In Utah, earning your Master Electrician license signals more than time on the tools—it shows you can lead projects, apply code and safety standards accurately, and operate within the state’s licensing laws and rules. If you’re ready to upgrade, your preparation needs to match the way the Utah exams are structured today: a focused Master Law and Rules written exam plus the required Utah Electrician Practical (with an important exception for those who already passed the practical while earning Journeyman).
This exam prep and study guide is built to help you train the skill that makes open-book exams winnable: confident, repeatable performance. You’ll get 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams designed to help you practice under realistic conditions, improve your pacing, and strengthen accuracy across the subject areas Utah tests on at the master level. The goal is to help you walk into test day with a plan—how you’ll read questions, how you’ll confirm answers in your references, and how you’ll stay consistent through an entire session.
Because Utah’s Master Law and Rules exam includes both technical topics and law/rule content, many experienced electricians find the challenge isn’t “electrical work”—it’s switching gears between code/safety requirements and state-specific licensing rules without losing time. A practice-driven approach helps you tighten that transition so you don’t get slowed down when the exam moves from NEC concepts to regulations, licensing acts, and workplace safety requirements.
Who this is for:
Utah’s electrician licensing program is overseen by the Utah Division of Professional Licensing (DOPL). For the Master Electrician classification, DOPL’s exam information outlines the required examinations as the Utah Master Electrician Law and Rule Exam and the Utah Electrician Practical Exam (6 modules). DOPL also notes that Master Electrician applicants are not required to take the practical exam if it was previously passed to receive a Journeyman Electrician license.
The State of Utah Electrical Exams Candidate Information Bulletin published by Prov describes the current exam structure and the 2025 changes that continue into 2026. It explains that beginning August 1, 2025, Master Electricians no longer take separate Theory and Code exams and instead take a new Master Law and Rules examination.
Utah Master Electrician Law and Rules exam (written):
Utah Electrician Practical exam:
Practical tasks listed in the bulletin include:
Some tasks are identified as additional requirements when upgrading from a Residential Electrician license. The bulletin also explains that once you pass a task, you no longer need to retake that task, and you may pass tasks over multiple testing days if necessary.
Utah’s written licensing exams are administered as open-book examinations with reference rules defined in the Candidate Information Bulletin. Open-book does not mean “easy”—it means you must be able to locate the right rule quickly, confirm details without getting lost, and keep moving with steady pacing.
Reference rules for open-book exams (high-impact items for test day):
This study guide’s practice-first format is designed for open-book success: you build the habit of recognizing what the question is testing, identifying the correct reference location, and verifying the detail without burning minutes.
Utah’s Master Electrician pathway combines documented experience/education, passing the required exams, and submitting the correct application through DOPL’s system. Your exact path depends on how you qualify (experience-only or education-based pathway), but the overall flow typically looks like this:
DOPL publishes the eligibility requirements for Utah Master Electrician applicants. For Utah applicants, DOPL lists multiple pathways, including:
Because Utah’s Master Electrician exams emphasize rules, safety, and technical standards, your exam prep should match that reality. Your practice routine should include: (1) reference navigation under open-book rules, (2) safety and workplace standards awareness, and (3) enough timed repetition that your pacing feels natural.
The Candidate Information Bulletin lists the references used for the Master Electrician Rule and Laws exam. The following items are included as listed references:
The Utah Candidate Information Bulletin is the controlling source for open-book reference rules and permitted materials. Follow the bulletin’s reference rules carefully to ensure your books and tabs comply with the testing requirements.
What Utah is really testing at the master level: your ability to operate as a license holder who understands both the technical side and the legal/safety obligations tied to the license. The Master Law and Rules exam topic breakdown in the bulletin includes areas such as the Construction Trades Licensing Act, DOPL Licensing Act, electricians licensing rules, general DOPL licensing rules, Utah NEC amendments, NFPA 70E safety concepts, and a range of technical subjects (grounding and bonding, services/feeders/branch circuits, motors and controllers, overcurrent protection, special conditions, and more).
How to use 12 practice exams + 2 full finals:
Practical exam readiness: If you must complete the Utah Electrician Practical, don’t overlook what the bulletin emphasizes: you must pass all tasks, tasks can be passed across multiple test days, and some tasks include diagram reading (ladder diagrams and schematics). The practical is a performance exam—your confidence improves when you rehearse the workflow: identify the requirement, follow the diagram carefully, verify connections, and complete each task with steady technique.
Smart pacing advice for the written exam:
1 Exam Prep supports your Utah Master Electrician goal by keeping your preparation structured, practice-driven, and realistic for an open-book testing environment. Instead of relying on scattered studying, you build skill through repetition—so your exam-day approach is familiar and dependable.
This guide is designed to help you study with intention, strengthen your weak areas, and approach your Utah exams with a plan you’ve practiced—without promising outcomes or shortcuts.
DOPL lists the Utah Master Electrician Law and Rule exam and the Utah Electrician Practical exam (6 modules) as the examination requirements for the Master Electrician classification. DOPL also notes the practical exam is not required if it was previously passed to receive a Journeyman Electrician license.
The Utah Candidate Information Bulletin lists the Master Electrician Rule and Laws exam as 80 questions.
The bulletin lists 240 minutes for the Master Electrician Rule and Laws exam.
The bulletin lists a passing score of 75% for the Master Electrician Rule and Laws exam.
The open-book reference rules in the Utah Candidate Information Bulletin describe how permitted reference books may be used during open-book examinations, including tabbing and marking limitations.
The Utah Candidate Information Bulletin lists the Utah Electrician Practical exam as 6 tasks with 110 minutes allowed. Tasks include torque setting, transformer termination, conduit bending, motor control wiring using a ladder diagram, 4-way and 3-way switch wiring, and schematic reading and wiring.
DOPL states Master Electrician applicants are not required to take the practical exam if it was previously passed to receive a Journeyman Electrician license.
DOPL lists multiple qualification pathways for Utah applicants, including 8,000 hours of experience as a licensed Journeyman, and education-based pathways that combine a qualifying degree with required licensed experience.
Use them at the end of your study plan as dress rehearsals. Take them timed, follow open-book reference rules, and use your score results to target the last weak areas before exam day.
Practice timed questions while actively using your references the right way: identify the key term, locate the correct source quickly, confirm the detail, and move on. Repetition reduces search time and builds confidence.