If you’re working toward Montana’s Master Electrician license, you’re preparing for more than a title—you’re preparing for responsibility. Master-level work is about planning, laying out, and supervising electrical installations and repairs with code accuracy and confidence. That’s exactly what the exam is designed to measure: your understanding of the National Electrical Code, your ability to apply it, and your knowledge of Montana board rules and applicable laws.
This combo gives you a focused, code-centered study setup built around the 2023 National Electrical Code (NEC): a Montana Master Electrician study guide paired with the NEC 2023 paperback and tabs to help you organize major sections for faster lookups during study. The goal is to make your preparation more efficient and more structured—so you spend less time wondering what to study next and more time building the skills that matter on test day.
Most experienced electricians don’t struggle with the trade—they struggle with exam performance traps:
This combo is designed to help you study in a way that prevents those mistakes. You’ll build a repeatable workflow: practice, verify, correct, and repeat until accuracy becomes consistent.
If you use this set as a system (instead of three separate items), your prep becomes more productive. The study guide gives your practice direction. The NEC gives you the source language behind correct answers. The tabs help you move through the code more efficiently while you train.
Montana’s State Electrical Board uses PSI as its exam vendor. Candidates must be approved by the Board before they can register for an exam. Once approved, the Board issues an admission letter and candidates pay and schedule through PSI.
Montana’s published exam information for the Master Electrician exam lists:
The exam description includes three major areas:
Montana law also states the Master Electrician examination must consist of at least 80 questions designed to fairly test the applicant’s knowledge and technical application skills, including the national electric code and board rules and applicable laws under Title 37.
Montana’s published exam information states the examinations are open book. Open book does not mean easy. It means your score depends heavily on your ability to use the approved materials efficiently and apply code language accurately under time pressure.
For Montana’s residential, journeyman, and master exams (as listed on the exam information sheet), the allowed materials include:
Montana’s exam sheet also states candidates may have personal highlights, underlining, and notes in approved materials, but candidates may not write, highlight, underline, or index during the examination, and candidates may not bring in any additional papers (loose or attached) with approved references.
How the tabs help you study for an open-book exam
Tabs aren’t a shortcut to avoid learning. They’re a time-management tool. During practice, a tabbed NEC helps you get to the correct “neighborhood” of the code quickly so you can spend your time doing what earns points: reading the correct rule carefully, checking exceptions, and applying tables correctly.
Open-book exam success usually comes down to three habits:
This combo is built to help you train those habits with a structured practice routine.
Montana’s licensing process is handled through the Montana State Electrical Board. While individual situations vary, the master-level path generally follows this progression:
This combo supports the stage that most directly impacts your outcome: the quality and consistency of your preparation.
Montana law outlines qualification pathways for a Master Electrician license. An applicant must furnish written evidence of at least one of the following:
Montana’s continuing education requirements are also clearly published for active licensees:
Because master-level licensing is tied to responsibility and supervision, building a code-first study routine is one of the best ways to prepare—not only for the exam, but for the work that follows.
Montana’s master exam content emphasizes the NEC, general trade knowledge and theory, and major load calculations. That mix is important: you need both the ability to locate and apply code rules and the fundamentals to work through calculation-based questions with confidence.
A practical study approach that fits real work schedules
High-value NEC areas many master candidates drill
How to use the tabs effectively
When you study this way, improvement becomes measurable: faster lookups, fewer repeat mistakes, and more confidence working through code questions without panic.
1 Exam Prep supports Master Electrician candidates with a practical, trade-focused approach to studying. Instead of scattered reading and hoping the right topics stick, you get a more organized way to prepare that emphasizes the skills exams actually reward: structured review, practice-driven learning, and confidence-building repetition.
Your goal is to walk into exam day with a process you trust: recognize the topic, find the rule, confirm the exception, apply the requirement. This combo is built to help you develop exactly that.
Yes. This combo includes the NEC 2023 paperback and is designed for study and practice based on the 2023 NEC.
Montana’s published exam information for the Master Electrician exam lists 80 questions, and Montana law states the examination must consist of at least 80 questions.
Montana’s published Master Electrician exam information lists a 75% correct minimum passing score.
Montana’s published Master Electrician exam information lists 240 minutes as the time allowed.
Yes. Montana’s published exam information states the examinations are open book and lists the allowed materials for electrician exams.
No. The tabs are affixable, meaning you apply them to your NEC book. Applying tabs early helps you learn the layout and build faster navigation habits during study sessions.
Montana law lists qualification pathways that include an accredited electrical engineering degree plus 2,000 hours of legally obtained practical experience, or 8,000 hours of legally obtained journeyman-level experience in planning, laying out, or supervising qualifying electrical work.
Yes. Montana’s published continuing education requirements state active licensees must complete 16 hours of continuing education each renewal period, with at least 8 hours covering NEC updates.
Apply the tabs early, then study by working practice questions and locating the code section that supports every correct answer. Add weekly load calculation practice and timed mixed-topic sets to build pacing and reduce rushed mistakes.