Wisconsin’s Master Electrician license is built around responsibility. It’s the credential that supports higher-level supervision, code compliance decisions, and the professional authority required to take charge of electrical wiring installations. The exam is designed to verify that you can apply Wisconsin’s electrical rules and the National Electrical Code (NEC) with confidence—not just in theory, but in the way a working Master Electrician must perform under pressure.
This Wisconsin 2026 Master Electrician Exam Prep and Study Guide is designed for electricians who want a structured, practice-first path to exam readiness. With 12 practice exams plus 2 full final exams, you’ll train the skills that matter most on an open-book test: strong code navigation, careful interpretation, and steady pacing so you can answer accurately without wasting time searching.
Practice exams do more than “test you.” They build your exam-day routine:
Who this is for:
The Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services (DSPS) states the Master Electrician exam is open book and requires a 70% passing score. DSPS also directs candidates to the Trades Examination Information resources for scheduling and testing options.
Wisconsin trade credential exams are offered through DSPS and may be taken at DSPS exam locations or at Wisconsin Pearson exam centers through DSPS’s trades testing partnership. After you request exam approval through Wisconsin’s LicensE system and your eligibility is confirmed, you receive authorization details for scheduling.
For test-day planning, Wisconsin’s Pearson DSPS Trades Candidate Handbook lists the Master Electrician exam under the Pearson program’s “Available Exams” table. That table also shows the maximum number of permitted binders and the exam fee associated with the Pearson test delivery for this credential.
The Wisconsin Master Electrician exam is not a “one-topic” test. DSPS states the exam will cover information from Wisconsin’s administrative code and NEC-based material. Your preparation should therefore train both: (1) rule recognition and (2) fast application using the permitted reference items.
Yes—Wisconsin’s DSPS Master Electrician exam is an open book test. DSPS also provides detailed rules about what can be brought into the exam room and how materials must be prepared.
High-impact reference rules and limits (DSPS):
DSPS also limits what references may be brought in: DSPS states that Pearson VUE and DSPS exam locations will only allow the following three reference items into the exam:
Open book is a real advantage, but only if you’ve trained for it. The goal is not to flip pages for every question. The goal is to confirm quickly, protect your time, and keep momentum. Practice exams help you build that habit: identify the keyword, go directly to the likely section, confirm the requirement, and move forward confidently.
Wisconsin’s Master Electrician process runs through DSPS and the LicensE platform. DSPS provides a clear pathway: apply online, meet the experience/education category, obtain exam eligibility, take and pass the exam, then apply for the license after passing.
DSPS states that, under Wisconsin law, electrical wiring work requires proper licensure or registration, and it provides category-based routes to become credentialed as a Master Electrician. DSPS’s Master Electrician License Application Information outlines three primary categories:
Category A qualification details (DSPS): DSPS states that Master Electrician exam applicants must meet one of the following:
Reciprocity (DSPS): DSPS also states that Iowa reciprocity is available for applicants holding an Iowa Master A Electrician license acquired through a state exam, with the applicant required to have held that license continuously for at least one year immediately prior to applying in Wisconsin.
This is why a Master Electrician exam prep program must do more than review code articles. It must help you demonstrate mastery under exam conditions: fast application, confident decisions, and consistent accuracy.
Wisconsin DSPS identifies the references and materials used for the Master Electrician exam and what exam locations will allow into the room. The following items are specifically listed by DSPS for Master Electrician testing:
Because the exam is open book, your preparation should be performance-based. Your goal is to reduce search time and increase confidence. Practice exams are ideal for that because they force you to do what the exam requires: locate the rule, confirm the detail, and move forward with momentum.
How to train with 12 practice exams:
How to use the 2 full final exams:
Open-book pacing habits that pay off:
1 Exam Prep supports Wisconsin Master Electrician candidates by focusing on what the exam really is: a performance test. Knowledge matters, but so does your ability to apply it under time pressure while navigating permitted references correctly.
This guide is built for working electricians: practice, review, correct, repeat—then rehearse with full finals so you walk into the Wisconsin Master Electrician exam ready to perform.
Yes. DSPS states the Master Electrician exam is open book and the passing score is 70%.
DSPS states exam locations will only allow three reference “items” into the room: one binder containing SPS 305, SPS 316, and permitted printed notes; the 2017 NEC codebook or handbook; and up to two additional printed, bound reference books.
Yes, with restrictions. DSPS states printed notes are allowed only if they are three-hole punched and placed in a binder, and printed code can only be brought in if it is bound together in a three-ring binder. Practice or previous exams do not qualify as notes and are not allowed.
No. DSPS lists loose papers, removable tabs, sticky notes, and paperclips as not allowed.
DSPS states the passing score is 70%.
DSPS lists categories including an experience/degree plus examination pathway, an exchange pathway for certain prior credential holders, and an Iowa reciprocity pathway for qualifying Iowa Master A Electrician license holders.
DSPS states Master exam applicants may qualify by completing at least 12 months as a licensed Journeyman, meeting the defined hours-and-months experience standard, or holding an electrical engineering degree (with documentation requirements).
Use them near the end of your study plan as full dress rehearsals. Take each final under timed conditions using only compliant materials, then review results to target the last weak areas before your scheduled exam date.