Louisiana’s statewide electrical testing is built for electricians who are ready to operate at the top of the trade—planning work, applying the National Electrical Code with confidence, and making decisions that hold up in the real world. If you’re pursuing master-level electrical authority in Louisiana, your preparation needs to do more than refresh concepts. It needs to build exam performance: fast code navigation, steady pacing, accurate interpretation, and the discipline to avoid time traps.
This Louisiana 2026 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is designed for practice-driven results. With 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams, you’ll train the exact skills that matter on an open-book trade exam: recognizing what the question is asking, locating the right reference quickly, confirming the rule, and moving forward without second-guessing.
Practice exams aren’t just a way to “check readiness.” They’re the fastest way to build readiness. Each round of practice helps you:
Who this is for:
Louisiana’s statewide electrical trade examination is administered through PSI for LSLBC. PSI’s exam outline for the Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination lists the format as:
The PSI content outline also shows how the 100 questions are distributed across the major topics you need to be ready for. This breakdown helps you study smarter, because it shows where your practice time will deliver the biggest score improvement:
That outline is why this product focuses on practice exams. Practice forces you to perform across the same categories the exam tests—especially high-volume areas like services/feeders/branch circuits, grounding and bonding, installation requirements, special occupancies, lighting/signs, and general electrical knowledge.
The Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination is an open book exam. PSI states that candidates are responsible for bringing their own references to the examination center, and it outlines exactly how those references may be prepared and used.
Key open-book rules you must train for:
Open book is a real advantage—if you use it correctly. The winning strategy is not “look up everything.” It’s confirm efficiently. Practice exams help you build that rhythm: recognize the topic, go straight to the right rule, confirm the detail, and move on with momentum.
LSLBC manages statewide contractor licensing in Louisiana, and electrical work performed at the statewide contractor level follows the LSLBC licensing process. While each applicant’s situation can vary, the core flow typically includes:
This study guide supports the exam portion of that journey—helping you prepare for the Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination with organized practice and realistic review.
LSLBC’s classification description for Electrical defines the scope of work at the statewide contractor level. The Board describes electrical work as the installation, construction, alteration, improvement, movement, maintenance, repair, or demolition of electrical wiring and related equipment for supplying electricity to a structure or project when the value exceeds $10,000. The same classification guidance also explains when low-voltage and structured cabling work requires an electrical classification—especially when the work involves penetrating walls, ceilings, floors, closed spaces, or the building envelope.
Qualifying Party requirement: LSLBC’s checklist states that all applicants must designate a Qualifying Party (or parties). The Qualifying Party represents the licensed entity for (1) complying with LSLBC licensing laws (Business & Law), (2) meeting classification requirements, and (3) meeting requirements for the initial license and continuation. LSLBC also provides examples of who may qualify as a Qualifying Party under the statutory definition, including a sole proprietor (or spouse), qualifying employees, corporate officers/stockholders/incorporators, partners, and LLC members/managers.
Application documentation (high-impact items from LSLBC instructions):
The most important takeaway: Louisiana statewide electrical contracting is structured around licensing, classification scope, and qualifying party responsibility. Your exam prep should match that professional expectation—steady performance across safety, installation requirements, and code compliance topics.
PSI lists the following references as the examination study materials for the Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination (open book):
With 100 questions in 240 minutes, your time matters. On average, you have just a couple minutes per question—including the time it takes to confirm NEC details, read tables, and double-check exceptions. The best way to protect that time is to practice under timed conditions until your lookup process becomes efficient.
How to use the 12 practice exams:
How to use the 2 full final exams:
Open-book strategy that works on Louisiana’s outline:
1 Exam Prep supports Louisiana electricians by focusing on the way licensing exams actually work: they are performance tests. You don’t just need knowledge—you need a reliable method that holds up under time pressure in an open-book setting.
This is realistic support for working electricians: practice, review, correction, and repeat—so you walk into your Louisiana statewide electrical exam ready to perform.
Yes. PSI states the Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination is an open-book exam and that candidates are responsible for bringing their own approved references to the test center.
PSI lists 100 questions on the Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination.
PSI lists 240 minutes to complete the Louisiana Electrical Statewide Examination.
PSI lists the minimum passing score as 70 (70%).
PSI lists the National Electrical Code (NEC) 2023 edition, Ugly’s Electrical References (2011, 2014, or 2017), and OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 (or PSI’s selections of 29 CFR Part 1926) as the exam study references allowed in the test room.
No. PSI states references may be highlighted, underlined, annotated, and/or indexed before the exam, but they may not be written in during the examination session.
No. PSI states references may be tabbed/indexed with permanent tabs only. Temporary tabs such as Post-it notes are not allowed and must be removed before the exam begins.
LSLBC describes electrical work as the installation, construction, alteration, improvement, movement, maintenance, repair, or demolition of wiring and related electrical equipment for the supply of electricity when the project value exceeds $10,000, and it provides additional guidance for when low-voltage and structured cabling work requires the electrical classification.
LSLBC states that applicants must designate a Qualifying Party to represent the licensed entity for Business & Law compliance, for meeting classification requirements, and for maintaining the license over time.