Master-level electrical testing is about proving you can apply the Code the way a professional in charge must apply it: safely, consistently, and under pressure. If you’re getting ready for a Kansas master electrician exam (or an ICC-based Kansas Standard Master Electrician exam used by many jurisdictions), this combo gives you a focused, practical study setup built around the 2023 National Electrical Code:
This package is built for electricians who want their study time to translate into exam performance. That means you’re not just reading. You’re training: learning how to recognize question types quickly, how to move through the NEC with confidence, and how to keep calculations clean and consistent when the clock is running.
At the master level, the difference between “almost ready” and “ready” is usually one of these things:
This combo is designed to strengthen all four—using the 2023 NEC as your foundation while supporting the broader master-level thinking that shows up across electrical licensing exams.
Kansas master electrician testing is often tied to ICC Contractor/Trades examinations used by participating jurisdictions. In the State of Kansas Contractor/Trades Examination Information Bulletin, the KGD Kansas Standard Master Electrician exam is listed as:
The same Kansas bulletin outlines the master exam’s major content areas and weighting. This breakdown is useful because it tells you where to focus your time first—especially when you’re balancing study around work and jobsite responsibilities:
This combo is designed to support that outline in a practical way: master-level review to keep your study organized, calculations practice to protect points, and the NEC 2023 paperback to build the reference confidence that makes open-book testing faster and less stressful.
The Kansas Standard Master Electrician (KGD) exam is listed as an open book examination. Open-book doesn’t mean you can “look up everything.” It means the exam rewards electricians who can use the Code efficiently and accurately.
The best open-book strategy is a repeatable workflow you can trust:
When you train this workflow, you gain two advantages at once: you improve accuracy, and you stop wasting time. That’s exactly what a timed open-book exam requires.
Licensing requirements can vary by Kansas jurisdiction, but many cities and counties rely on standardized contractor/trades examinations as part of their qualification process. A practical exam-focused path most candidates follow looks like this:
This combo supports the part you can control every day: how you study, how you practice, and how ready you are to perform under a clock.
The ICC Contractor/Trades program is an independent testing program used by participating jurisdictions, and passing an exam is only one part of becoming licensed where you work. Kansas licensing expectations can be set at the jurisdiction level, and your city or county may require additional items beyond the exam.
Because of that, it’s smart to treat your preparation as two parallel tracks:
This product page focuses on Track 1—building the knowledge and exam-day skills you need to earn a passing score and move forward confidently.
The Kansas Standard Master Electrician outline makes one thing clear: a large portion of the exam is built around the Code’s most tested systems—branch circuits, wiring methods, services, equipment, and special conditions. The best way to prepare is to use an outline-based approach that matches how the exam is weighted.
1) Start with the highest-weight category: Wiring Methods & Materials (26%)
This category is the biggest slice of the exam, and it’s where many candidates lose time by searching. Train for recognition and speed:
2) Build strength in Branch Circuits & Conductors (19%)
Branch circuits are a high-impact scoring area because they combine Code requirements and practical logic. Use your master study guide and calculations guide together here:
3) Services & Service Equipment (11%) and Feeders (4%)
Service and feeder questions can feel intimidating, but they become manageable when you train the process:
4) Equipment & Devices (13%), Motors & Generators (6%), and Control Devices (4%)
These categories reward electricians who study the way the job works: devices and equipment aren’t isolated—they’re part of systems. Train for real installation thinking:
5) Special Occupancies, Equipment & Conditions (11%)
This category often tests whether you can move between general rules and special rules without missing what “overrides” what. Train a simple habit:
How to use this combo effectively
The goal is steady improvement: fewer wrong turns in the Code, cleaner calculations, and more confident pacing.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians with a study structure that matches how trade exams work: organized guidance, practice-forward preparation, and skill-building that improves performance under a time limit. Instead of scattered studying, you get a focused approach that helps you build the habits open-book master exams reward.
This is the kind of preparation that helps you show up with a plan: you know how to approach questions, how to move through the Code efficiently, and how to keep calculations controlled from start to finish.
Yes. The Kansas Contractor/Trades examination bulletin lists the KGD Kansas Standard Master Electrician exam as an open-book examination.
The bulletin lists 100 multiple-choice questions with a 5-hour time limit.
The outline places the most weight on Wiring Methods and Materials (26%) and Branch Circuits and Conductors (19%), followed by Equipment and Devices (13%) and Services and Service Equipment (11%).
Yes. This combo includes the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback.
Yes. The Electrician Calculations Study Guide is included to help you build a repeatable setup method, improve accuracy, and reduce avoidable mistakes on math-driven questions.
Train navigation and accuracy together. Use timed lookups to practice finding the governing Code section quickly, build an exception-checking habit, and drill calculations with a consistent setup process so your math stays controlled under time pressure.
Many electricians use the 2023 NEC for modern Code familiarity and skill-building, especially for navigation, table confidence, and understanding how requirements and exceptions are organized. Those skills translate well across Code editions.