Preparing for Washington’s journeyman-level electrical exam is less about what you can memorize and more about how well you can work the code under pressure. The questions are designed to test real application: identifying the right topic, finding the supporting rule, checking exceptions, using tables correctly, and moving on without losing time.
This combo is built for that exact style of preparation—using the 2023 National Electrical Code (NEC) as your foundation. You get a focused 2023 Washington Journeyman Electrician Study Guide plus the National Electrical Code 2023 paperback with tabs so you can practice the most valuable open-book skill: fast, accurate navigation.
If you’re finishing your hours as a trainee, stepping up from a specialty track, or challenging the exam with strong field experience, this set gives you a clean system for study sessions that actually move your scores: practice questions, code lookups, and repeatable routines that help you stay calm when the clock is running.
Washington electrical exams are tied to certification types and are administered by PSI after the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) approves an electrician candidate’s eligibility to test. L&I explains that you must pass each section of the exam with a score of 70% or greater.
PSI’s Washington Electrical Certification Candidate Information Bulletin shows that the 01–General electrician exam is section-based and includes:
For 01–General (Electrician), PSI lists the exam as having 60 questions in the NEC & Theory section and 17 questions in the WA Codes section, with time allowed per section shown as 3 hours (NEC & Theory) and 1 hour (WA Codes). PSI also notes that the number of questions in any knowledge area is approximate.
L&I also emphasizes that this isn’t an exam about pure memorization—being familiar with your reference material and how to use it efficiently is what improves performance.
PSI’s Washington bulletin states that all examinations are open book. The bulletin also explains that candidates may use original copyrighted materials and a silent, nonprinting, nonprogrammable calculator. It allows copies of Washington RCW/WAC downloaded and printed in a binder, and it permits highlighting, underlining, and permanent index tabs. Removable sticky notes are not permitted, and references may not be written in.
That open-book format rewards a specific kind of preparation: not just knowing the idea of the rule, but being able to prove the rule quickly in the code and move on.
The included NEC 2023 paperback with tabs helps you train that skill in a practical way:
A simple open-book “lookup routine” you can train during study:
Repeat that pattern while working practice questions and your speed improves naturally—because you stop “searching” and start “locating.”
Washington’s journey-level pathway is managed through L&I. While the exact paperwork and route can differ depending on whether you’re in-state, out-of-state, or documenting military experience, the typical process looks like this:
Washington has both general journey-level and specialty electrician tracks. L&I’s electrician guidance highlights key requirements candidates commonly plan around:
This combo supports the part that affects most candidates’ outcomes: exam performance. The study guide gives you structured practice, and the tabbed NEC helps you build the navigation habits open-book exams reward.
The fastest way to improve on an NEC-based open-book exam is to practice the way you’ll be tested: timed sets, code verification, and consistent routines. Use this combo as a system—each component has a job.
Navigation drills are short, focused sessions where your only goal is to get faster at finding what you need. Try a simple drill format:
This training helps your score because it reduces the most common open-book problem: spending too long searching for the right place.
Consistency beats marathon sessions. Regular code lookups are what make open-book exams feel manageable.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians with study resources designed around performance—because licensing exams test how well you apply what you know. Instead of relying on scattered notes or unfocused reading, you use organized materials that help you build stronger habits over time.
This combo helps you prepare by providing:
No prep system can replace hands-on experience, but the right study routine can help you perform more efficiently, reduce hesitation, and improve how you work through exam questions when every minute matters.
This combo includes the 2023 Washington Journeyman Electrician Study Guide and the National Electrical Code 2023 paperback with tabs.
Yes. L&I explains that electrician exam candidates must apply and be approved by L&I before they can schedule an exam with PSI.
L&I states you must pass each section of the examination with a score of 70% or greater.
Yes. PSI’s Washington Electrical Certification Candidate Information Bulletin states that all examinations are open book.
PSI’s bulletin shows the 01–General exam is section-based and includes NEC & Theory and WA Codes, with each section timed separately.
Tabs help you build faster navigation habits during practice. When you can locate the right chapter or Article family quickly, you spend more time applying the rule correctly and less time flipping pages.
L&I lists 96 hours of Basic Classroom Instruction and 8,000 hours of work experience for the 01 journey-level exam (with additional limits and specialty-hour rules described by L&I).
L&I states that you must renew your electrician certificate every 3 years and that it expires on your birthdate.
L&I states renewal requires 24 hours of approved continuing education credit, including 8 hours of code update and 4 hours of RCW/WAC.