Preparing for the Kentucky Master Electrician exam is all about performance: finding the correct code rule fast, verifying exceptions, and applying the NEC accurately under a real time limit. This combo is built for that exact workflow. You get a Kentucky-focused Master Electrician study guide paired with the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback—professionally tabbed—so you can train code navigation speed while you study.
Kentucky has moved its electrical licensing exams into the 2023 NEC cycle. The Kentucky Department of Housing, Buildings and Construction (DHBC) announced that mandatory enforcement of the 2023 NEC began on January 1, 2025, and that Kentucky’s electrician and master electrician exams would be updated to align with the 2023 NEC. From January 1, 2025 until January 1, 2026, applicants could choose exams based on the 2017 or 2023 NEC—then beginning January 1, 2026, all electrical examinations are based upon the 2023 NEC.
That matters because it protects your study time. When your exam is written to a specific code cycle, you want your practice to match it. The NEC 2023 book in this combo is the foundation. The tabs are the accelerator. The study guide is the structure that keeps your preparation consistent—so you can improve week to week instead of bouncing between random topics.
If you’re shopping for something like 2023 Kentucky Master Electrician Study Guide, National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback with Tabs, this set delivers that same goal in one focused package: study structure + a tabbed NEC 2023 for faster lookups during practice.
Best for: Kentucky master electrician candidates who want a practical study plan and faster NEC navigation practice using a tabbed 2023 code book.
Open-book exams aren’t “easy.” They’re simply different. The advantage isn’t having the book—it’s knowing how to use it efficiently. This combo helps you build a repeatable approach:
Kentucky’s Electrical Licensing Division contracts with Prov, Inc. to develop and administer Kentucky’s electrical licensing examination program. The Kentucky Electrical Licensing Candidate Information Bulletin explains that all exams are open book and timed, and that examinations are computer-based.
For the Master Electrician exam, the Kentucky candidate bulletin lists:
The bulletin also provides a topic breakdown so you can prioritize your study time. The Master Electrician exam is organized across major NEC and trade knowledge areas:
Kentucky’s administrative regulation requires applicants for a master electrician license to pass an exam administered by an approved exam provider with a minimum score of 70%, and it states that a passing score is valid for three (3) years.
Kentucky’s Candidate Information Bulletin states that Kentucky electrical licensing exams are open book and timed. For the Master Electrician exam specifically, the bulletin states that exam items have been selected to comply with the 2017, 2020, and 2023 editions of the National Electrical Code, and that candidates may use any one of those editions for the exam.
However, Kentucky’s DHBC also announced that electrical examinations would be updated to align with the 2023 NEC, with a transition period allowing 2017 or 2023 exams through January 1, 2026, and then requiring that all electrical examinations be based upon the 2023 NEC starting January 1, 2026.
That’s why training with the NEC 2023 is so valuable right now. Even on an open-book test, you still have to:
The tabbed NEC supports the navigation side of the equation while you study—helping you reduce the wasted minutes that often separate a comfortable score from a stressful finish.
Kentucky’s electrical licensing process is managed through DHBC’s Electrical Licensing Division. When you’re aiming for a Master Electrician license, your path typically follows these steps:
This combo supports the part you control the most—preparation—so your exam experience feels familiar: open-book workflow, fast navigation, and accurate code application.
Kentucky requires state licensing for individuals who perform electrical work or present themselves as engaged in electrical work. DHBC’s Electrical Licensing Division oversees the licensing process for electricians, master electricians, and electrical contractors.
For a Kentucky Master Electrician license, DHBC’s published checklist and Kentucky’s administrative regulation include requirements such as:
Kentucky’s regulation also states that master electrician (and related) applicants must pass the exam with a minimum score of 70%, and that a passing score is valid for three (3) years. Those rules make your study plan even more important: you want a code-navigation-first approach that helps you pass efficiently and confidently within your exam window.
The Kentucky Master Electrician exam gives you 4 hours to answer 100 questions. That’s enough time to succeed—if you can keep moving. Most candidates don’t fail because they “don’t know anything.” They lose points because they can’t find the correct section fast enough, they miss exceptions, or they burn too much time on a handful of questions.
Use the topic breakdown to study smarter
The Kentucky candidate bulletin shows heavier-weight areas like Wiring Methods & Materials (19 questions), plus two additional 15-question blocks for Wiring & Protection and Motors & Controls. If you want the best return on your study time, prioritize your practice in the highest-weight categories first, then keep steady review across the rest so you don’t give away easy points.
How to study so your open-book advantage actually works
Where this combo helps most
The tabbed NEC helps you reduce the “search time” that drains your minutes on test day. The study guide helps you keep your review organized so you build skill consistently: stronger navigation, better accuracy, and less second-guessing. Together, they support the exact method most successful open-book candidates use—find the rule fast, confirm details, and answer with confidence.
Master Electrician prep is a performance skill. You’re training to make correct decisions under time limits while using the NEC efficiently. 1 Exam Prep supports that goal with a trade-focused approach that keeps your study time practical and organized.
This combo gives you the tools to build that system: a Kentucky Master Electrician study guide for structure and a tabbed NEC 2023 paperback for faster navigation practice.
Kentucky’s Electrical Licensing Division contracts with Prov, Inc. to develop and administer the electrical licensing examination program, and DHBC’s checklist states the Master Electrician exam may be taken with PROV or Pearson VUE.
Yes. Kentucky’s Candidate Information Bulletin states that all Kentucky electrical licensing exams are open book and timed.
The Kentucky candidate bulletin lists the Master Electrician exam as 100 questions.
The Kentucky candidate bulletin lists a time allowance of 4 hours for the Master Electrician exam.
Kentucky’s administrative regulation requires a minimum passing score of 70% for the master electrician exam (and related electrical licenses), and it states that a passing score is valid for three (3) years.
Kentucky’s candidate bulletin states that Master Electrician exam items comply with the 2017, 2020, and 2023 NEC editions and candidates may use any one of those editions for the exam. Kentucky’s DHBC also announced that the exam would be updated to align with the 2023 NEC, and that all electrical examinations are based upon the 2023 NEC beginning January 1, 2026.
DHBC’s master electrician application checklist requires proof of experience totaling 16,000 hours in the electrical trade since your sixteenth birthday, with specific options for documenting that experience.
Yes. DHBC’s checklist explains that an approved apprenticeship-training program with at least 576 classroom hours may substitute for 4,000 hours of verifiable experience, and it lists other education/teaching options that may substitute for additional hours.
Kentucky’s administrative regulation requires a completed Electrical License Application (Form EL-3), the required fee for a biennial license, and a passport-sized color photograph taken within the past six months. DHBC’s checklist also requires identification documentation and proof of experience.
Because open-book testing rewards speed and accuracy together. Tabs help reduce page-hunting while you practice, so you can spend your time interpreting requirements, confirming exceptions, and keeping your pace across the full exam.