North Dakota’s Master Electrician license is about more than “knowing the code.” It represents the ability to take responsibility for electrical work—planning, supervising, and making code decisions that stand up to inspection and real-world job conditions. The exam reflects that expectation. It’s designed to test how well you can apply fundamental electrical knowledge, North Dakota laws/rules and wiring standards, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code (NEC) under time pressure.
This North Dakota 2023 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built around the most effective way to prepare for a timed licensing exam: practice. With 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams, you’ll train the skills that matter most on exam day—clean decision-making, strong pacing, and confident performance across the topics North Dakota tests.
Practice-based preparation is especially valuable because many candidates don’t miss questions due to a lack of field experience. They miss points because of exam habits:
This guide is designed to correct those issues through repetition. When you practice the way you’ll test, your confidence grows and your performance becomes consistent—exactly what you want when you sit for a master-level exam.
Who this is for:
The North Dakota State Electrical Board (NDSEB) states that examinations are based on fundamental electricity, Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code. NDSEB lists the passing grade as 70%.
NDSEB also outlines important timing rules that affect how you should plan your schedule:
Items provided by NDSEB for the exam:
Exam timing (Master): NDSEB lists two timed portions for the Master exam:
That structure is a big deal for your prep. You’re training for performance in two different modes: a closed-book pace where accuracy and recall matter most, and an open-book pace where you must stay efficient and avoid time traps.
Retest waiting periods: NDSEB lists waiting periods based on your score:
North Dakota’s Master exam includes an open-book portion. NDSEB specifically lists the Master exam timing as Master Closed (1 hour) and Master Open (3.5 hours), with code books provided by NDSEB. That means your success depends on two complementary skills:
How to make open-book time work in your favor:
NDSEB describes a clear path for applying and testing. While your documentation depends on your work history, the exam-centered flow generally looks like this:
NDSEB’s Master qualification standards are direct and specific. NDSEB states that a Master electrician must have completed one (1) year’s experience as a licensed journeyman and must have at least two thousand (2,000) hours of experience working as a licensed journeyman electrician under the supervision of a contracting master electrician or master of record.
NDSEB also describes three categories of Master electricians:
Reciprocity note (helpful for planning): NDSEB states North Dakota is part of a multi-state reciprocal licensing group for Master and Journeyman electricians. NDSEB lists Master reciprocity agreements with Iowa, Minnesota, and South Dakota, and it lists a requirement to document experience under supervision (including 10,000 hours for a Master) as part of reciprocity requirements.
North Dakota’s Master exam is built around both knowledge and performance. With a closed-book portion and an open-book portion, you need a study plan that trains both styles instead of leaning on only one. This guide is built to do exactly that—by using repetition and timed practice to strengthen recall, improve accuracy, and build exam-day rhythm.
How to use the 12 practice exams (your score-building routine):
How to use the 2 full final exams (your readiness routine):
High-impact strategies that help on North Dakota’s Master format:
Want a simple weekly structure? Use a rotation that mirrors performance goals: one timed practice exam, one focused review session (miss list + weak topics), then another timed exam. Finish the cycle with a full final exam once you’ve tightened the major gaps.
1 Exam Prep supports North Dakota Master Electrician candidates by focusing on what licensing exams really are: performance tests. You don’t just need trade experience—you need a repeatable method that holds up under time pressure, across both closed-book and open-book exam conditions.
This is preparation designed for working electricians: practice, review, correct, repeat—then rehearse with full finals so you walk into the North Dakota Master exam ready to perform.
NDSEB lists the passing grade as 70%.
Yes. NDSEB lists Master Closed as 1 hour and Master Open as 3.5 hours.
NDSEB states examinations are based on fundamental electricity, Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code.
Yes. NDSEB lists code books, calculators, and pencils as items it provides for the exam.
NDSEB states you must test within six (6) months of receiving an exam invite.
NDSEB lists waiting periods based on your score: 60–69 has no waiting period, 50–59 has a 3-month waiting period, and 0–49 has a 6-month waiting period.
NDSEB states a Master electrician must have completed one year’s experience as a licensed journeyman and must have at least 2,000 hours of experience working as a licensed journeyman under the supervision of a contracting master or master of record.
NDSEB lists three categories: contracting master, master of record, and non-contracting master, each with specific responsibilities and insurance/supervision rules.
Use them late in your study plan as full dress rehearsals. Take each final timed and uninterrupted, then review results to target the last weak areas before your scheduled exam date.