The Massachusetts Journeyman Electrician Part 1 exam is timed, code-driven, and built to measure how well you can apply the rules—not just recognize terms. The fastest way to feel prepared is to study in a way that mirrors the test experience: identify the topic, locate the controlling requirement, confirm the details (including exceptions and definitions), and choose the best answer with confidence.
This Online Exam Prep is designed for candidates working toward the Massachusetts Journeyman Electrician license who want a clear, practical study path for Part 1. Instead of bouncing between random notes and scattered practice, you get a structured approach that keeps your effort focused on the same knowledge areas and code navigation habits you’ll rely on in the exam room.
Your preparation is centered on the core references used for Part 1:
Because Massachusetts uses an open-book format for this exam, your success depends on two skills working together: solid electrical understanding and efficient reference use. This Online Exam Prep supports both—helping you build stronger code familiarity while also strengthening the real-world skill of finding answers quickly under time pressure.
Massachusetts electrician examinations are open-book, computer generated, and two-part. Each part is scored independently, and you must pass both parts to obtain licensure.
Journeyman Electrician, Part 1 includes:
Part 1 is organized around core electrical code knowledge and practical application. The published content outline for Journeyman Electrician Part 1 includes these subject areas and item counts:
Those numbers tell you something important: this isn’t a single-topic exam. A good prep plan needs to cover a wide range of NEC applications while keeping you strong in high-volume categories like wiring methods/devices, services, and grounding/bonding.
Massachusetts examinations are OPEN-BOOK, computer generated, and two-part. Open book does not mean you have time to “look everything up from scratch.” It means you’re expected to know the code well enough to navigate quickly and confirm details accurately.
For open-book success, your prep should train these exam-day behaviors:
Massachusetts allows reference materials in formats such as paper-back, ring-binder, spiral binder, or loose-leaf, and allows tabbing as well as highlighted and/or underlined sections of the original text for the code book and NFPA 72. The exam process also includes rules around papers and notes, so it’s wise to keep your materials exam-ready from the start.
Massachusetts uses an application-and-approval process prior to scheduling the examination. Candidates are eligible for the two-part examination when their application and supporting documentation are approved.
A practical overview of the typical licensing path looks like this:
This Online Exam Prep focuses on your Journeyman Electrician Part 1 readiness—helping you build structured coverage across the content outline and strengthening the code navigation habits that matter in open-book testing.
Massachusetts requires candidates to meet education and work experience requirements to be approved for examination by the Board of State Examiners of Electricians.
Eligibility is tied to application approval, so it helps to align your study timeline with your testing plans. The more consistently you practice code-based questions and reference navigation, the more comfortable you become with the pace and decision-making required on test day.
Important note for Massachusetts candidates: Massachusetts also references state amendments (Massachusetts Electrical Code, 527 CMR 12.00) as an allowed examination center reference. This Online Exam Prep product listing includes the NEC 2023 and NFPA 72 (2022) references you provided.
The published exam structure gives you a strong blueprint for building a realistic study plan. With 80 questions in 180 minutes, your average pace is just over two minutes per question—before you account for harder items that require deeper reading or table work. That’s why successful open-book candidates don’t rely on “searching around” during the test. They build a repeatable method for finding answers.
Use this exam-aligned approach when studying for Journeyman Electrician Part 1:
When your study routine matches the exam format, your confidence grows in the right places: understanding what the question asks, knowing where to verify it, and making decisions efficiently.
1 Exam Prep supports Journeyman Electrician candidates with a preparation approach built around how licensing exams are actually taken. Instead of treating Part 1 as a reading assignment, the goal is to help you develop practical readiness: organized review, code-centered practice, and consistent habits that improve both accuracy and speed in an open-book environment.
This Online Exam Prep is designed to help you:
The goal is simple: help you walk into Part 1 with a clearer study structure, stronger code familiarity, and a more efficient “find it, verify it, answer it” workflow.
This product is for the Massachusetts Journeyman Electrician Part 1 exam.
Journeyman Electrician Part 1 includes 80 questions.
You have 180 minutes to complete Part 1.
The required passing score is 70%, which equals 56 correct answers out of 80.
Yes. Massachusetts examinations are administered as open-book, computer generated, and two-part.
Yes. Each part is scored independently, and you must pass both parts to obtain licensure.
The published outline includes areas such as general knowledge, services, grounding and bonding, wiring methods and devices, motors, overcurrent protection, alarm systems, photovoltaics, and energy storage systems.
This product listing is built around the references you provided: National Electrical Code (NEC), 2023 and NFPA 72 - National Fire Alarm Code, 2022.
Yes. Massachusetts references state amendments (Massachusetts Electrical Code, 527 CMR 12.00) as an allowed exam-center reference for Massachusetts electrician examinations.
Study the way you will test: practice code lookups, use the index regularly, confirm exceptions and definitions, and train in timed blocks so your pace improves along with your accuracy.
Massachusetts requires documented education and work experience for journeyman applicants, including a high school diploma, a 600-hour journeyman curriculum, and 4 years/8,000 hours of work experience.