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⚠️ Important: This comparison is based on published state licensing requirements and may not reflect recent changes. Reciprocity and transfer rules change frequently and are evaluated on a case-by-case basis by state licensing boards. This tool is for research purposes only and does not constitute legal or professional advice. Always contact Idaho Division of Occupational and Professional Licenses (DOPL) – Electrical Program / Idaho Electrical Board directly to confirm current transfer requirements before submitting any applications or fees.
Everything you need to know about transferring your electrician license from Utah to Idaho
Idaho may accept out-of-state Journeyman or Master licenses by endorsement. Applicants must hold a valid license from another state and may need to pass the state exam. Wyoming has explicit reciprocity with Idaho for both Journeyman and Master levels.
| Requirement | Utah (UT) | Idaho (ID) |
|---|---|---|
| Education Requirements● | Journeyman: 4-year electrical apprenticeship education program (minimum 576 classroom hours) OR competency exam OR 16,000 hours (8 years) verified work experience. Residential Journeyman: 2-year program (288 classroom hours). Master: Associate Degree in Applied Science. | 576 hours of classroom instruction required as part of apprenticeship; 4 years of approved electrical apprentice school for standard pathway |
| Exam Requirements● | Provider: Prov (formerly ProV Exams). Phone: (800) 733-9267. Available at 17 testing centers in Utah plus remote via Prov Examroom service.; NEC: 2023 NEC (NFPA 70); Journeyman exam: required; Master exam: required | Provider: NASCLA examination, administered through PSI/Pearson VUE; NEC: 2020 NEC (current exam basis); transitioning to 2023 NEC as NASCLA updates its exam; Journeyman exam: required; Master exam: required |
| Experience Requirements● | apprentice: No prior experience required. Must register with DOPL. Work under direct supervision of a licensed Journeyman or Master Electrician.; journeyman: 4-year (minimum 576 classroom hours) electrical apprenticeship education program or competency exam equivalence, plus 6,000 hours of electrical experience as a licensed apprentice. Alternative: 16,000 hours (8 years) verified work experience under a licensed electrician (no education). Residential Journeyman requires 2-year program (288 classroom hours) plus 3,000 hours.; master: Associate Degree in Applied Science plus 4,000 hours of electrical experience as a licensed journeyman electrician. Residential Master has separate requirements. | apprentice: Level 1: 0–2,000 hrs; Level 2: 2,000–4,000 hrs; Level 3: 4,000–6,000 hrs; Level 4: 6,000–8,000 hrs. Must be at least 16 years old. All work under supervision of an Idaho-licensed journeyman.; journeyman: Option A: 4 years of approved electrical apprentice school + 8,000 hours of supervised work experience. Option B: 16,000+ hours of supervised work experience as apprentice. Option C (in-state): 4 years school + 6,000 hours (must work additional 2,000 hours after passing exam before licensure). All options require 576 hours of classroom instruction.; master: Must have held an active Journeyman license for 4 years and pass the NASCLA examination before submitting an application to DOPL. |
| Fees | apprentice registration fee: $110; journeyman license fee: $90-$105; master license fee: $90-$105; renewal fee: $72-$84; total initial fees: $90-$105; confidence: medium | apprentice registration fee: $15; journeyman license fee: $130; master license fee: $65; exam fee: $75; renewal fee: $45; total initial fees: $130; confidence: high |
| Renewal / CE Requirements● | Period: 2 years (expires November 30 of even-numbered years); CE hours: 16; Fee: $72-$84 | Period: 3 years (triennial) for Journeyman and Master; annual for Apprentice and Contractor; CE hours: 0; Fee: $45 |
Data verified as of 2026-04-03. Requirements may have changed since verification.
Gather required documentation (education transcripts, experience logs, exam scores).
These steps are general guidance based on common transfer processes. Your state may have a different process. Always follow the instructions provided by your state licensing board.
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