Getting ready for the Michigan Master Electrician exam is less about memorizing random code facts and more about building a reliable system for finding the right answers fast. This combo pairs a Michigan-focused master electrician study guide with the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback—professionally tabbed—so your study time trains the same skill you’ll lean on during the test: efficient NEC navigation and accurate code application.
Michigan’s Bureau of Construction Codes (BCC) outlines clear requirements for Master Electrician licensure, including minimum age and experience, and PSI administers the exam program for Michigan. Your preparation has to match the exam environment, the reference rules, and the code cycle the questions are built from. This package is based on the 2023 NEC, and Michigan’s electrical code rules adopted the 2023 NEC (with Michigan-specific amendments) effective March 12, 2024.
If you’ve ever lost time flipping between articles, exceptions, and tables, you already know the biggest challenge: pace. The tabbed NEC helps you practice locating key areas quickly, while the study guide keeps you consistent—so you’re not just “reading the code,” you’re training your test-day workflow.
This combo is also a strong fit if you’re comparing products like: 2023 Michigan Master Electrician Study Guide, National Electrical Code 2023 Paperback with Tabs. It’s the same core idea—Michigan master exam prep supported by a tabbed NEC—packaged as a single, focused study solution.
Built for: Michigan master electrician candidates who want a structured study plan plus faster code lookups using a tabbed NEC during practice.
Michigan’s candidate bulletin for electrical examinations outlines the Master Electrician exam format and confirms that the exam questions are based on the 2023 NEC. It also lists key reference rules (what can be brought in, what is prohibited, and how references must be prepared).
The Michigan Master Electrician exam is an open book exam. PSI’s Michigan electrical candidate bulletin states that the NEC may be used during the examination and that exam items are based on the 2023 NEC. The bulletin also explains reference rules that matter for real-world prep:
Because it’s open book, your edge comes from knowing where answers live and how to confirm them quickly. That’s exactly what the tabbed NEC supports during your study sessions: faster movement through the code so you can spend your time interpreting the requirement (and checking exceptions), not hunting for the page.
Michigan’s Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA), Bureau of Construction Codes, explains the Master Electrician license requirements and provides the examination and application pathway. In practical terms, most candidates move through these steps:
This combo supports the step you control most: preparation. When the clock starts, the difference-maker is your ability to work through code-based questions efficiently and consistently.
Michigan’s licensing information for Master Electricians is published through LARA/BCC. The state describes the Master Electrician role as being responsible for Michigan code compliance of installations of electrical wiring and equipment, and it outlines core eligibility requirements for the license.
Key Michigan Master Electrician requirements and expectations described by LARA/BCC include:
For testing and exam administration, Michigan contracts with PSI to conduct the Bureau of Construction Codes examination program. Michigan’s PSI exam page also includes important test rules related to eligibility windows, retesting, and scheduling procedures for master and journeyman candidates.
For the code cycle: Michigan’s 2023 Michigan Electrical Code rules adopt by reference the 2023 (second printing) NEC with Michigan amendments, and these rules are effective March 12, 2024. That’s why a 2023 NEC-based combo is the right foundation for candidates preparing under Michigan’s current electrical code cycle.
The Michigan Master Electrician exam is designed to test more than “where is this rule located?” It checks whether you can apply electrical code rules correctly to real installation scenarios while understanding Michigan’s skilled trades rules and the state’s electrical code framework.
Michigan’s PSI candidate bulletin describes the master electrician exam as including questions that test knowledge of the skilled trades regulation act, rules promulgated under that act, the current electrical code rules (Part 8), and related state construction code references. The bulletin also highlights that the master exam covers additional knowledge required to plan and supervise electrical installations.
In practical prep terms, your study sessions should focus on two skills working together:
To make your prep feel like the exam (and not just a reading project), build habits around how questions actually work:
The tabbed NEC supports this practice flow by reducing page-hunting during your study sessions. The study guide helps you keep your review organized so you improve steadily instead of bouncing between random topics.
Master-level exams require a different kind of preparation. You’re expected to understand the code deeply enough to plan and supervise work—not just recognize a definition. 1 Exam Prep supports that by helping you study with structure and purpose.
This combo gives you the tools to build that process: a Michigan-focused study guide to keep you on track, and a tabbed NEC to help you practice fast, accurate code lookups.
Yes. Michigan’s PSI candidate bulletin states the examination is OPEN BOOK and explains the allowable reference materials, including the NEC (with limitations).
The Michigan PSI candidate bulletin lists the Master Electrician exam as 76 questions.
The Michigan PSI candidate bulletin lists 180 minutes for the Master Electrician exam.
Michigan’s licensing information states you must pass the Master Electrician exam by scoring at least 75%. The PSI candidate bulletin also lists a minimum passing score of 75% for the master exam.
Michigan’s PSI candidate bulletin includes specific limitations on the NEC allowed in the exam site, stating the code book may have factory markings or highlights with factory tabs only. It also states the NEC Handbook is not allowed.
No. The Michigan PSI candidate bulletin states the NEC Handbook is not allowed in the examination room.
Michigan’s LARA/BCC licensing information states you must be at least 22 years old to qualify for the Master Electrician license.
Yes. Michigan’s LARA/BCC licensing information describes experience requirements for master licensure, including journeyperson experience and a total of at least 12,000 hours over at least 6 years.
Even when your exam-day book is limited, practicing with a tabbed NEC helps you learn the structure of the code faster. The long-term benefit is improved “mental mapping” of where topics live—so you can get to the right article and verify exceptions more quickly during timed practice and on test day.