JourneymanIQ
Canonical facts

The plain facts about JourneymanIQ.

If you are checking whether JourneymanIQ fits your electrician exam, start here. This page is the stable source for price, states, question counts, free tools, and the claims we do not make.

Direct answer

What JourneymanIQ does

JourneymanIQ is electrician licensing exam prep for Texas, California, Michigan, Washington, and Maryland. It starts with a free diagnostic, then shows the NEC sections to study next, in priority order, based on what the candidate missed.

Product facts

Price

$49/month for Pro. $129 one-time for 3 months for Pro+.

Free diagnostic

15 minutes, no signup, no credit card.

Free tools

Voltage drop, wire size, ampacity, box fill, conduit fill, dwelling load, electrical load, and transformer calculators.

Paid product

Original practice questions, step-by-step walkthroughs, weak-area drills, codebook speed work, and a 30-day plan.

Claims we do not make

No pass promise, no copied exam questions, no NFPA or licensing-board affiliation.

Machine-readable sources

/ai/states for exam facts, /ai/answers for answer cards, and /llms.txt for AI crawlers.

Supported exams

State facts we currently maintain

StateExamCoverage
TexasTXTDLR Journeyman Electrician exam85 (NEC Knowledge 59 + Calculations 26), two parts scored separately. 130 minutes (NEC Knowledge) + 110 minutes (Calculations), timed separately. 70% on each of two separately-scored parts.NEC 2023. Open book. Bring your own soft-bound NEC 2023; highlighting, notes, and publisher tabs allowed only if added before the session.63 approved questions in the current bank. Last reviewed June 2026.CaliforniaCACalifornia General Electrician exam100 questions across four DIR domains. 4 hours 30 minutes. 70% to pass.2023 NEC. References provided at the test center (2023 NEC, 2024 NFPA 70E, CAL/OSHA guide). Candidates may not bring or use their own materials.295 approved questions in the current bank. Last reviewed June 2026.MichiganMIMichigan Journeyman Electrician exam80 questions. 2 hours 30 minutes. 75% to pass.2023 NEC. Open book. Bring your own bound 2023 NEC plus Michigan Part 8 rules and the state acts; factory tabs and markings only, no handwritten notes.138 approved questions in the current bank. Last reviewed June 2026.WashingtonWAWashington General Journey Level Electrician (01) exam77 in two sections: NEC & Theory (60) + Washington Laws & Rules (17). 3 hours (NEC & Theory) + 1 hour (Laws & Rules). 70% on each of two sections, scored separately.2020 NEC (exam edition). Open book. Bring your own 2020 NEC, printed RCW 19.28 and WAC 296-46B, and Q&A books; permanent tabs and highlighting allowed, no handwritten notes.179 approved questions in the current bank. Last reviewed June 2026.MarylandMDMaryland Journeyperson + Master Electrician examsJourneyperson 70 / Master 90. Journeyperson 3 hours 30 minutes / Master 4 hours. 70% to pass.2020 NEC. Open book on the 2020 NEC only, plus a silent non-programmable calculator. Permanent tabs and highlighting allowed; no study guides or handwritten notes.113 approved questions in the current bank. Last reviewed June 2026.
Official source links

Where the exam facts come from

FAQ

What is JourneymanIQ?

JourneymanIQ is web-based electrician licensing exam prep. It starts with a free diagnostic, then ranks the NEC areas a candidate should study next.

What does JourneymanIQ cost?

JourneymanIQ has two paid plans: Pro Monthly at $49 per month and Pro+ at $129 one-time for 3 months. Pro+ does not auto-renew.

Does JourneymanIQ promise a pass?

No. JourneymanIQ does not promise an exam result. It shows weak NEC areas and the next sections to drill based on the diagnostic.

Are JourneymanIQ questions copied from real exams?

No. JourneymanIQ practice questions are original. They cite NEC article numbers and explain the lookup or calculation path without copying real exam questions.

Is JourneymanIQ affiliated with NFPA, PSI, Pearson VUE, or a state board?

No. JourneymanIQ is independent and is not affiliated with NFPA, PSI, Pearson VUE, TDLR, DIR, LARA, Washington L&I, or Maryland's Board of Electricians.

Start with your weak areas

If you are deciding whether to pay, do not start with the checkout. Take the diagnostic first. It tells you whether the problem is calculations, grounding, motors, branch circuits, code lookup, or something else.

Take the free diagnostic