This 2026 Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Super Combo is designed for apprentices, electrical trainees, helpers, and working electricians who want a complete printed study package for journeyman-level electrical knowledge, calculation practice, National Electrical Code review, and exam preparation. The combo includes the 2026 Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide, the 2026 Electrician Calculations Study Guide, the National Electrical Code 2026 paperback with tabs, and the 2026 Journeyman Electrician Flash Cards.
Mississippi electrical licensing is different from states that issue one single statewide journeyman electrician license through a dedicated statewide electrician board. Mississippi regulates contractor licensing through the Mississippi State Board of Contractors, while journeyman-level electrician licensing is commonly handled locally by cities, counties, or municipalities. Because individual journeyman requirements may vary by location, candidates preparing for a Mississippi journeyman electrician exam should follow the instructions issued by the local licensing authority or exam provider for the area where they plan to work.
The 2026 Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide helps organize journeyman-level electrical topics into a practical study format. The 2026 Electrician Calculations Study Guide gives dedicated attention to math-based problem solving, including load calculations, conductor sizing, service and feeder calculations, branch-circuit work, motors, overcurrent protection, voltage drop concepts, box fill, raceway fill, and formula-based review. The National Electrical Code 2026 paperback with tabs supports current-code study and article navigation practice. The 2026 Journeyman Electrician Flash Cards help reinforce terminology, formulas, definitions, safety concepts, and code-related reminders through quick review.
This Super Combo is built for students who want more than a single study book. Reading helps build understanding. Calculation practice builds accuracy. NEC lookup practice builds speed. Flash cards build recall. Used together, these materials support a stronger study routine for Mississippi electrical apprentices, journeyman-level workers, and candidates preparing for local journeyman or statewide electrical trade examinations.
This product is based on the 2026 National Electrical Code and includes the NEC 2026 paperback with tabs for students who want current-code study materials and long-term code familiarity. Candidates taking a scheduled Mississippi exam should follow the active local licensing authority, Mississippi State Board of Contractors, PSI, NASCLA, or approved testing provider instructions for the specific exam being taken, including the code edition, reference list, tabbing rules, calculator rules, passing score, and exam procedures.
Mississippiās statewide contractor licensing program is administered by the Mississippi State Board of Contractors. MSBOC requires applicants for contractor licensing to submit the proper application before testing. After the Board reviews the application and determines eligibility, PSI is notified and the candidate receives scheduling information for the required examination.
Mississippi journeyman-level electrician exams may be handled locally by cities, counties, or municipalities. A local journeyman electrician exam may be administered directly by the local authority or through an outside testing provider. Local exams may include National Electrical Code questions, electrical theory, installation requirements, wiring methods, services, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, conductors, raceways, boxes, motors, overcurrent protection, safety, and electrical calculations.
For statewide electrical contracting, Mississippi applicants may be required to take a law and business examination and a trade examination, depending on the license classification. Mississippi electrical contractor candidates may use the MSBOC Master Electricians state-specific trade examination or the NASCLA Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors when accepted for the trade portion of the licensing process. These exams are different from a local journeyman license, but the electrical knowledge areas overlap with journeyman-level study.
The NASCLA Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors is listed with 100 questions, a 270-minute time limit, and a 75% passing score. Its content outline includes project design and management, safety, electrical theory and principles, general code requirements, wiring and protection, wiring methods and materials, general equipment use, special occupancies, special equipment, special conditions, and communication systems.
Journeyman-level electrical exam preparation in Mississippi should focus on the trade knowledge expected of a competent electrician. Important study areas include general electrical knowledge, NEC organization, conductors and cables, wiring methods and materials, raceways and boxes, grounding and bonding, service equipment, feeders, branch circuits, overcurrent protection, motors and controls, utilization equipment, special occupancies, special equipment, low voltage circuits, safety practices, and calculation-based problem solving.
This Super Combo supports the technical preparation side of the process. The Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide helps organize broad electrical topics. The Electrician Calculations Study Guide helps students practice math-based electrical problems. The NEC 2026 paperback with tabs helps students practice article navigation. The Journeyman Electrician Flash Cards help reinforce key information through repeated short study sessions.
Mississippi State Board of Contractors examinations administered through PSI are open book exams. MSBOCās testing guidance states that all exams administered by PSI are open book exams, and the PSI candidate bulletin lists the approved reference materials for each examination. Local journeyman-level exams may also use open-book reference rules when the local licensing authority or testing provider identifies approved materials.
Open-book electrical testing still requires serious preparation. A candidate who is unfamiliar with the National Electrical Code can lose valuable time searching through definitions, article sections, tables, exceptions, and related rules. A prepared candidate can move more efficiently through wiring methods, raceway requirements, box rules, grounding and bonding provisions, conductor requirements, service rules, feeder rules, branch-circuit requirements, motor provisions, special occupancy provisions, safety topics, and equipment-specific requirements.
For MSBOC and PSI contractor examinations, candidates are responsible for bringing their own approved references to the examination center. Reference materials may be highlighted, underlined, and indexed before the exam, but references may not be written in. Additional papers, loose papers, and attached papers are not permitted with approved references. Temporary tabs, such as Post-it notes, are not allowed and must be removed before the exam begins.
The National Electrical Code 2026 paperback with tabs included in this Super Combo is intended for study and code navigation practice before the exam. Tabs can make study sessions more efficient by helping students move quickly between major articles and frequently reviewed sections. Students should practice using the table of contents, index, article numbering system, definitions, conductor tables, grounding and bonding articles, wiring method articles, service articles, feeder articles, branch-circuit provisions, and motor sections. Exam-room reference use is controlled by the active local, MSBOC, PSI, or NASCLA examination instructions for the scheduled test.
The Mississippi journeyman electrician path begins with identifying the correct licensing authority. For many journeyman-level credentials, the controlling authority may be a city, county, or municipality. For electrical contracting work that falls under Mississippiās statewide contractor licensing law, the licensing authority is the Mississippi State Board of Contractors.
A practical journeyman-level path begins with reviewing local application instructions. Many jurisdictions expect applicants to document electrical work experience, apprenticeship training, classroom education, or a combination of training and field experience before approving the applicant for examination. Some jurisdictions may require proof of work under a licensed electrician, master electrician, or electrical contractor.
After reviewing the local or state rules, the candidate submits the required application to the licensing authority or testing provider. For MSBOC contractor examinations, the applicant submits the appropriate contractor license application to the Board. After the Board reviews the application and determines eligibility, MSBOC notifies PSI, and PSI sends the candidate a confirmation notice for scheduling.
Once approved, the candidate schedules the required exam, studies the current reference list, brings the permitted materials, and follows the test-day procedures established by the testing provider or licensing office. Electrical contractor applicants may need to take the Mississippi Law and Business Management examination and an electrical trade examination, depending on the classification being pursued.
After passing the exam, the candidate completes the remaining local licensing, certificate, registration, or contractor licensing steps. These steps may include submitting the score report, paying local fees, completing registration, receiving a license card or certificate, meeting insurance or business requirements, or renewing according to the applicable schedule. Because Mississippi journeyman requirements may be local, electricians who work in more than one city or county may need to confirm licensing or registration rules in each area.
Mississippi regulates contractor licensing through the Mississippi State Board of Contractors. Commercial and residential contractors are required to be licensed by MSBOC when their work falls within the Boardās licensing requirements. Electrical contractor licensing at the state level is separate from local journeyman or master electrician credentials that may be issued by cities, counties, or municipalities.
Mississippiās MSBOC testing process begins with submitting the proper contractor license application. The Board reviews the application, notifies the applicant of missing requirements, sends testing information from the PSI candidate bulletin, and notifies PSI of the candidateās eligibility to test. A candidate cannot schedule an MSBOC exam until PSI sends the confirmation notice.
For statewide contractor testing, the required exams depend on the license classification. MSBOC identifies the Mississippi Law and Business Management exam as required for all applicants, with a trade exam required based on the type of license being pursued. For electrical classifications, applicants may encounter the MSBOC Master Electricians state-specific exam or the NASCLA electrical trade exam where accepted.
Mississippi journeyman electrician requirements may be local rather than statewide. Cities, counties, and municipalities may establish their own journeyman, master, contractor, registration, permit, or inspection requirements. Electricians should follow the rules for the area where they plan to perform regulated electrical work.
For preparation purposes, the core journeyman-level knowledge areas remain consistent across many electrical exams. Students should study NEC organization, electrical theory, conductors, raceways, boxes, wiring methods, services, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, equipment, special occupancies, special equipment, safety, and calculations.
Mississippi Journeyman Electrician exam preparation should include code study, trade knowledge review, electrical theory, calculation practice, and repeated quick recall. Journeyman-level electrical exams cover a wide range of subjects, and students often benefit from using several study methods together. Reading builds understanding. Calculations build problem-solving accuracy. NEC lookup practice builds reference navigation speed. Flash cards build recall through repetition.
The 2026 Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide helps organize broad electrical exam content into a more manageable study path. Students can use it to review general electrical knowledge, services, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, conductors and cables, raceways and boxes, wiring methods, wiring protection, overcurrent protection, motors, equipment, safety, special occupancies, special equipment, special conditions, communication systems, and calculations.
The 2026 Electrician Calculations Study Guide is included because electrical math is an important part of journeyman-level preparation. Calculation practice may include conductor sizing, box fill, raceway fill, branch-circuit loads, service and feeder calculations, overcurrent protection, motor calculations, voltage drop concepts, load balancing, transformer calculations, and unit conversions. Students should practice writing out each step, checking units, and reading each question carefully before selecting an answer.
The National Electrical Code 2026 paperback with tabs helps students practice code navigation. Tabs can make it easier to move between major sections during study sessions. Students should become comfortable using Article 100 definitions, conductor tables, grounding and bonding articles, wiring method articles, box and raceway rules, service requirements, feeder requirements, branch-circuit provisions, motor rules, special occupancy rules, special equipment rules, communication system articles, and equipment-specific sections.
The 2026 Journeyman Electrician Flash Cards support quick review between longer study sessions. Flash cards are useful for short daily study because they help students repeat definitions, formulas, safety concepts, and code-related terms. A few minutes of flash card review each day can help keep important concepts fresh while the student continues deeper study with the guide and NEC.
A strong study routine may include separate blocks for reading, calculations, NEC lookup practice, and flash card review. One session may focus on electrical theory. Another may focus on wiring and protection. Another may focus on wiring methods and materials. Another may focus on services, feeders, and branch circuits. Another may focus on motors, equipment, special occupancies, or communication systems. Calculation sessions should be repeated throughout the study period rather than saved until the end.
Students should also track missed questions and difficult subjects. A missed question is useful when it shows what needs more review. When a student misses a question about conductor ampacity, raceway fill, overcurrent protection, grounding rules, service calculations, branch-circuit requirements, or motor controls, that topic should be reviewed in the study guide and then located in the NEC. This approach helps connect the explanation with the actual reference path.
1 Exam Prep helps students prepare with organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, reference navigation support, and confidence-building study structure. Journeyman-level electrical study can feel overwhelming because the topics are broad, the code book is detailed, and calculation work requires accuracy. A complete study package helps students divide the material into smaller, more manageable sections.
This Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Super Combo supports students from several angles. The Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide helps organize exam topics and trade review. The Electrician Calculations Study Guide gives dedicated attention to math-based electrical problem solving. The National Electrical Code 2026 paperback with tabs supports code study and faster reference navigation practice. The Journeyman Electrician Flash Cards help reinforce terms, formulas, and key concepts through repetition.
1 Exam Prepās approach is practical and realistic. Students are encouraged to study consistently, practice using the NEC, review calculations step by step, strengthen weaker topics, and use flash cards for quick review. The goal is to help students build a stronger preparation routine and approach local journeyman-level exams, apprenticeship milestones, statewide electrical trade exams, or future licensing steps with better organization and more confidence.
For Mississippi electrical students and journeyman-level workers, progress comes from repeated exposure to the material. Repeated code lookups build speed. Repeated calculation practice builds accuracy. Repeated flash card review builds recall. Repeated review of difficult topics builds confidence. This Super Combo gives students a useful foundation for steady, focused preparation.
This Super Combo includes the 2026 Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide, the 2026 Electrician Calculations Study Guide, the National Electrical Code 2026 paperback with tabs, and the 2026 Journeyman Electrician Flash Cards.
Mississippi does not use one single statewide journeyman electrician license structure like some states. Statewide contractor licensing is handled by the Mississippi State Board of Contractors, while journeyman-level requirements may be handled locally.
Mississippi contractor licensing is administered by the Mississippi State Board of Contractors.
Mississippi State Board of Contractors examinations are administered through PSI after MSBOC determines the applicantās eligibility to test.
Yes. Mississippi State Board of Contractors examinations administered through PSI are open book exams. Local journeyman exams may also use open-book rules when listed by the local authority or testing provider.
For MSBOC and PSI examinations, references may be highlighted, underlined, and indexed, but they may not be written in. Additional loose or attached papers are not permitted.
Temporary tabs, such as Post-it notes, are not allowed for MSBOC and PSI examinations and must be removed before the exam begins.
Important study areas include electrical theory, NEC navigation, conductors, raceways, boxes, wiring methods, services, feeders, branch circuits, grounding and bonding, overcurrent protection, motors, equipment, safety, special occupancies, and calculations.
Electrical contractor applicants may need the Mississippi Law and Business Management exam and an electrical trade examination. Electrical trade options may include the MSBOC Master Electricians state-specific exam or the NASCLA Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors when accepted.
The NASCLA Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors is listed with 100 questions and a 270-minute time limit.
The NASCLA Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors is listed with a 75% passing score.
This Super Combo is based on the 2026 NEC for students who want current-code study materials, stronger code navigation practice, and a newer NEC reference as part of their preparation routine.
The calculations guide helps students practice electrical math, formula selection, load calculations, conductor sizing, service and feeder work, branch-circuit calculations, motors, and other math-based electrician preparation topics.
Tabs help students practice faster navigation through the National Electrical Code during study sessions. They can make it easier to locate major articles, definitions, tables, and frequently reviewed sections.
Flash cards support quick review of electrical terms, formulas, code concepts, safety topics, and exam-relevant knowledge areas. They are useful for short daily study sessions and repeated recall practice.
Use the Mississippi Journeyman Electrician Study Guide to organize your review, the Electrician Calculations Study Guide to practice math-based problems, the NEC 2026 paperback with tabs to build code navigation skills, and the flash cards for quick daily review.