Washington’s 01 General (journey-level) electrician exam is known for one thing: it tests how well you can apply code and rules in a real-world way—quickly, accurately, and without getting lost in the book. You may know the trade cold on the jobsite, but the exam adds pressure: timed sections, exam-style wording, and questions designed to check whether you truly understand requirements, not just routines.
This Washington 2023 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built to help you prepare the way you’ll be tested. You get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to strengthen NEC navigation, Washington RCW/WAC familiarity, and the steady pacing you need to finish both sections confidently. The goal is simple: reduce surprises, improve accuracy, and build a repeatable strategy you can trust on test day.
Trusted by 50k electricians, this prep format is practice-first because practice reveals what reading alone won’t: where you hesitate, where you misread, where you miss exceptions, and where your pace breaks down. Once you see those patterns, you can fix them—then prove the improvement on the next exam set.
If you’re balancing work, overtime, and life, this guide also gives you a plan that fits real schedules. Use short, timed blocks during the week to build speed and accuracy, and reserve longer weekend sessions for full practice exams and your two final simulations.
Washington’s 01 General Electrician examination is administered in separate exam sections. For the 01-General Electrician track, the exam is structured as:
That structure matters for how you prepare. You’re not only learning content—you’re training two different skills:
This study guide supports both sections with a practice-driven approach so your prep is measurable: you practice, review what you missed, tighten weak areas, then practice again until your pace and accuracy stabilize.
Yes—Washington’s electrical exams are open book. Open book is a real advantage, but only if you train for it properly. The exam won’t reward slow searching or “I’ll find it eventually” habits. It rewards electricians who can identify what a question is really asking and locate the relevant requirement quickly.
Open-book strategy that actually works:
This guide is built to train those habits through repetition. Each practice exam gives you another round of realistic lookups and decision-making so code navigation becomes automatic instead of stressful.
Washington’s 01 journey-level certification process starts with eligibility and exam approval through the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries (L&I), followed by scheduling your exam through the testing provider. While individual situations vary, the typical flow looks like this:
This product supports the part you can control most: exam readiness. The better your preparation, the smoother your path through scheduling, testing, and moving forward with your Washington credential.
Washington regulates electricians through L&I and uses certificate categories (including 01-General). Eligibility to test is tied to documented experience and training requirements for the category you’re pursuing. Washington also recognizes paths for out-of-state applicants and military experience evaluation when applicable.
Two timing details are especially important for exam planning:
Because Washington’s exam includes both NEC/theory and Washington laws/rules, the strongest study routine is balanced: don’t over-focus on one section while leaving easy points on the table in the other.
Washington’s electrician exam content is based on the National Electrical Code (NEC) along with Washington’s electrical laws and rules. Since you indicated open book, your study plan should revolve around the same materials you’ll rely on during testing—so your navigation habits match test-day reality.
Washington’s 01-General exam content outline is built around the NEC areas electricians use daily, plus Washington laws and rules and basic trade knowledge/theory. That means your best approach is not “read everything once.” It’s repeated, targeted practice that builds exam skills:
Here’s a practical way to use your 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams so the product functions like a complete prep system:
Practice exams are also the fastest way to eliminate avoidable errors that drain scores: mixing up similar NEC rules, overlooking a single word like “shall,” “shall not,” or “where required,” choosing a table value without reading notes, or rushing a calculation setup. Once you identify your pattern, you can correct it—and repetition helps that correction stick.
1 Exam Prep is designed for electricians who want preparation that feels practical, organized, and aligned with how licensing exams actually behave. Instead of guessing what to study next, you build a repeatable system that improves real test performance.
The goal is realistic readiness: faster navigation, cleaner decision-making, fewer avoidable misses, and a steady exam-day approach you can trust.
Yes. Washington’s electrical examinations are open book. Open-book success depends on how quickly and accurately you can use your references under timed conditions.
The 01-General Electrician exam is administered in separate sections, including an NEC & Theory section and a WA Codes section. Each section has its own question count and time limit.
For the Washington 01-General Electrician track, the NEC & Theory section is listed as 60 questions.
For the Washington 01-General Electrician track, the WA Codes section is listed as 17 questions.
Washington’s 01-General Electrician exam lists 3 hours for the NEC & Theory section and 1 hour for the WA Codes section.
The exam administration lists a 70% passing standard. Since Washington uses separate exam sections, your plan should be to practice high enough above the minimum that one difficult topic area doesn’t pull you below the passing line.
Washington’s electrician exam content is based on the NEC along with Washington laws and rules (RCW/WAC). Your best prep is to practice finding answers in the same materials you’ll rely on during the exam so your navigation is fast and confident.
Start with one timed diagnostic exam, track missed-question patterns in a miss log, then use the next practice exams to target weak areas while building pace. Save the two full finals for realistic, timed simulations near the end of your prep.
Speed comes from repetition with intention. Each time you miss a code-based question, locate the exact NEC section/table that supports the correct answer, then practice finding that same location again later. Over time, you’ll recognize where information lives and waste less time searching.