exam, you’re not just studying electrical theory—you’re training for a timed, code-driven performance test. Michigan’s exam expects you to apply the National Electrical Code (NEC) and Michigan-specific laws and rules accurately, under pressure, without getting trapped in slow lookups or overthinking.
This Michigan 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built for electricians who want preparation that feels practical. You’ll work through 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to help you improve the skills that typically raise scores fastest:
Practice exams don’t just test what you know—they show you how you perform when the clock is running. That’s the difference between “I understand the material” and “I’m ready for the Michigan journeyman test.”
Trusted by 50k electricians reflects a simple truth: repetition works. When you practice in the same format you’ll face on test day, the process becomes familiar. You stop guessing where things are in the code. You stop burning time on questions you could have answered faster. You build confidence that’s based on results, not hope.
Michigan’s Bureau of Construction Codes (within the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs) uses PSI to administer licensing examinations. Once Michigan approves your eligibility, PSI schedules and proctors your exam at approved testing centers. Michigan’s PSI bulletin lists the following for the Electrical Journeyman exam:
Michigan’s PSI bulletin also explains what the journeyman exam is designed to test: knowledge of Michigan’s Skilled Trades Regulation Act and rules, Michigan Electrical Code Rules Part 8, the State Construction Code Act and related adopted codes, plus the theory relative to those codes. The exam content includes practical installation knowledge such as grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, wiring methods and installations, boxes and cabinets, special occupancies, load calculations, box and raceway fill, power-limited circuits, general trade knowledge, and electrical theory.
From a preparation standpoint, that means your best results come from two lanes of study working together:
Michigan’s PSI bulletin states: “The examination is OPEN BOOK.” It also notes that while other NEC editions may be used during the examination, the items are based on the 2023 edition. Open book can be a big advantage—but only if you train the right way. If you try to look up everything slowly, you’ll run out of time. If you practice smart, open book becomes a speed tool.
Michigan’s bulletin outlines rules that should shape how you prepare and how you handle your materials:
What open-book success looks like on a timed Michigan journeyman exam:
This study guide’s exam-based structure is designed for open-book performance. The more you practice in realistic sets, the faster your lookups become and the less time you waste searching.
Michigan’s licensing process runs through the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) and the Bureau of Construction Codes. PSI handles scheduling and proctoring once you are approved to test. A practical journeyman path typically follows these steps:
Michigan’s PSI bulletin also notes attempt limits for journeyman candidates: journeyman candidates are limited to 2 attempts within 1 year under the PSI scheduling procedures described in the 2026 bulletin.
Michigan law sets baseline qualifications for an electrical journeyman’s license. Under Michigan’s Skilled Trades Regulation Act provisions for electrical licensure, Michigan requires (among other things) that an applicant be at least 20 years old and have qualifying experience. One pathway described in Michigan law is at least 8,000 hours of experience obtained over a period of at least 4 years related to electrical construction or maintenance of buildings or electrical wiring or equipment, under appropriate supervision.
In the real world, your experience is your foundation—but the exam is where you prove you can apply code and rules cleanly. That’s why practice-based prep is so effective. It turns your field experience into test performance by training you to interpret questions, navigate references, and answer confidently under time pressure.
The most efficient way to prepare for a timed open-book exam is to practice the same task you’ll do on test day—then review what you miss until you stop missing it. That’s the purpose of the 12 practice exams and 2 full final exams in this guide: repeated reps that build speed, accuracy, and consistency.
Here’s a practical, score-building way to use the exams:
The review routine that actually raises scores:
Where candidates often gain points quickly:
By the time you reach the final exams, the goal is simple: the test should feel familiar. Familiar format. Familiar pacing. Familiar process. That’s what practice-based prep gives you.
1 Exam Prep supports Michigan journeyman candidates with preparation that is structured, practical, and performance-focused. You already have hands-on trade knowledge—this guide helps you convert that knowledge into exam-day execution.
This is prep built for working electricians: practice, review, correct the pattern, repeat—then prove readiness with full finals.
Yes. Michigan’s PSI Candidate Information Bulletin states: “The examination is OPEN BOOK,” and it lists the reference materials allowed in the examination site.
The Michigan PSI bulletin lists the Electrical Journeyman exam as 80 questions with 150 minutes allowed, and a minimum passing score of 75%.
Michigan’s PSI bulletin lists the NEC, 2016 PA 407, 1972 PA 230, and Michigan Electrical Code Rules Part 8 as allowed reference materials. It also states the NEC Handbook is not allowed.
The PSI bulletin notes exam items are based on the 2023 NEC edition (even though it states other editions may be used during the examination). Most candidates prepare using the edition the items are based on so practice matches the exam.
The 2026 Michigan PSI bulletin lists the examination fee as $100.
Michigan’s 2026 PSI bulletin states master, journeyman, and sign specialist candidates are limited to 2 attempts within 1 year, and Michigan’s PSI information explains candidates must pass within one year of the eligibility date or re-apply.
Michigan law describes journeyman licensure requirements that include being at least 20 years old and having qualifying experience. One pathway includes at least 8,000 hours of experience obtained over at least 4 years under appropriate supervision.
Use them late in your study plan as full dress rehearsals. Take each final in one sitting with realistic timing, then review every missed question and target those weak areas before your scheduled exam date.
No. Results depend on your preparation, experience, and performance on exam day. This guide is designed to make your prep more effective by building open-book speed, accuracy, and pacing through realistic practice exams.