Becoming a New Hampshire Master Electrician is about more than time on the tools—it’s about proving you can lead electrical work with consistent code accuracy, sound judgment, and professional responsibility. The exam reflects that higher standard. It’s broad, detailed, and designed to test how you apply the National Electrical Code (NEC) across real job situations, not just how well you remember definitions.
This New Hampshire 2023 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built for electricians who want a structured, practice-first way to prepare. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams so you can train like you’ll test: timed questions, code navigation under pressure, and repeated exposure to the topic areas New Hampshire expects master-level electricians to handle.
Practice exams do something simple but powerful: they turn studying into performance training. Instead of rereading chapters and hoping it clicks, you work questions the way the exam forces you to—identify the rule, confirm the detail, and move forward without losing time. Over multiple rounds, you build:
Who this is for:
New Hampshire’s Master Electrician examination is administered through Prov, Inc. for the New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC). The current Candidate Information Bulletin states that the exams are open book, timed, and scored to a passing standard of 70% or higher.
For the Master Electrician (2023) exam form described in the bulletin, the structure is:
The bulletin also provides a topic distribution for the Master exam that helps you study smarter. The Master Electrician (2023) outline lists these areas and question counts:
This matters because it shows you where the exam puts its weight. If you want to raise your score efficiently, you practice heavily in the areas with the most questions—especially administrative, general knowledge, motors/generators, wiring methods, and services. That’s exactly where repeated practice exams pay off: they expose your weak patterns early, so you can fix them before exam day.
Prov’s bulletin also explains that written exams may be taken remotely (with remote proctoring) or at a Prov testing center, and official results are emailed and provided to the State within a short window after testing.
New Hampshire’s electrician examinations are open book. Open book does not mean easy—it means your score depends heavily on how well you can navigate your references and confirm details quickly. The best test-takers aren’t the ones who try to look up everything; they’re the ones who know when to confirm in the book and when to trust their knowledge so they can protect their time.
What open-book success really looks like:
The New Hampshire bulletin lists the references used for the Master Electrician (2023) exam. These include the NFPA 70 – National Electrical Code, 2023, Ugly’s Electrical References (2020), American Electrician’s Handbook (17th edition), and New Hampshire-specific laws/rules and amendments identified in the bulletin. Knowing your way around these references—especially the NEC—is a major part of performing well on test day.
New Hampshire’s electrician licensing is overseen by OPLC’s Electricians’ Board. While your specific path depends on your current license level and documentation, the typical master-level process follows this general flow:
New Hampshire licensing rules include specific requirements for master-level eligibility. In the administrative rule covering journeyman and master electrician licensure, New Hampshire states that a master electrician applicant must:
Those requirements help explain why the Master exam is built the way it is. It assumes you already have jobsite experience and journeyman-level competency—and it tests whether you can apply code and rules at a higher, supervisory level with consistent accuracy.
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Because the New Hampshire Master exam is long, open book, and topic-heavy, the most effective preparation is a mix of targeted review and repeated practice under realistic conditions. The exam outline shows the biggest point opportunities—especially the Administrative category—so your study plan should reflect the weighting.
How to train with 12 practice exams:
How to use the 2 full final exams:
Category-specific strategies aligned with the New Hampshire outline:
Remote testing considerations (if you choose that option): Prov’s bulletin includes remote proctoring requirements and environment rules. If you test remotely, set up a quiet workspace, clear prohibited items, and follow the proctoring instructions closely so your session runs smoothly.
1 Exam Prep supports New Hampshire Master Electrician candidates by focusing on a practical truth: licensing exams are performance tests. You don’t just need knowledge—you need a reliable method that works under time pressure, in an open-book environment, across a wide topic range.
This is the kind of preparation built for working electricians: measurable practice, focused review, and a repeatable process that helps you walk into exam day ready to perform.
Yes. The New Hampshire Candidate Information Bulletin states that all exams are open book and timed, including the Master Electrician exam.
The bulletin lists the Master Electrician (2023) exam as 126 questions.
The bulletin lists 5 hours for the Master Electrician (2023) exam.
The Candidate Information Bulletin’s score information states that exams are graded against a 70% cut-score, and candidates at 70% or higher receive a passing grade.
The bulletin’s Master Electrician (2023) outline shows major weight in Administrative, General Electrical Knowledge, Motors and Generators, Wiring Methods & Materials, and Services and Service Equipment.
The bulletin lists references for the Master Electrician (2023) exam including NFPA 70 (NEC) 2023, Ugly’s Electrical References, American Electrician’s Handbook (17th edition), and New Hampshire laws/rules and state materials identified in the bulletin.
The bulletin states that written exams may be taken remotely or at a Prov testing center, and it provides remote proctoring requirements and rules for the testing environment.
New Hampshire administrative rules state that a master electrician applicant must pass the journeyman exam and obtain 2,000 hours of field experience as a journeyman performing electrical installations before being allowed to take the master examination.
Use them at the end of your prep as full dress rehearsals. Take them timed and uninterrupted, then use the results to target the last weak areas before your scheduled exam date.