North Dakota’s journeyman electrician exam is built around what working electricians do every day: apply code, follow state wiring standards, and make safe decisions that hold up under inspection. The challenge is doing it fast and accurately in a timed testing environment. This North Dakota 2026 Journeyman Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is designed to help you train for that moment with a practice-first approach that turns study time into measurable progress.
You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams to help you build three skills that matter most on test day:
This isn’t about cramming random facts. It’s about practicing the same work the exam demands—over and over—until the process feels automatic: read the scenario, identify the topic, locate the rule, confirm the requirement, choose the best answer, move on. That’s how electricians build calm confidence going into a state exam.
Trusted by 50k electricians reflects what consistently works for trades testing: realistic practice, targeted review, and repetition. When you take multiple practice exams, you start seeing the patterns in how questions are written and which NEC areas you keep returning to. That makes your studying smarter, not longer.
North Dakota journeyman electrician licensing and examinations are administered by the North Dakota State Electrical Board (NDSEB). NDSEB states the examinations are based on fundamental electricity, Laws, Rules, and Wiring Standards of North Dakota, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code. NDSEB also lists a passing grade of 70%.
Because NDSEB’s exam is tied to both the NEC and North Dakota’s wiring standards and rules, successful candidates prepare in two layers: (1) strong NEC lookup ability and (2) comfort with exam-style wording tied to state expectations and fundamentals. This study guide supports that by building your performance through practice exams that reinforce code-driven decision-making and reduce the time lost to searching.
NDSEB lists the journeyman exam as having both a closed portion and an open portion, with the Journeyman Open section timed at 3.5 hours. NDSEB also states that code books are provided for the exam. That means open-book performance is not a bonus—it’s a core skill you’re expected to demonstrate.
Open-book testing rewards electricians who can move through the NEC efficiently. It’s not enough to know the answer is “in the book.” You need a repeatable method to find it quickly without second-guessing:
This is exactly why practice exams are so powerful for open-book testing. Every practice run trains you to navigate, confirm, and answer with less wasted motion—so your exam time is spent earning points, not searching.
NDSEB requires candidates to apply and be approved before selecting an exam date. Once approved, your exam invite includes a list of available exam dates at the time of approval, and NDSEB requires you to test within six months of receiving that invite. A typical journeyman path in North Dakota looks like this:
This study guide is built to help you show up prepared for the step that matters most: performing well on the exam. Your hours and field experience are the foundation—practice exams help you translate that foundation into test-day results.
NDSEB’s journeyman qualifications are experience- and training-based. NDSEB states that a journeyman electrician must have completed 8,000 hours of experience, which may not be obtained in less than three (3) years, while registered as an apprentice electrician under the supervision of a contracting master or master of record. NDSEB also states candidates must have successfully completed apprentice electrician training.
NDSEB also notes additional experience credit rules that can apply to some candidates, including:
If you’re planning reciprocity or coming from out of state, NDSEB also publishes reciprocal license agreements and requirements, including experience benchmarks such as 8,000 hours for a journeyman when listing reciprocity requirements.
The main takeaway for your exam prep is simple: once your experience and training are in place, the exam becomes a performance challenge. Practice exams help you control what you can control—your speed, accuracy, and confidence with the NEC and exam-style questions.
The fastest way to get “exam-ready” is to practice like the exam. This guide gives you 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams so you can train in realistic cycles instead of hoping a single review pass is enough.
Here’s a practical way to use the exams for steady improvement:
High-impact review is where your score improves the most. After each practice exam, try this review routine:
Over time, you’ll notice a shift: the NEC stops feeling like a huge book and starts feeling like a structured tool. That’s the moment open-book exams get easier—because you’re no longer searching, you’re navigating.
1 Exam Prep supports electricians with a practical, trade-focused approach to studying. Instead of overwhelming you with disconnected material, we emphasize organized practice and repeatable exam skills—the same habits that help candidates perform steadily on a timed licensing exam.
Your goal isn’t to “study harder.” It’s to study smarter—so you can perform when it counts. This guide helps you turn practice into progress and progress into test-day confidence.
This guide is for candidates preparing for the NDSEB Journeyman Electrician exam who want to improve exam performance through realistic practice exams, stronger NEC navigation, and better pacing under timed conditions.
You get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to help you build consistency, speed, and accuracy.
NDSEB lists the journeyman exam as having a closed portion and an open portion, with the open portion timed at 3.5 hours. NDSEB also states code books are provided for the exam.
NDSEB states the passing grade is 70%.
NDSEB states journeyman candidates must complete 8,000 hours of experience (not obtained in less than three years) while registered as an apprentice under appropriate supervision, and must have successfully completed apprentice electrician training.
NDSEB states the examinations are based on fundamental electricity, North Dakota laws, rules, and wiring standards, and the current edition of the National Electrical Code.
Use them as your dress rehearsal. Take each final exam in one sitting, focus on pacing, then review every missed question and revisit the topics that cost you points.
You can explore additional electrician exam prep resources at 1examprep.com.