2023 North Dakota Journeyman Electrician Study Guide & National Electrical Code Combo with Tabs (Based on the 2023 NEC)

2023 North Dakota Journeyman Electrician Study Guide & National Electrical Code Combo with Tabs (Based on the 2023 NEC)

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2023 North Dakota Journeyman Electrician Study Guide & National Electrical Code Combo with Tabs (Based on the 2023 NEC)

Prepare for North Dakota journeyman-level electrical testing with a study setup that keeps you focused on what the exam is actually built on: electrical fundamentals, North Dakota laws/rules/wiring standards, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code. This combo pairs a 2023 North Dakota Journeyman Electrician Study Guide with the NFPA 70: National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 paperback and tabs to help you build faster code navigation during practice.

When you’re studying for a journeyman exam, the goal isn’t to read the NEC cover to cover. The goal is to get comfortable doing three things repeatedly:

  • Recognize the concept behind a question (grounding and bonding, OCPD, wiring methods, calculations, motors, special occupancies, etc.).
  • Find the exact NEC location that answers it (article/part/table/exception).
  • Confirm the detail precisely (because one small condition or exception can change the correct answer).

North Dakota’s licensing and testing is administered by the North Dakota State Electrical Board (NDSEB), which examines applicants and issues licenses based on qualifications and knowledge of electrical codes and laws. The NDSEB also publishes the Laws, Rules and Wiring Standards used for electrical and power-limited systems in the state.

This combo is designed to help you study efficiently using the 2023 NEC—so your practice time builds real exam-day skills: code lookup speed, careful reading, and accurate application.

Note on tabs: Tabs are included to help you practice code navigation faster while you study. Exam-room rules can vary by testing site and by what materials are provided on test day. This package keeps your focus on building the NEC lookup skill that carries over either way.

Exam Details

The NDSEB states that examinations are based on fundamental electricity, Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code. The NDSEB also notes important timing and scheduling rules:

  • Approval is required before you can sign up for an exam date.
  • If approved, your exam invite provides the dates available at the time of approval.
  • You must test within six (6) months of receiving an exam invite.
  • Passing grade is 70%.

NDSEB also lists what is provided for the exam session:

  • Code books
  • Calculators
  • Pencils

Journeyman exam length (as published by NDSEB) includes two timed portions:

  • Journeyman Closed: 1 hour
  • Journeyman Open: 3.5 hours

Because the exam includes both a closed portion and an open portion, your preparation should include:

  • Core understanding (so you can perform well even when you can’t rely on lookups).
  • Code navigation and verification (so you can answer quickly and confidently during the open portion).

This combo supports both: the study guide helps organize your practice and reinforce key concepts, while the NEC 2023 book with tabs helps you drill the navigation habit—finding the right article and verifying details without burning time.

Open Book Test

The NDSEB lists separate exam lengths for a closed portion and an open portion for journeyman testing, including a Journeyman Open portion that is 3.5 hours. For exam day, NDSEB also lists code books as provided items, along with calculators and pencils.

For your study plan, that means your best advantage comes from building a smooth NEC workflow:

  • Start with the index when you’re not sure where to go—then confirm the article/part once you land in the right chapter.
  • Train the “fast flip” to high-use areas (definitions, Chapter 1 general requirements, Chapter 2 wiring and protection, Chapter 3 wiring methods, Chapter 4 equipment, and the tables you use most).
  • Practice spotting exceptions and special conditions that modify the general rule.
  • Verify with the code text every time, so you build the habit of proving the answer instead of guessing.

Tabs are especially helpful during practice because they reduce the “hunt time” so you can spend your energy on reading and applying the requirement correctly.

Licensing Steps

North Dakota’s journeyman electrician licensing process is handled through the NDSEB. NDSEB outlines an application-and-approval flow tied to eligibility verification and exam scheduling.

  • Meet the experience and training qualifications for the journeyman category (documented and verifiable).
  • Submit the Examination Application and the required supporting documentation (NDSEB publishes fillable forms, including employment verification).
  • If submitting forms by email, NDSEB instructs sending them as a single PDF file.
  • Pay the appropriate fee after you receive email confirmation from NDSEB (NDSEB notes you may call to pay once confirmation is received).
  • After approval, receive an exam invitation that outlines available testing dates.
  • Choose your exam date and inform the board of the date selected.

NDSEB also notes that if the examination is not taken in the allotted time, you may be required to complete another application and pay the necessary fee. The exam invite timeline is important—so this combo is built to help you study consistently and be ready when your testing window opens.

State Requirements

NDSEB publishes journeyman qualifications that focus on supervised, documented experience and successful completion of apprenticeship training.

Journeyman qualification highlights (NDSEB) include:

  • 8,000 hours of experience, which may not be obtained in less than three (3) years.
  • Experience must be as a registered apprentice electrician under the supervision of a contracting master or master of record licensed electrician.
  • Electrical construction work must be done in a jurisdiction with similar licensing and inspection rules to North Dakota.
  • Applicant must have successfully completed apprentice electrician training.
  • 2,000 hours credit may be granted for a graduate of a two (2) year or more electrical school accepted by the board.

NDSEB also describes how different types of experience may be credited (with limits), including credits for areas such as repairing wiring/equipment, fire alarm technology circuits or systems, process control circuits or power-limited systems, and certain military electrical construction experience that the board determines equivalent.

If your work history includes multiple environments—commercial, industrial, agricultural, residential—your best study approach is to keep your code practice broad while giving extra attention to the topics that show up across nearly every job type: overcurrent protection, grounding and bonding, wiring methods, and calculations.

Reference Books

  • NFPA 70: National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 Edition
    The 2023 NEC is referenced in North Dakota’s published Laws, Rules and Wiring Standards, and the NDSEB states exams are based on the current edition of the NEC. This combo includes the NEC 2023 paperback to match 2023-code study and practice. Included Book:
  • 2023 Laws, Rules and Wiring Standards of North Dakota
    NDSEB publishes the state’s wiring standards (effective 7/1/2024) and notes they are based on the NEC, with the more restrictive requirement controlling where differences exist. (Not included in this combo.)

This combo keeps your focus on the NEC, because that’s the primary technical reference electricians use every day—on the job and in exam prep.

Test Information and Study Materials

The NDSEB exam blueprint emphasizes fundamentals plus North Dakota-specific rules and wiring standards, along with the NEC. A strong study plan should build both concept knowledge and lookup execution.

How to structure your study time with this combo

  • Week-by-week code focus: Rotate through high-frequency NEC areas so you keep improving without burning out on one topic.
  • Targeted drills: Do short, repeated drills where you identify the NEC topic, locate the rule, and confirm the detail—over and over until it feels automatic.
  • Closed-portion readiness: Practice core electrical theory and common requirements without looking things up, so you’re comfortable when the clock starts.
  • Open-portion pacing: Practice answering by proving your answer in the NEC quickly—especially where exceptions, definitions, and table notes matter.

High-value NEC areas to master for journeyman prep

  • Definitions and general requirements: understanding how terms are used (and where “defined” meaning controls).
  • Wiring and protection: branch circuits, feeders, services, OCPD selection and application, and the logic behind protection requirements.
  • Grounding and bonding: one of the most detail-sensitive topics—practice until you can quickly find and confirm requirements.
  • Wiring methods and materials: where you must match the method to the environment and installation conditions.
  • Equipment rules: panelboards, switchgear, disconnecting means, and related installation requirements.
  • Calculations and tables: practice locating and using the table or section the question depends on.
  • Motors and transformers: common exam topics that blend code navigation with careful reading.
  • Special occupancies and special equipment: learn how to identify the correct “special” article quickly when a scenario triggers it.

Why the NEC tabs help during prep

Tabs don’t replace studying—they make studying more efficient. When you can open the code to the right general area faster, you spend less time flipping and more time practicing the skills that score points: reading accurately, locating the controlling section, and confirming details under pressure.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep is built around real trade testing habits—organized study, practice-first learning, and code navigation that becomes second nature. Instead of turning your prep into a stressful scramble, we help you build a steady routine that feels practical and job-relevant.

  • Organized study guidance: A structured approach that keeps you moving through the topics that matter most instead of guessing what to do next.
  • Trade-focused review: Preparation centered on NEC application, code interpretation, tables, and exceptions—the stuff electricians actually use.
  • Practice-oriented preparation: Repetition that strengthens both accuracy and timing, especially on high-frequency NEC topics.
  • Reference navigation support: Building the “find it fast” skill that helps you confirm answers confidently during open-book testing and in the field.
  • Confidence-building study structure: A realistic way to prepare consistently while you’re still working full time.

This combo gives you the tools and structure to study like an electrician: focused practice, code-driven verification, and steady improvement that adds up.

FAQ Section

Who licenses journeyman electricians in North Dakota?

Journeyman electrician licensing and examinations are administered by the North Dakota State Electrical Board (NDSEB).

What is the North Dakota journeyman exam based on?

NDSEB states the examinations are based on fundamental electricity, the Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code.

What passing score is required?

NDSEB lists the passing grade as 70%.

How long is the North Dakota journeyman exam?

NDSEB lists a Journeyman Closed portion of 1 hour and a Journeyman Open portion of 3.5 hours.

Do I have to be approved before scheduling an exam date?

Yes. NDSEB states you must apply and be approved prior to signing up for an exam date. If approved, your invite will provide the dates available at the time of approval.

How long do I have to test after I receive my invite?

NDSEB states you must test within six (6) months of receiving an exam invite.

Does NDSEB provide anything at the exam?

Yes. NDSEB lists code books, calculators, and pencils as items provided for the exam.

What experience is required to qualify for a journeyman license in North Dakota?

NDSEB states a journeyman electrician shall have completed 8,000 hours of experience (not obtained in less than three years) as a registered apprentice under supervision of a contracting master or master of record, along with successful completion of apprentice electrician training. NDSEB also notes that 2,000 hours credit may be granted for graduates of a two-year or more electrical school accepted by the board.

Why include a tabbed NEC if the testing site provides code books?

Because the biggest advantage comes from what you build before exam day: faster navigation, better accuracy, and confidence using the NEC under time pressure. A tabbed NEC helps you train that skill consistently during prep.