2023 Georgia Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

2023 Georgia Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

Regular price $279.95
Sale price $279.95 Regular price $315.00
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

CALL TO ASK ABOUT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE

  • image-right
Customer Reviews
View full details

2023 Georgia Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

2023 Georgia Master Electrician + Electrician Calculations Study Guides & National Electrical Code Combo (Based on the 2023 NEC)

Georgia candidates preparing for “master-level” electrical testing are usually aiming for one thing: the authority to take on higher responsibility, run jobs correctly, and prove competency through a code-driven exam. The challenge is that most electricians don’t struggle because they don’t understand the trade—they struggle because exams demand a different skill set: careful reading, consistent math, and fast, accurate code verification.

This combo brings those pieces together in one practical study system built around the 2023 National Electrical Code (NEC):

  • 2023 Georgia Master Electrician Study Guide to sharpen exam-style decision-making and code application
  • 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide to strengthen the math that drives sizing, protection, loads, and everyday electrical problem solving
  • National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Paperback so you can practice the way code-based exams actually work—by confirming answers in the book, not guessing

If you want a study routine you can repeat confidently, this package supports a realistic approach: practice questions, verify in the NEC, fix weak areas (especially calculations), and repeat until your pace and accuracy feel steady.

What You Get

  • 2023 Georgia Master Electrician Study Guide
    A practice-driven guide focused on strengthening code interpretation, trade judgment, and exam readiness through repeated review.
  • 2023 Electrician Calculations Study Guide
    A targeted calculations guide designed to build confidence with the math that shows up in code-based electrical testing and real-world sizing decisions.
  • National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Paperback
    The 2023 edition of NFPA 70 in paperback format for code navigation, lookup practice, and rule verification.

Exam Details

In Georgia, statewide licensing is structured around the Electrical Contractor credential (Class I and Class II) issued by the Georgia State Construction Industry Licensing Board’s Division of Electrical Contractors. Georgia’s rules describe the statewide Electrical Contractor license categories and outline core requirements, including minimum age, experience, and a passing score requirement on the appropriate exam.

Georgia’s licensing rules state that to obtain a statewide Class I or Class II Electrical Contractor license, an applicant must be at least 21 years of age, submit an application, meet experience requirements, obtain a minimum score of seventy (70) on the appropriate examination, and pay required fees. The rules also describe experience expectations and supporting documentation such as references.

From a preparation standpoint, the biggest takeaway is that Georgia’s contractor-level electrical testing is designed to confirm you can work at a high level of responsibility—interpreting requirements correctly, applying safe installation rules, and making accurate decisions across many scenarios.

That’s why this combo focuses on the three areas that typically make the difference in performance:

  • Code execution: knowing how to locate and apply the correct NEC requirement (including exceptions and definitions)
  • Calculations consistency: staying steady and accurate when math drives the correct answer
  • Exam-style decision-making: recognizing what a question is actually asking and avoiding “almost right” choices

Open Book Test

Georgia’s electrical contractor exam process allows candidates to bring only specific, approved reference materials into the exam. Georgia’s published Electrical Contractors Suggested Reference List states that candidates are allowed to bring to the exam only the references listed, and that references may be highlighted, underlined, or tabbed with permanent tabs. It also warns that additional materials may be removed and confiscated, and candidates may be removed from the examination.

That reference policy is important because it shapes how you should study. When reference materials are permitted, success depends on how well you can:

  • Identify key terms in the question (equipment, wiring method, ratings, location/conditions, and qualifiers)
  • Navigate to the right NEC area without hunting
  • Confirm the exact requirement and avoid missing exceptions, definitions, and small conditions that change the correct answer
  • Keep a steady pace by solving efficiently—especially when calculations are involved

The NEC 2023 paperback in this combo supports the kind of preparation that translates: practicing lookups, learning how chapters and articles are organized, and building confidence verifying answers inside the code.

Licensing Steps

Georgia’s process is board-driven, meaning eligibility is reviewed and candidates must be approved before moving forward with the examination process. Georgia’s Electrical Exam application materials explain that if you are approved to sit for the exam, the Board sends an approval letter, and the testing vendor provides candidate exam information and test-day protocol details. Applicants are responsible for registering and scheduling their exam through the vendor once approved.

While individual circumstances vary, a clean way to understand the overall flow is:

  1. Select the correct statewide license class.
    Georgia’s rules describe statewide Class I and Class II Electrical Contractor licenses and how they are defined.
  2. Meet the basic eligibility requirements.
    Georgia’s rules include requirements such as minimum age, experience, and obtaining a minimum score of seventy (70) on the appropriate exam.
  3. Submit your application and required documentation.
    Board review determines whether you are approved to sit for the exam.
  4. After approval, register and schedule your exam.
    The Georgia exam application materials explain that approved applicants receive an approval letter and then schedule through the testing vendor.
  5. Prepare with a code-and-calculations study routine.
    Use your study guides for structured practice and use the NEC for lookup verification so your study matches how reference-based exams work.
  6. Test and complete remaining licensing items.
    After passing, follow the Board’s instructions for final licensing steps and ongoing requirements.

This combo is built to support the part that usually takes the most effort: becoming exam-ready through consistent practice, stronger calculations, and confident NEC navigation.

State Requirements

Georgia’s statewide Electrical Contractor requirements are outlined in the state’s rules and regulations for licensure. The rules describe the license categories and core eligibility items such as:

  • Minimum age: Georgia’s rules specify applicants must be at least 21 years old for statewide Class I or Class II Electrical Contractor licensure.
  • Passing score requirement: Georgia’s rules require a minimum score of seventy (70) on the appropriate examination.
  • Experience documentation: Georgia’s rules describe experience expectations and supporting documentation, including references attesting to an applicant’s electrical experience.

Separately, Georgia also publishes an Electrical Contractors Suggested Reference List with exam-day rules about what reference materials are allowed and how they may be marked (highlighted, underlined, or tabbed with permanent tabs), while prohibiting additional inserted materials.

For exam candidates, those requirements point to a simple strategy: prepare like the exam expects you to perform. Build your ability to locate the right NEC requirement quickly, use calculations confidently, and avoid careless errors caused by rushed reading or missed qualifiers.

Reference Books

  • National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Paperback
    The primary code reference in this combo for learning layout, practicing lookups, and verifying answers based on the 2023 NEC.

Test Information and Study Materials

Most candidates improve the fastest when their study routine is structured. Instead of trying to “study everything,” the goal is to train the actions you’ll need on test day: understand the question, determine the relevant topic, confirm the rule in the code, apply the math correctly, and move on.

This package supports a practical routine you can repeat consistently:

  • Build your NEC navigation habits early.
    Use the NEC 2023 paperback during practice from day one. Learn where major topics live, how definitions guide interpretation, and how exceptions change outcomes.
  • Use the Master Electrician Study Guide for exam-style repetition.
    Work practice sets regularly. After each set, review every missed question and locate the supporting NEC section so you’re building accuracy through verification—not guesswork.
  • Use the Calculations Study Guide as a weekly “skills block.”
    Calculations improve with reps. Schedule dedicated calculation practice and track your accuracy. If your score dips, slow down and rebuild fundamentals before adding speed.
  • Create a “miss list” that targets weak areas.
    Don’t just track missed questions—track missed concepts. Keep a running list of topics that cost you points, then drill those topics until they stop showing up.
  • Train a steady pace with mixed sessions.
    Once you’re comfortable with open-reference lookups, start mixing: some sessions focused on careful accuracy, others focused on completing a set without stalling. The goal is consistency, not perfection.

How the calculations guide fits into code-based exam prep: electrical exams often require math-driven decisions even when the NEC is allowed. The NEC tells you what is required, but you still need to calculate correctly and choose the right value, size, or protective device based on the scenario. A calculations-focused guide helps reduce the most common performance issues: small arithmetic mistakes, unit confusion, and rushing through multi-step problems.

How the NEC book supports confidence: many candidates know the trade well but lose time because they don’t trust their first answer. A reference-based approach helps you confirm requirements quickly, stop second-guessing, and keep moving.

As you prepare with this combo, you’ll be developing the kind of readiness that matters for contractor-level responsibility: correct code interpretation, disciplined calculations, and a reliable test-day process.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep is built to support real-world electricians preparing for real exams. Instead of relying on scattered resources, you get a structured study path that emphasizes the behaviors exams reward: organized practice, code verification, and consistent improvement in weak areas—especially calculations.

  • Organized study guidance: A practice-first approach that helps you stay consistent and avoid drifting between topics.
  • Trade-focused review: Emphasis on applied NEC understanding and the kinds of decisions electricians make on the job—framed the way exams test them.
  • Practice-oriented preparation: Repetition builds timing, confidence, and a steadier process under pressure.
  • Reference navigation when applicable: The NEC book supports lookup practice so you learn how to confirm rules efficiently.
  • Confidence-building study structure: When your routine is repeatable—practice, verify, fix, repeat—your performance becomes more consistent.

This combo is designed to help you show up prepared with the skills that matter most: code accuracy, calculation confidence, and a reliable approach you can trust from the first question to the last.

FAQ

Is this combo based on the 2023 NEC?

Yes. This package includes the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback and both study guides are designed for preparation aligned with the 2023 NEC.

Does Georgia issue a statewide “master electrician” license?

Georgia’s statewide licensing structure is based on the Electrical Contractor credential (Class I and Class II) through the Division of Electrical Contractors. Georgia’s rules describe statewide Class I and Class II Electrical Contractor licenses and set the requirements for obtaining them.

Are reference books allowed in Georgia’s electrical contractor exams?

Georgia’s Electrical Contractors Suggested Reference List states candidates are allowed to bring to the exam only the references listed, and that references may be highlighted, underlined, or tabbed with permanent tabs, while additional inserted materials are prohibited.

Does this combo include tabs?

No. This package includes the two study guides and the NEC 2023 paperback. Tabs are not included in this combo.

Why include a calculations study guide?

Calculations are often where strong electricians lose points: small math mistakes, unit confusion, or rushing multi-step problems. A dedicated calculations guide helps you build repeatable accuracy and confidence, which supports better performance in code-based testing.

What passing score does Georgia require for the electrical contractor exam?

Georgia’s rules for statewide Class I and Class II Electrical Contractor licensure state that applicants must obtain a minimum score of seventy (70) on the appropriate examination.

How should I study with this combo?

Use the Master Electrician Study Guide for regular practice sets, verify missed questions in the NEC, and schedule weekly calculations sessions using the calculations guide. Track weak topics and drill them until your accuracy and pace feel consistent.