Preparing for a Tennessee master-level electrical exam is about more than reviewing code sections. It’s about proving you can work like the person responsible for the outcome—planning the work, applying the National Electrical Code (NEC) correctly, and making safe, compliant decisions under a timed exam format.
This Tennessee 2026 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is built around the most effective way to prepare for a code-based licensing exam: real practice. With 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams, you’ll train the same skills the Tennessee exams reward: faster reference navigation, cleaner decision-making, strong pacing, and fewer avoidable mistakes caused by misreading or slow lookups.
Practice exams do more than “check readiness.” They build readiness by turning study time into a repeatable routine:
Who this is for:
Tennessee contractor exams are administered by PSI for the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors, and applicants are required to take the Tennessee Business and Law exam as part of the contractor licensing exam process.
This prep supports the two most common “master-level” electrical trade paths used in Tennessee contractor licensing:
Electrical Contractor (CE) trade exam format:
Electrical Contractor (CE) content outline (items):
NASCLA-Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractor format:
NASCLA Electrical Contractor exam content outline (items):
Both the Tennessee Electrical Contractor (CE) trade examination and the NASCLA-Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractor are open book exams. Open book is a real advantage—if you train the right way. It does not mean you have time to look up everything. It means you need a method that keeps you moving.
Open-book habits that consistently raise scores:
Reference handling rules that matter in real testing: references must be prepared before you arrive. You can highlight/underline and use permanent tabs/indexing, but you cannot write in your references during the exam, and you cannot bring loose or attached papers inside approved books. Temporary tabs (like sticky notes) are not allowed and must be removed.
Tennessee contractor licensing is handled through the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors, with PSI administering exams. While the full licensing path depends on your classification and monetary limit, the exam-centered workflow typically follows this sequence:
Tennessee contractor exams are administered by PSI for the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors, and Tennessee requires applicants to take the Tennessee Business and Law exam. Exam scores are typically treated as time-limited for licensing purposes, so your best plan is to schedule your testing window when your practice scores are consistently strong and your timing is steady.
Because contractor licensing requirements can vary by classification and application details, this prep focuses on what is fixed and testable:
The approved references depend on which Tennessee electrical trade exam you are taking. The lists below are the trade-exam references identified in the PSI candidate bulletin.
Electrical Contractor (CE) trade exam reference books:
NASCLA-Accredited Electrical Contractor trade exam reference books:
Whether you’re taking the CE trade exam or the NASCLA Electrical Contractor trade exam, the biggest score gains typically come from improving performance—not from trying to memorize everything. Open-book exams reward the electrician who can move with confidence.
How to use the 12 practice exams (score-building routine):
How to use the 2 full final exams (readiness routine):
High-impact focus areas for Tennessee electrical trade exams:
1 Exam Prep supports Tennessee master-level electrician and contractor candidates by focusing on what licensing exams really are: performance tests. You don’t just need experience—you need a repeatable 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 your Tennessee exam ready to perform.
This prep supports Tennessee master-level electrical contractor candidates preparing for the Electrical Contractor (CE) trade exam and candidates using the NASCLA-Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractor as their trade exam option.
Yes. The PSI candidate bulletin identifies both the CE Electrical Contractor trade exam and the NASCLA-Accredited Electrical Contractor trade exam as open-book examinations.
The CE Electrical Contractor exam is 100 questions, requires 73% to pass (73 items), and allows 260 minutes.
The NASCLA Electrical Contractor trade exam is 100 questions, requires 75 correct answers to pass, and allows 270 minutes. A physical diagram/blueprint packet is provided onsite at the test center.
Yes. Tennessee requires applicants to take the Tennessee Business and Law exam as part of the contractor exam process.
Yes, within the exam rules. Permanent tabs/indexing and highlighting/underlining are permitted as described in the PSI bulletin, but references may not include loose papers, and you may not write in your references during the exam.
Timed repetition. Practice exams train keyword recognition, efficient navigation, and disciplined confirmation so you don’t lose minutes searching for every answer.
Take them near the end of your study plan as dress rehearsals. Use the results to identify your last weak areas and tighten them before test day.