In South Dakota, “master-level” electrical testing is closely tied to the South Dakota Electrical Contractor examination administered through the International Code Council (ICC) contractor/trades program. This is the exam many electricians pursue when they’re ready to operate at the highest level of responsibility—planning work, supervising installations, and making code decisions that must be accurate and defensible.
This South Dakota 2026 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built for that reality. You get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to strengthen the skills that matter most on a timed, open-book ICC exam: faster National Electrical Code (NEC) navigation, cleaner decision-making, and steady pacing so you don’t get caught in time traps.
Practice exams do more than measure readiness—they build readiness. With repeated, exam-style work, you’ll develop a repeatable method you can rely on under pressure:
Who this is for:
South Dakota’s electrical licensing is administered by the South Dakota Electrical Commission. For ICC contractor/trades testing in South Dakota, the ICC bulletin explains that you must first make a license application with the South Dakota Electrical Commission and submit it with a $60 application processing fee and a copy of your valid photo identification. Once the Commission approves you for testing, ICC is notified of your eligibility and you can schedule your exam through ICC’s Pearson VUE testing partner.
Code cycle for 2026 prep: The South Dakota Electrical Commission states that starting December 2, 2024, all tests are based on the 2023 NEC. This is a major reason your study plan must be aligned to the correct edition for the 2026 exam cycle.
South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam (ICC 530) format:
Testing window: The ICC South Dakota bulletin states that once approved by the Electrical Commission for testing, you have 90 days within which to test. If you fail to test within that timeframe, you must reapply and resubmit the $60 fee to the Electrical Commission.
Retake timing: The ICC bulletin states you must wait 30 days before retaking a failed exam. After the second failed attempt, you must wait 90 days before each subsequent attempt.
Content outline (what the 530 exam actually tests): The ICC bulletin provides a topic breakdown by percentage, which is one of the best ways to study smarter because it shows where the exam places its weight:
This guide is designed to help you practice in the same proportions—so you build confidence in the highest-weight areas (wiring methods, services, and branch circuits) while still staying sharp across special conditions, motors, devices, and plan reading.
The South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam (ICC 530) is an open book examination. ICC’s bulletin also makes an important point about open book testing: because of time constraints, you will not have time to look up every answer. Open book is an advantage only if you are very familiar with your references and can confirm details quickly without wasting time searching.
What open-book success looks like on the ICC 530 exam:
This is exactly why practice exams work so well for South Dakota. Repetition trains your lookup rhythm and your timing discipline. Over time, you stop “hunting” and start navigating with purpose.
South Dakota’s electrical contractor pathway starts with the South Dakota Electrical Commission and uses ICC contractor/trades testing for the examination requirement. While your full licensing requirements are handled by the Commission, the exam-centered flow in the ICC bulletin works like this:
South Dakota’s electrical licensing is administered statewide by the South Dakota Electrical Commission. For the examination process, the Commission requires applicants to submit an application before scheduling testing, and the Commission uses ICC contractor/trades testing once eligibility is approved.
From a preparation perspective, the most important “state requirement” is making sure your study plan matches the correct exam:
Because the contractor exam is broad and weighted heavily toward wiring methods/materials, services, and branch circuits, the smartest approach is to practice repeatedly across those categories while still keeping steady coverage of motors, devices, special occupancies, and plan reading.
ICC’s South Dakota bulletin lists the official reference for the South Dakota Electrical Contractor (530) exam and also states what additional references may be used during the exam in addition to the NEC.
The ICC 530 exam is open book, but it’s still a time-managed performance test. With 100 questions in 5 hours, you can work carefully—yet time can disappear fast if your lookups are slow or you get pulled into “perfect searching.” The goal is to build a repeatable workflow you can trust.
How to use the 12 practice exams (score-building routine):
How to use the 2 full final exams (readiness routine):
High-impact focus areas (based on the ICC 530 weighting):
Open-book strategy you can train in every session:
1 Exam Prep supports South Dakota electrician candidates by focusing on what this exam really is: a performance test. You don’t just need knowledge—you need a method that holds up under time pressure in an open-book environment.
This is preparation built for working electricians: practice, review, correct, repeat—then rehearse with full finals so you walk into the South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam ready to perform.
Yes. ICC’s South Dakota bulletin lists the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam as an open-book exam with a five-hour time limit.
The ICC bulletin lists 100 multiple-choice questions for the South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam.
The ICC bulletin lists a five-hour time limit for the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam.
The South Dakota Electrical Commission states that starting December 2, 2024, all tests are based on the 2023 NEC, and the ICC bulletin lists the 2023 NEC as the reference for the 530 exam.
The ICC bulletin lists Pearson VUE pricing for the 530 South Dakota Electrical Contractor exam as $115.
Yes. ICC’s South Dakota bulletin states you must first make a license application with the South Dakota Electrical Commission and submit it with a $60 processing fee and a copy of valid photo identification before you can be approved to schedule the exam.
The ICC bulletin states that once approved by the Electrical Commission for testing, you have 90 days within which to test or you must reapply and resubmit the $60 fee.
Use them late in your prep as dress rehearsals. Take each final timed and uninterrupted, then review results to identify the last weak areas—slow lookups, recurring misreads, or a topic bucket that still needs repetition.
Timed repetition. Practice questions force you to identify keywords, go directly to the right NEC location, confirm the requirement efficiently, and move on. Over time, your lookup speed improves and your answers become more consistent.