Prepare for Georgia master-level electrical contractor exam content with a structured study guide and flash card combo built for electricians, qualifying agents, and electrical professionals who want serious practice before test day. This 2026 Georgia Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide + Flash Card Combo includes 12 practice exams, 2 full final exams, and flash card review based on the 2026 National Electrical Code. It is designed to help you review electrical laws and regulations, administrative functions, electrical circuits, controls, motors, transformers, interior electrical systems, grounding, wiring methods, calculations, safety, project organization, and contractor-level electrical knowledge.
Georgia does not issue a statewide license officially titled āMaster Electricianā in the same way some other states do. Georgia licenses electrical contractors through the Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board, Division of Electrical Contractors. The two primary Georgia electrical contractor license classes are Class I Restricted and Class II Unrestricted. For students and electricians using the term āGeorgia master electrician,ā the Class II Unrestricted Electrical Contractor license is the closest Georgia pathway for broad, master-level electrical contracting authority.
This combo is built for candidates who want more than a light review packet. The 12 practice exams give you repeated exposure to exam-style questions across major electrical and administrative topic areas. The 2 full final exams help you measure readiness after completing your main study work. The flash cards provide short, repeated review for formulas, electrical terms, code concepts, safety reminders, business and law topics, and trade knowledge that benefits from repetition.
Georgiaās electrical contractor exam is open book and administered in two parts. Open book does not mean easy. Candidates still need to understand the material, use approved references efficiently, read questions carefully, manage time, and apply the correct rule or trade concept under pressure. A large reference set can only help when you know where to look and how to use it.
Because this product is based on the 2026 National Electrical Code, it gives students a current NEC-based study foundation for modern electrical terminology, wiring methods, grounding concepts, protection rules, equipment requirements, and code organization. Candidates taking the official Georgia examination should use the reference materials and code edition listed for the examination they are approved to take. This study guide, practice exam, final exam, and flash card combo is designed to strengthen understanding, build repetition, and support more confident exam preparation.
The Georgia Electrical Contractor licensure examinations are administered through PSI for the Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board, Division of Electrical Contractors. The Board must approve a candidate before the candidate can schedule an examination appointment. After approval, PSI sends the candidate registration and scheduling instructions for the examination.
Georgia offers two electrical contractor examinations that correspond with the two electrical contractor license classes: Class I Restricted and Class II Unrestricted. Both examinations consist of multiple-choice questions. The exam is administered in two parts, with 8 total hours allotted. Candidates have 4 hours to complete Part I, followed by a break, and 4 hours to complete Part II. The time limit includes beta, or pretest, questions. The Class I exam includes 15 beta questions, and the Class II exam includes 22 beta questions. Beta questions do not count toward the candidateās score.
The minimum passing final scaled score for each Georgia electrical contractor examination is 70. Scores are scaled, and candidates receive a score report after completing the exam. PSI provides the Board with the official score report, and Board staff communicates with the candidate regarding results and licensing status after the score report is received.
The Georgia electrical contractor content outline includes Regulations, Laws, and Administrative Functions, along with Technical Functions. The administrative area includes complying with laws, complying with regulations, complying with administrative requirements, and planning and organizing work. These topics include workersā compensation, unemployment insurance, employer tax guide topics, Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board requirements, sales and use tax, business licensing, OSHA, the National Electrical Code, permits, inspections, bonding, insurance, financing, bookkeeping, estimating, bidding, contracts, purchase orders, drawings, specifications, inventory, scheduling, and project management.
The technical portion includes maintaining basic electrical circuits, installing and maintaining electrical controls and devices, installing and maintaining AC and DC rotating equipment, installing, sizing, and maintaining transformers, and installing and maintaining interior electrical systems. The Class II Unrestricted exam includes broader industrial and commercial topics, including additional motor and transformer tasks marked for Class II candidates only.
The Georgia Electrical Contractor examination is an open-book test. Only the reference materials listed in the official candidate handbook may be used during the examination. No other reference materials are allowed. Some questions are based on field experience and trade knowledge, so candidates should not expect every answer to be found word-for-word in a book.
Candidates may bring as many or as few of the listed approved references as desired. References may be highlighted, underlined, or tabbed with permanent tabs. Candidates may not bring other photocopied materials or handwritten notes, even if they are pasted into a reference book. Additional materials may be removed and confiscated, and a candidate may be removed from the examination if prohibited materials are found.
A silent, non-programmable calculator without alpha keys or printing capability is allowed in the testing room. Notes, cameras, recorders, pagers, cell phones, tablets, laptops, and similar electronic devices are not allowed in the testing room. Candidates must follow all PSI test-center security rules and bring only materials allowed for the examination.
The study guide, 12 practice exams, 2 full final exams, and flash cards are preparation tools. They are designed to help you learn before exam day, strengthen recall, and practice applying electrical concepts. They should not be treated as exam-room references unless official PSI instructions specifically allow a material. For open-book success, practice using your approved references during study so you can move quickly when the exam clock is running.
Georgia electrical contractor licensing begins with the Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board, Division of Electrical Contractors. Candidates must apply to the Board and receive approval before scheduling an examination. A candidate who has not received notice of approval cannot schedule the exam.
After the Board approves the candidate to sit for the exam, the Board notifies PSI. PSI then sends a confirmation notice with instructions for registering and scheduling the examination. The candidate schedules the examination through PSI and reports to the test center according to the testing instructions, identification rules, and appointment requirements.
After completing the examination, the candidate receives a score report. PSI also provides the Board with an official score report. Once the Board receives the official score report, Board staff communicates with the candidate regarding results and the remaining licensing process.
Candidates who fail the examination must retake and pass the examination to be considered for licensure. Georgiaās candidate handbook states that a candidate who fails twice must complete a Board-approved review course before being allowed to test a third time. After submitting proof of completion of the review course, the candidate may test again under the Boardās process.
This product supports the exam preparation portion of the Georgia licensing process. Candidates must still complete the Board application, receive approval, schedule through PSI, follow examination rules, pass the required examination, and satisfy all licensing requirements established by Georgia.
The Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board, Division of Electrical Contractors regulates electrical contractor licensing in Georgia. Georgia electrical contractor licenses are divided into Class I Restricted and Class II Unrestricted. The Class I license is limited in scope, while the Class II license is the unrestricted electrical contractor classification.
The Class II Unrestricted Electrical Contractor license is the Georgia license most closely aligned with master-level electrical contracting preparation. Candidates preparing for this path should be ready for both technical electrical topics and contractor administrative responsibilities. The exam includes business, legal, administrative, OSHA, NEC, project management, estimating, and trade knowledge areas.
Georgiaās licensing structure is contractor-focused. A person pursuing electrical contracting authority must follow the Boardās application and approval process before testing. PSI administers the examination, but the Board controls examination approval, licensing decisions, and the application process.
Georgia electrical contractor candidates should keep application materials, approval notices, scheduling information, identification documents, score reports, and Board communications organized throughout the process. The licensing process requires both technical preparation and attention to state administrative requirements.
This exam prep combo does not replace Georgiaās application process, Board approval, PSI scheduling, license issuance, renewal requirements, continuing education requirements, or any decision made by the Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board or the Division of Electrical Contractors.
This study guide and flash card combo is based on the 2026 National Electrical Code. Georgiaās official reference list identifies the references allowed during the examination, and candidates should use the approved reference materials required for the exact exam they are approved to take.
Effective Georgia master electrician exam preparation should combine NEC review, technical trade knowledge, business and law review, OSHA safety study, reference navigation, timed practice, and repeated recall. The exam is long, open book, and divided into two 4-hour parts, so candidates need both stamina and organization. Some questions may be answered from knowledge, while others require using approved references efficiently.
Start with the administrative content. Georgia tests regulations, laws, administrative functions, and work organization. Candidates should review workersā compensation, unemployment insurance, employer tax obligations, Georgia board rules, sales and use tax, business licensing, OSHA regulations, NEC requirements, inspections, permits, bonding, insurance, job cost estimating, bidding, contracts, purchase orders, drawings, specifications, scheduling, and project management.
Next, study basic electrical circuits and troubleshooting. Candidates should be comfortable with grounding systems, ground fault indicators, overloaded circuits, shorted circuits, batteries in series and parallel, simple circuits, schematic diagrams, wire terminations, splices, repairs, meters, and wiring devices. These topics require practical field knowledge as well as exam-focused reading skills.
Controls and devices are a major part of the technical outline. Review relays, drum switches, motor control, starters, overload relays, pressure switches, temperature switches, transmitters, rheostats, potentiometers, rectifiers, time-delay relays, limit switches, selector switches, push buttons, HOA switches, surge protectors, voltage regulators, programmable controllers, panels, circuit breakers, disconnects, lighting controls, and energy management devices.
Motors and rotating equipment deserve focused study, especially for Class II Unrestricted candidates. Study single-phase and three-phase motors, direction of rotation, speed changes, motor connections, delta and wye configurations, capacitors, DC motors, generators, fire pump systems, motor nameplate data, motor diagrams, motor loads, overload protection, short-circuit protection, and branch-circuit wiring for motors.
Transformers are another important Class II area. Candidates should review transformer connections, dual-voltage transformers, current transformers, potential transformers, auto-transformers, distribution transformers, three-phase transformer banks, delta systems, wye systems, and transformer load concepts. Transformer questions may require both trade knowledge and calculation skill.
Use the 12 practice exams as your main repetition tool. After each practice exam, review every missed question. Identify the topic, return to the NEC-based material or approved reference, and understand why the correct answer is best. Do not only memorize the answer. Learn the concept behind it so you can handle similar questions in a different format.
Use the 2 full final exams near the end of your preparation. Treat each final exam like a real testing session. Work without distractions, manage your time, answer every question, and review your results carefully afterward. The final exams help build stamina for a long testing day and reveal remaining weak areas before the actual exam.
Use the flash cards for short, repeated review sessions. Flash cards are helpful before work, after a job, during lunch, or during final review. They reinforce formulas, definitions, electrical terms, code organization, OSHA concepts, business terms, and high-value contractor exam topics that need to stay fresh.
1 Exam Prep helps electricians prepare with organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, reference navigation support, and confidence-building study structure. Georgia master-level electrical contractor preparation requires more than field experience. Candidates need to understand electrical concepts, use the NEC, apply OSHA safety rules, review business and law topics, manage time, and work efficiently with approved references during an open-book exam.
This combo gives you a practical system for preparation. The study guide helps organize the content. The 12 practice exams help build repetition and identify weak areas. The 2 full final exams help evaluate readiness after your main review. The flash cards help keep important formulas, terms, safety points, business concepts, and code topics fresh through repeated review.
Because this product is based on the 2026 National Electrical Code, it supports current NEC-based study and helps candidates strengthen their understanding of modern electrical terminology, code layout, and application. The goal is not just to memorize answers. The goal is to build stronger electrical reasoning, better reference habits, and more confident test-taking skills.
1 Exam Prep does not guarantee a passing score, licensing approval, or any state outcome. Instead, this product gives you a disciplined way to study, practice, review, and approach Georgia master electrician exam preparation with a stronger plan.
This product is designed for electricians, qualifying agents, and contractor applicants preparing for Georgia master-level electrical contractor exam content, especially candidates studying for the Class II Unrestricted Electrical Contractor license.
Georgia does not issue a statewide license officially titled āMaster Electrician.ā Georgia licenses electrical contractors as Class I Restricted and Class II Unrestricted through the Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board, Division of Electrical Contractors.
This combo includes a Georgia master electrician exam prep and study guide, 12 practice exams, 2 full final exams, and flash card review materials.
Yes. This study guide and flash card combo is based on the 2026 National Electrical Code.
Yes. The Georgia Electrical Contractor exam is open book. Only the reference materials listed in the official candidate handbook may be used during the examination.
The exam is administered in two parts. Candidates have 4 hours for Part I, followed by a break, and 4 hours for Part II, for a total of 8 hours.
The minimum passing final scaled score for each Georgia electrical contractor examination is 70.
The exam covers regulations, laws, administrative functions, project organization, basic electrical circuits, controls and devices, motors, rotating equipment, transformers, interior electrical systems, safety, and related trade knowledge.
Georgia offers Class I Restricted and Class II Unrestricted electrical contractor licenses. The Class II Unrestricted license is the broader electrical contractor classification and is the path most closely aligned with master-level electrical contractor preparation.
The study guide, practice exams, final exams, and flash cards are preparation materials. Candidates should bring only the approved references allowed by the official examination instructions.
Yes. References may be highlighted, underlined, or tabbed with permanent tabs. Handwritten notes and other photocopied materials are not allowed.
Yes. Candidates must be approved by the Georgia Construction Industry Licensing Board before scheduling the examination through PSI.
Use the practice exams throughout your study plan. Review missed questions carefully, identify weak topics, and return to the NEC-based material or approved references until the reasoning is clear.
Use the full final exams after completing several practice exams and reviewing your weaker areas. They work best as readiness checks near the end of your preparation.
No. This is an exam preparation product. Candidates must still complete the Georgia licensing application process, receive Board approval, schedule through PSI, pass the required examination, and satisfy all state licensing requirements.