If you’re preparing for Rhode Island’s master-level electrician testing, you’re not just studying code—you’re training for the responsibility that comes with leading electrical work at the contractor level. The exam is designed to confirm that you can apply the National Electrical Code (NEC) the way a jobsite leader must: accurately, consistently, and under time pressure.
This Rhode Island 2026 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built for serious, practice-driven preparation. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams to help you develop the exam-day skills that matter most in an open-book environment: strong NEC navigation, careful interpretation of wording, confident decisions, and steady pacing from the first question to the last.
Instead of spending your time rereading chapters and hoping it “sticks,” you’ll use a repeatable study method that works for real electricians:
Who this is for:
Rhode Island electrician examinations are overseen through the Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training (DLT), Division of Workforce Regulation and Safety, Professional Regulation Unit, under the Board of Examiners of Electricians.
Rhode Island’s Board regulations state that examinations are conducted in writing (and may include written and/or practical demonstrations), and the exam provisions are based on the edition of the National Electrical Code adopted by the Rhode Island State Building Code Standards Committee at the time of the examination. The Board regulations also state that applicants must achieve an average of at least 70% to obtain a license.
Because the exam is tied to the state-adopted NEC and requires a passing average, strong preparation is less about memorizing isolated facts and more about building reliable, repeatable performance: knowing where to look, confirming details quickly, and applying code language correctly.
This exam is open book, and the National Electrical Code (NEC) is permitted. Rhode Island’s Board regulations also make clear that referring to notes or books during an examination is only allowed by permission of the Board—so candidates should follow the exam-day instructions provided with their approval notice and bring only the permitted reference material in the allowed format.
Open-book exams reward the electrician who can navigate efficiently. The NEC becomes your tool—but only if you can move through it with purpose. That’s why practice exams are so effective: they train you to recognize what the question is asking, locate the relevant rule, and confirm the requirement without losing momentum.
Rhode Island’s “master-level” electrician pathway is typically associated with the Electrical Contractor credential (Certificate A). While your exact steps depend on the license type you’re pursuing, the state process commonly follows this flow:
Rhode Island’s Board of Examiners of Electricians regulations list multiple license types and corresponding certificate designations, including:
For master-level goals, most candidates are focused on the Electrical Contractor (Certificate A) exam pathway. Rhode Island’s electrician application instructions state:
Rhode Island’s Board regulations also include requirements tied to how contractor licensing connects to business structure. For example, the regulations describe requirements for an officer who holds a contractor license when operating under a corporate structure, and they describe the issuance of a firm or corporate certificate when conducting business under a firm or corporation name.
Rhode Island’s recommended electrician study material highlights the NEC as the key reference, and the state’s regulations tie exam content to the state-adopted NEC edition. That means your exam success depends on two things at the same time:
What practice exams help you improve:
How to use the 12 practice exams + 2 full final exams:
Open-book strategy that works: You don’t need to look up every question. Use the book to confirm uncertain details, verify table values, and double-check exceptions—then move on. Your score improves more from steady pacing than from spending too long trying to be perfect on a single question.
1 Exam Prep supports Rhode Island electricians by providing structured, practice-driven preparation that matches the way open-book licensing exams actually work. Instead of random studying, you follow a system that builds skill through repetition and review.
This guide is designed to help you study with intention, strengthen weak areas, and walk into your Rhode Island exam with a plan you’ve already practiced—without promising outcomes or shortcuts.
Yes. The exam is open book, and the National Electrical Code (NEC) is permitted. Candidates should follow the exam-day instructions provided with their approval notice and bring only the permitted materials in the permitted format.
Rhode Island’s Board of Examiners of Electricians regulations state that applicants must obtain an average of at least 70% to obtain a license.
Rhode Island’s Board regulations list multiple license types. For many electricians, the master-level goal aligns with the Electrical Contractor license (Certificate A), which reflects contractor-level authority and responsibility.
Rhode Island’s electrician application instructions state that contractor testing requires verification of at least six years of experience in the trade and possession of a Rhode Island Journeyperson’s license that has been valid for at least two years before applying for the contractor examination.
Rhode Island’s electrician application instructions state that journeyperson testing requires verification of at least four years of experience in the trade and 576 hours of related instruction approved by DLT.
Rhode Island’s Board regulations state that applications for examinations must be received 15 working days prior to the examination date.
Rhode Island’s Board regulations state the exam provisions are based on the edition of the NEC adopted by the Rhode Island State Building Code Standards Committee at the time of the examination. DLT also lists the current NEC as recommended study material and notes it should be the latest state-approved edition.
Use them near the end of your preparation as full dress rehearsals. Take each one timed, follow open-book rules, and use your score results to target the last weak areas before you sit for the real exam.
Train your lookup process with timed questions. Identify the key term, go directly to the most likely article or table, confirm the detail quickly, and move on. Repetition reduces search time and improves confidence.