The 1 Package: All-Inclusive Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor Exam, Licensing & Business Setup Solution is built for electricians, electrical contractors, qualifying agents, construction professionals, and business owners preparing for the Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor trade exam, the Tennessee Business and Law exam, contractor licensing, and business setup. This all-inclusive package brings together the listed electrical contractor references, business and trade courses, access to live classes, 1 year of course access, Application Service, Business Formation support, EIN Filing support, and Contractor Compliance Guidance in one complete preparation and setup solution.
The Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor classification is connected to electrical contracting work. Candidates preparing for this licensing path should be ready to review National Electrical Code requirements, electrical installation methods, grounding and bonding, wiring systems, conductor sizing, overcurrent protection, services, feeders, branch circuits, motors, transformers, raceways, boxes, electrical calculations, OSHA construction safety, jobsite safety practices, and contractor business responsibilities. This package supports both the technical exam preparation and the business setup steps needed to move toward professional electrical contracting in Tennessee.
This package includes NFPA 70 - National Electrical Code, 2017 edition; American Electrician's Handbook, 17th Edition; Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA); Ugly's Electrical References; and NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law, and Project Management, 4th Edition - TN. It also includes business and trade courses, access to live classes, 1 year of course access, and Application Service. The package price is $2,075 plus a $400 refundable deposit, for a total of $2,475. The refundable deposit is connected to the rental books.
This all-inclusive Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor package is designed for students who want more than exam books alone. It gives candidates the reference materials for trade and business exam preparation, course structure for both exam areas, live class access for guided study, application support for the Tennessee contractor licensing process, and business setup assistance to help establish the foundation for operating professionally as an electrical contractor in Tennessee.
The Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor exam is a trade examination used for Tennessee contractor licensing. It is intended for candidates preparing for an electrical contractor classification. Students should prepare for questions involving electrical code, wiring methods, conductor sizing, grounding and bonding, services, feeders, branch circuits, boxes, raceways, overcurrent protection, equipment installation, motors, transformers, safety, electrical calculations, and practical electrical trade knowledge.
The included references support the different areas of preparation. The NFPA 70 - National Electrical Code, 2017 edition supports electrical code preparation. Candidates should become familiar with NEC organization, definitions, wiring and protection rules, wiring methods, materials, equipment for general use, special occupancies, special equipment, tables, annexes, and calculation-related code provisions. Many electrical exam questions require careful code navigation and the ability to apply a rule to a specific situation.
The American Electrician's Handbook, 17th Edition supports practical electrical trade review. This reference can help students review electrical principles, installation practices, equipment, systems, calculations, troubleshooting concepts, and field-oriented electrical information. It supports broader trade understanding beyond code lookup alone.
The Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA) supports construction safety preparation. Electrical contractors must understand jobsite safety responsibilities and safe work practices. Candidates should review OSHA construction safety topics related to electrical hazards, personal protective equipment, ladders, scaffolds, tools, excavations, hazard recognition, fall protection, and general construction safety.
Ugly's Electrical References supports quick review of electrical formulas, tables, conversions, wiring diagrams, conduit information, motor data, transformer information, Ohmās Law, voltage drop, conductor information, and field reference material. Students should use it to reinforce electrical calculation habits and quick-reference skills during preparation.
The Tennessee Business and Law exam is also generally required for Tennessee contractor applicants. This exam focuses on contractor business operations, licensing responsibilities, contracts, estimating, project management, financial management, labor responsibilities, safety responsibilities, tax-related topics, and legal obligations involved in operating a contracting business. The NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law, and Project Management, 4th Edition - TN supports preparation for this part of the licensing process.
The Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor exam is an open-book test. Candidates may use authorized reference materials during the exam according to current testing rules. Open-book testing can be helpful, but it is not a substitute for preparation. The exam is timed, and candidates need to know how to locate information quickly, understand what they find, and apply it correctly.
The NFPA 70 - National Electrical Code, 2017 edition should be a major part of study. Candidates should become familiar with the NEC layout, article numbers, definitions, indexes, tables, and common code topics. Important areas may include general requirements, wiring and protection, wiring methods and materials, equipment for general use, grounding and bonding, services, feeders, branch circuits, conductor sizing, box fill, raceways, overcurrent protection, motors, transformers, and special equipment.
The American Electrician's Handbook, 17th Edition should be used to reinforce electrical trade knowledge. Students should review electrical theory, calculations, installation methods, equipment, systems, materials, and practical trade concepts. This reference can help connect field experience with the type of structured technical knowledge needed for exam preparation.
The Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA) should be reviewed for construction safety topics. Students should become familiar with OSHA construction standards, electrical safety awareness, hazard recognition, personal protective equipment, fall protection, ladders, scaffolds, excavation safety, tools, and safe work practices. Electrical work often takes place on active construction sites, so safety preparation is an important part of trade readiness.
Ugly's Electrical References should be used during study to reinforce quick access to formulas, conversions, tables, wiring information, and electrical calculation support. Candidates should practice using the reference rather than simply keeping it nearby. Open-book exams reward students who can move through references with confidence and accuracy.
The Business and Law exam also requires preparation with the Tennessee business reference. Students should use the NASCLA guide to review contractor responsibilities, licensing topics, contracts, project management, estimating, financial management, employment responsibilities, safety management, and legal duties. Candidates should follow current testing rules for allowed references, tabs, highlighting, book preparation, and exam-room materials.
The Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor license classification is issued through the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors. Candidates should begin by confirming that the CE Electrical Contractor classification matches the type of electrical contracting work they plan to perform. Tennessee contractor licensing includes different classifications, so applicants should select the classification that fits their business goals and work scope.
A typical licensing path includes reviewing Tennessee contractor license requirements, identifying the correct classification, confirming the qualifying agent, preparing for the required examinations, registering for the correct trade exam, passing the Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor trade exam, passing the Tennessee Business and Law exam, completing the contractor license application, and submitting required documentation to the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors.
This 1 Package includes Application Service to support the licensing application portion of the process. Application Service helps candidates stay more organized while moving through paperwork and submission steps. Students are still responsible for providing accurate information, meeting state requirements, and completing any required actions connected to their license application.
In addition to exam preparation and application support, this package includes Business Formation and EIN Filing support. Business Formation helps establish the customerās LLC or Corporation structure, while EIN Filing with the IRS helps the business obtain the Employer Identification Number used for banking, taxes, hiring, and professional business operations.
Candidates should be careful when selecting the exam and license classification. Electrical contracting work can involve code compliance, safety responsibilities, permits, inspections, and strict installation standards. Registering for the wrong exam or selecting the wrong classification can delay the licensing process and create unnecessary expense.
Tennessee contractors must meet the requirements set by the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors. A contractor license is generally required before bidding, offering, or performing construction work when the total project cost meets the state licensing threshold. Applicants should review current Tennessee contractor requirements before submitting an application or registering for exams.
The CE Electrical Contractor classification applies to electrical contracting work. Candidates should understand the scope of this classification before advertising, bidding, contracting, or performing work. Contractors who plan to perform work outside the electrical classification may need to review whether a different or additional license classification is required.
State contractor licensing may involve more than the trade exam. Applicants may need to provide business information, financial information, insurance information, qualifying agent information, fees, insurance documents, and other information required by the Board. The Board determines whether an applicant meets the requirements for the requested license classification.
Local permitting and inspection requirements may also apply to electrical work. Electrical contractors are responsible for performing work within the proper license scope and following applicable code, permit, inspection, safety, and installation requirements. Preparing for the Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor exam and the Business and Law exam should be viewed as part of a larger licensing and compliance process.
This all-inclusive package supports exam preparation, licensing application organization, and business setup. Contractor Compliance Guidance helps students understand key compliance responsibilities connected to Tennessee contractor licensing and business formation so the business is better positioned for long-term professional operation.
The following books are included in this all-inclusive package for Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor and Tennessee Business and Law exam preparation:
Candidates should prepare and bring only authorized exam references according to current testing rules. Books may be checked before the exam begins. Students should review exam-room rules before test day so their materials are prepared correctly for both trade and business testing. Tabs, highlighting, and markings should follow the current testing provider requirements for allowed reference preparation.
The 1 Package gives students access to the listed books, business and trade courses, access to live classes, 1 year of course access, Application Service, Business Formation support, EIN Filing support, and Contractor Compliance Guidance. This structure supports exam readiness, licensing application organization, and business setup for the Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor licensing path.
For trade preparation, students should separate their study into electrical code, electrical calculations, practical electrical trade knowledge, and OSHA safety. The electrical code portion should focus on the NFPA 70 - National Electrical Code, 2017 edition. Important study areas include definitions, general requirements, wiring and protection, wiring methods and materials, grounding and bonding, equipment for general use, services, feeders, branch circuits, motors, transformers, special equipment, and NEC tables.
The electrical trade portion should include regular review of the American Electrician's Handbook, 17th Edition. Students should review electrical principles, installation practices, equipment, systems, materials, calculations, field methods, and technical knowledge. This reference can help students connect hands-on experience with exam preparation.
The safety portion should include the Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA). Electrical contractors work around jobsite hazards, energized equipment, tools, ladders, scaffolds, trenches, elevated work areas, and active construction conditions. Students should review safety topics consistently and understand how OSHA construction standards support safe work practices.
The quick-reference and calculation portion should include Ugly's Electrical References. Students should practice using formulas, tables, conversions, wiring information, conduit data, motor information, transformer information, and electrical reference material. Electrical exams often require careful reading and accurate calculation work, so students should build confidence using reference tables and formulas.
For the Business and Law exam, students should use the NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law, and Project Management, 4th Edition - TN to review contractor business responsibilities, licensing, contracts, project management, estimating, scheduling, financial controls, employment responsibilities, safety management, and legal obligations. Contractor licensing requires both trade competence and business awareness.
The business and trade courses included in this package help students organize both sides of preparation. The trade course supports CE Electrical Contractor exam review, while the business course supports contractor law, business management, project management, licensing topics, and legal responsibilities. Live classes add a guided learning option for students who want more structure while reviewing exam topics and reference-navigation skills.
With 1 year of course access, students have time to review material, revisit difficult areas, practice reference navigation, attend available live class sessions, work through calculations, and build a steady study routine. Open-book exams reward candidates who know how to use their books efficiently.
1 Exam Prep helps students prepare for contractor licensing exams through organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, reference navigation support, application support, live class access, and business exam preparation. For the Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor license path, that means helping students prepare for both the electrical contractor trade exam and the Tennessee Business and Law exam while also supporting business setup steps.
This 1 Package gives students a complete preparation and setup option. The included books provide access to trade and business references, while the business and trade courses help students study both exam areas with structure. Access to live classes gives students an additional way to engage with the material and stay focused during preparation. Application Service supports the licensing application portion of the process, helping candidates stay more organized as they move through required steps.
Business Formation support helps customers establish an LLC or Corporation so the business is structured to operate professionally. EIN Filing support helps obtain the Employer Identification Number used to open business bank accounts, manage taxes properly, hire employees, and operate as a contracting business. Contractor Compliance Guidance helps customers understand compliance responsibilities connected to Tennessee contractor licensing and business setup.
Students still need to study, practice, provide accurate information, and complete the Tennessee licensing process, but organized preparation and setup support can make the path more manageable. Whether you are preparing as a qualifying agent, moving from field work into licensed electrical contracting, or building an electrical contracting business, this package helps support the exam, licensing, and business setup stages of the journey.
This package includes NFPA 70 - National Electrical Code, 2017 edition; American Electrician's Handbook, 17th Edition; Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA); Ugly's Electrical References; NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law, and Project Management, 4th Edition - TN; business and trade courses; access to live classes; 1 year of course access; Application Service; Business Formation support; EIN Filing support; and Contractor Compliance Guidance.
The package price is $2,075 plus a $400 refundable deposit, for a total of $2,475.
Yes. The package includes a $400 refundable deposit connected to the rental books.
This package includes 1 year of course access.
Yes. Access to live classes is included with this package.
Yes. This package includes Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor trade exam preparation and Tennessee Business and Law exam preparation.
Yes. Application Service is included with this package.
Yes. Business Formation support is included to help establish an LLC or Corporation for the contracting business.
Yes. EIN Filing with the IRS is included to help the business obtain an Employer Identification Number for banking, taxes, hiring, and professional business operations.
Yes. The Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor exam is an open-book test with authorized references allowed according to current testing rules.
Yes. Tennessee contractor applicants are generally required to pass the Tennessee Business and Law exam in addition to the required trade exam for their license classification.
No. Passing the required exams is part of the process. Applicants must complete the licensing process through the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors and meet the applicable requirements.
The 1 Package combines books, business and trade courses, live classes, 1 year of course access, Application Service, Business Formation, EIN Filing, and Contractor Compliance Guidance for a complete Tennessee CE Electrical Contractor exam, licensing, and business setup solution.