In Michigan, the Master Electrician license is more than a title—it’s the credential tied to higher responsibility, code compliance oversight, and the professional authority that contractors depend on. If you’re ready to move up, your study plan should reflect what the Michigan master exam actually demands: strong NEC navigation, clean electrical theory, and the ability to apply Michigan rules and statutes accurately under time pressure.
This Michigan 2023 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built for practice-first preparation. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams to help you develop the exact performance skills that matter on test day—fast lookups, careful reading, steady pacing, and fewer avoidable mistakes.
Many experienced electricians don’t struggle because they lack trade knowledge. They struggle because the exam format exposes weak spots in timing, code-book navigation, and small interpretation errors. With repeated practice, you build a repeatable exam rhythm:
Who this is for:
Michigan’s Bureau of Construction Codes (BCC) uses PSI to administer the Master Electrician examination. PSI’s candidate bulletin lists the Master Electrician exam as:
The PSI bulletin explains that the master exam covers the additional knowledge required to plan and supervise electrical installations. It also lists the subject areas that commonly appear on the exam, including:
PSI also states that other editions of the NEC may be used during the examination, but the exam items are based on the 2023 edition. For many candidates, that means you must be comfortable applying NEC rules as written in the 2023 code, even if you’ve been working from a different edition on the job.
Yes—Michigan’s Master Electrician exam is open book. PSI states the exam is open book and identifies the specific reference materials that are allowed in the examination site. This is a major advantage for prepared candidates, but it only helps if you can navigate your references quickly and efficiently.
Allowed reference materials (per PSI):
Important open-book rules that affect your exam day strategy:
Open book doesn’t mean “look up everything.” It means the exam rewards the candidate who can identify the keyword, go directly to the right section, confirm the rule, and move on. That’s why practice exams are so effective—your speed and confidence come from repetition.
Michigan’s master licensing path is administered by the Bureau of Construction Codes (BCC). In general, your pathway includes meeting eligibility requirements, applying for examination approval, passing the PSI master exam, and completing the state licensing steps.
Once licensed, the master credential also plays a key role in how electrical contracting works in Michigan. Michigan’s licensing information explains that an Electrical Contractor license requires an associated Master Electrician, and that a Master Electrician can only associate with one Electrical Contractor at a time. Without an associated Master Electrician, an Electrical Contractor’s license is placed on hold.
Michigan’s official licensing information outlines the key requirements for Master Electrician licensure:
If your long-term goal is to operate a contracting business, Michigan’s Electrical Contractor rules also matter to your planning. The state explains that an Electrical Contractor license is required to do business as an electrician, and the contractor license must have an associated Master Electrician who is responsible for Michigan code compliance for installations of wiring and equipment. A master electrician can only associate with one electrical contractor at a time, and if the master is not associated, the contractor license goes on hold.
The Michigan master exam is short enough that time can disappear faster than expected. With 76 questions in 180 minutes, your average pace is roughly a little over two minutes per question—including time spent flipping to confirm NEC rules, reading tables, and double-checking details. Your prep should train you to protect your time.
How to use the 12 practice exams effectively:
How to use the 2 full final exams:
Michigan-specific test-day readiness tips:
1 Exam Prep supports Michigan Master Electrician candidates by keeping preparation organized, practice-driven, and realistic. Instead of scattered studying, you follow a structure that helps you measure improvement and build confidence where it counts: on timed, open-book exam questions.
This guide is designed to help you prepare effectively and professionally—so you can walk into PSI testing ready to perform your best.
Yes. PSI states the Michigan Master Electrician exam is open book and lists the specific reference materials allowed in the exam site.
PSI lists the Master Electrician exam as 76 questions.
PSI lists 180 minutes for the Master Electrician exam.
Michigan requires a minimum passing score of 75% on the master electrician exam.
PSI states the exam items are based on the 2023 edition of the NEC, even though other NEC editions may be used during the exam.
PSI lists the allowed references as the National Electrical Code®, 2016 PA 407, 1972 PA 230, and Michigan Electrical Code Rules Part 8. All references must be bound, and printed documents follow specific binding rules.
No. PSI states the NEC Handbook is not allowed, and candidates may not bring additional papers (loose or attached) with approved references. Writing or highlighting in references during the exam is also prohibited.
Michigan’s licensing information states master candidates must be at least 22, complete 4,000 hours as an electrical journey and hold the license at least 2 years, meet the total experience standard, and pass the master exam with at least 75%.
Michigan explains that Electrical Contractor licenses require an associated Master Electrician, and a Master Electrician can only associate with one Electrical Contractor at a time. Without an associated Master Electrician, the contractor license is put on hold.
Use them late in your prep as dress rehearsals. Take each one timed and uninterrupted, then review the results to target the last weak areas before your PSI exam.