Vermont 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

Vermont 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

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Vermont 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

Vermont 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide: 12 Practice Exams +2 Full Final Exams: Trusted by 50k Electricians

Vermont’s Journeyman Electrician exam is the kind of test that rewards real electricians—if you prepare the right way. It’s not a “read the code once and hope for the best” exam. It’s a timed, open-book exam that expects you to understand how electrical work is supposed to be installed, protected, and verified, and then find the right NEC answer quickly when the question demands it.

This Vermont 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built around the fastest, most reliable way to improve exam performance: practice under realistic conditions. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to help you sharpen code navigation, strengthen trade fundamentals, and build a steady pacing strategy so you don’t run out of time on test day.

Trusted by 50k electricians, this practice-first approach focuses on what actually moves your score:

  • Cleaner decision-making by training with exam-style multiple-choice questions
  • Faster lookups by repeatedly working the same high-impact NEC “neighborhoods”
  • Fewer avoidable misses by drilling exceptions, table notes, and “where required” wording
  • Better pacing so tough questions don’t steal time from easy points

If you’re balancing a full work schedule, the goal isn’t to study longer—it’s to study smarter. Practice exams help you quickly identify weak areas (slow navigation, rushed reading, calculation setup mistakes, or topic gaps) and then correct them with repetition that actually sticks.

What You Get

  • 12 Practice Exams to build confidence, code navigation speed, and test-day accuracy.
  • 2 Full Final Exams for realistic, timed simulations that help you fine-tune pacing and stamina.
  • Open-book exam strategy focus so you practice using authorized references the way Vermont/Prov rules require.
  • Exam-style multiple-choice training designed to reduce the most common point-loss issues: misreads, missed exceptions, and wrong table selections.

Exam Details

Vermont’s Journeyman Electrician exam is administered through Prov for the Vermont Division of Fire Safety. The current Candidate Information Bulletin lists the Journeyman Electrician exam as:

  • Number of Questions: 90
  • Time Allowed: 4 hours
  • Passing Standard: A cut-score of 70% (70% or higher is passing)
  • Exam Fee: $80.00 per exam

Vermont’s exam also publishes a topic breakdown so you know what to expect. The Journeyman Electrician blueprint is weighted heavily toward wiring and protection plus wiring methods and materials—exactly why practicing code lookups and installation rules pays off.

  • General Electrical Theory & Principles: 7
  • Wiring & Protection: 30
  • Wiring Methods & Materials: 20
  • Motors & Controls: 3
  • Equipment for General Use: 15
  • Special Occupancies: 4
  • Special Equipment: 3
  • Special Conditions: 3
  • Local Amendments: 5

One more Vermont detail worth knowing: you receive your score result at the testing center once you complete your exam, and the State is notified automatically. That means your test-day performance has immediate impact—another reason a practice-driven plan is so valuable.

Open Book Test

Yes—this is an open book exam in the sense that Vermont/Prov allows you to use authorized references while testing. That’s a major advantage when you prepare correctly. Open book doesn’t make the exam easy; it makes it different. The exam rewards electricians who can quickly identify what the question is asking and locate the correct rule without wasting time.

Vermont/Prov’s reference rules also matter. Your reference materials are checked before you’re allowed into the testing room, and you’re instructed to prepare references using only approved methods such as highlighting and attaching permanent tabs. During the exam, you are not allowed to add marks or make changes to your references.

Key open-book rules that affect how you should practice:

  • Highlighting is allowed.
  • Permanent tabs are allowed.
  • Handwritten notes are not allowed in any portion of a reference book.
  • Moveable tabs are never permitted (temporary tabs, Post-it notes, or taped/glued paper must be removed).
  • No photocopied documents may be added to a reference book; photocopied books are not permitted.
  • Test prep study guides are not approved references and are not permitted in the testing center (including practice exams).
  • Simple 4-function calculators only; phones and special calculators are not permitted.

The good news: when you practice the right way, open book becomes a strength. You stop searching randomly and start navigating confidently—because you’ve already trained the patterns.

A practical open-book strategy you can use in every practice exam:

  • Read the question twice before opening the book. Decide if this is theory, a wiring method rule, an OCPD/protection requirement, or a “local amendments” style question.
  • Go to the likely NEC neighborhood first. Start broad (chapter/article/part), then narrow down.
  • Confirm exceptions and table notes. Many wrong answers are “almost right” until you catch the exception.
  • Protect your pace. If a lookup is eating minutes, move on and come back later.

Licensing Steps

Vermont’s electrical licensing is overseen by the Vermont Division of Fire Safety. While applicants’ backgrounds can vary, the general flow for the Journeyman path is consistent:

  1. Confirm you’re eligible to test under Vermont’s licensing process.
  2. Receive your registration/testing letter and the candidate information required to schedule your exam.
  3. Register and schedule with Prov for a date, time, and testing location (Vermont also offers options beyond in-state testing centers).
  4. Prepare your authorized references so they meet Vermont/Prov rules (highlighting and permanent tabs only; no moveable tabs or added papers).
  5. Take the exam and pass by meeting the 70% cut-score.
  6. Complete remaining state steps for license issuance after your passing result is recorded.

This product supports the part you can control most: exam readiness. When you show up with a practiced strategy and a steady pace, the entire process feels smoother.

State Requirements

Vermont’s Division of Fire Safety oversees trade licensing and certifications and contracts with Prov to administer the licensing examination program. Candidates must resolve which exam is required for the license they’re seeking before registering, and scheduling is tied to the information Vermont provides to Prov for your record.

Vermont/Prov also publishes retesting guidance. If you fail your initial exam, you are permitted to retake the exam up to two more times within your eligibility period, and there is no waiting period between attempts. Once you have passed, you cannot retake the exam.

Those rules make your study plan matter. A practice-driven approach reduces retake risk by focusing your time on what earns points: accurate reading, efficient navigation, and consistent decision-making.

Reference Books

Below are the exam references listed for the Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam in the current Vermont Division of Fire Safety/Prov Candidate Information Bulletin. These are the materials your study routine should be built around for open-book success.

  • 2020 State of Vermont Electrical Safety Rules (2020)
    Supports Vermont-specific electrical safety requirements and local amendments content included in the exam blueprint.
  • NEC Notes (2023)
    Listed as an approved reference for the Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam. Use it the way Vermont/Prov rules allow and keep your exam-day materials compliant.
  • NFPA 70 – National Electrical Code (NEC) 2020
    The primary reference for wiring methods, protection rules, definitions, installation requirements, and tables. The fastest score gains usually come from improving NEC navigation speed and accuracy.
  • Ugly’s Electrical References (2020)
    A compact reference commonly used for quick electrical facts and calculations that support exam-style problem solving.
  • Vermont Statutes Title 26 Chapter 15
    Supports Vermont licensing statute knowledge referenced in the exam’s approved materials.

Test Information and Study Materials

The Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam is broad, but it isn’t random. The published blueprint shows exactly where your time should go: wiring & protection and wiring methods & materials make up the biggest share, followed by equipment for general use. That’s why a strong prep plan isn’t just “study more NEC.” It’s targeted repetition across the blueprint until your accuracy and speed improve.

Here’s a practical way to use your 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams so the product works like a complete study system:

  • 1) Start with a diagnostic exam. Take Practice Exam 1 timed. Don’t pause mid-exam to research. Your goal is to identify patterns: slow navigation, misreads, weak topics, or pacing issues.
  • 2) Keep a simple miss log. For each missed question, write one short reason: missed exception, wrong code location, wrong table note, misread wording, or rushed setup.
  • 3) Review by proving the answer. When you miss an NEC question, find the exact section/table that supports the correct answer. Don’t just “memorize the right option.” Train the habit of confirmation.
  • 4) Train two-pass pacing. First pass: answer what you can efficiently and move past time sinks. Second pass: return to the tougher questions with the time you protected.
  • 5) Rotate topic sets to match the blueprint. Don’t only drill what you like. Practice across wiring/protection, wiring methods/materials, equipment, special occupancies, and local amendments.
  • 6) Save the two Final Exams for simulations. Take both finals near the end of your prep, timed, in a quiet setting, with minimal interruptions. Then review carefully—this is where you tighten timing and confidence.

Practice exams do something regular reading can’t: they reveal your personal patterns under pressure. Maybe you lose points to exceptions, or you rush through wording, or you get stuck in the wrong chapter. Once you see the pattern, you can fix it—and repeated exams give you the reps to prove the fix.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep is built for electricians who want preparation that feels practical, organized, and aligned with how licensing exams actually work. Instead of guessing what to study next, you use exam-style practice to measure progress and improve with purpose.

  • Organized study guidance: A simple practice-review-repeat structure keeps your time focused and measurable.
  • Trade-focused review: Questions are built around the kinds of NEC decisions electricians make in real work, translated into exam-style wording.
  • Practice-oriented preparation: 12 practice exams plus 2 full finals gives you the repetition that builds timing, accuracy, and familiarity.
  • Reference navigation support: Open-book exams reward efficient lookups. Practice naturally builds that skill through repetition.
  • Confidence-building structure: When you’ve practiced under timed conditions, the test center feels familiar and your decision-making stays steady.

The goal is realistic readiness: faster code navigation, cleaner decision-making, fewer avoidable mistakes, and a test-day approach you can trust.

FAQ Section

Is the Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam open book?

Yes. Vermont/Prov allows the use of authorized reference materials during the exam under strict reference rules (highlighting and permanent tabs are allowed; moveable tabs, Post-its, and added papers are not).

How many questions are on the Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam?

The Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam is listed as 90 questions.

How long do I have to complete the exam?

The exam time allowed is 4 hours.

What score do I need to pass in Vermont?

Vermont/Prov scores exams against a cut-score of 70%. A score of 70% or higher is passing.

What references are listed for the Vermont Journeyman Electrician exam?

The Candidate Information Bulletin lists the 2020 Vermont Electrical Safety Rules, NEC Notes (2023), NFPA 70 NEC 2020, Ugly’s Electrical References (2020), and Vermont Statutes Title 26 Chapter 15.

Can I write notes in my code book or use Post-it tabs?

No. Vermont/Prov reference rules do not allow handwritten notes in any portion of a reference book, and moveable tabs (including Post-its) must be removed. Only highlighting and permanent tabs are permitted.

What kind of calculator can I use?

Only simple 4-function calculators are permitted. Phones and special calculators are not allowed.

What’s the best way to use 12 practice exams and 2 final exams?

Start with one timed diagnostic exam, keep a miss log (why you missed each question), then use the remaining practice exams to target weak areas while building pacing. Save the two final exams for realistic timed simulations near the end of your prep.

How do I get faster at open-book NEC questions?

Speed comes from repetition with intention. Each time you miss a code-based question, locate the exact NEC section or table that supports the correct answer and practice finding that location again later. Over time, you recognize where information lives and waste less time searching.