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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 No state-level licensing authority for electricians. Licensing is handled by local jurisdictions. NYC: Department of Buildings (DOB). NYS DOL oversees registered apprenticeships only. directly to confirm current transfer requirements before submitting any applications or fees.
Everything you need to know about transferring your electrician license from Vermont to New York
New York has no interstate reciprocity for electricians. Within the state, some jurisdictions have reciprocity agreements with other NY municipalities. Greene County reciprocates with Albany, Amsterdam, Kingston, Newburgh, Oneonta, Poughkeepsie, Schenectady, Sullivan, and Troy. Ithaca accepts reciprocal licenses from other NY cities/towns. Nassau County reciprocity is limited to Nassau residents. NYC does not offer reciprocity — all applicants must pass NYC DOB exams.
| Requirement | Vermont (VT) | New York (NY) |
|---|---|---|
| Education Requirements● | Must complete 576 hours of classroom instruction for journeyman. No specific general education requirement stated, but apprenticeship programs typically require high school diploma or equivalent. | No state-level education requirement. Local jurisdictions set their own. NYC requires 7 years experience (or 3 years with a bachelor's in electrical engineering). |
| Exam Requirements● | Provider: ICC (International Code Council) / Prov, Inc.; NEC: 2023 NEC (Vermont Electrical Safety Rules, 2025 Edition, effective 11/05/2025); Journeyman exam: required; Master exam: required | Provider: unknown; NEC: ; Journeyman exam: not required; Master exam: not required |
| Experience Requirements● | apprentice: No prior experience required; must work under direction of a master electrician; journeyman: 8,000 hours of documented on-the-job electrical experience (generally through apprenticeship) and 576 hours of classroom instruction covering electrical theory, safety, and code requirements. Alternative: verification by Vermont Apprenticeship Council of completed apprenticeship, or equivalent training acceptable to the Board.; master: Must have been licensed as and working as a journeyman electrician for at least 2 years, or have comparable experience acceptable to the Board | apprentice: null; journeyman: null; master: NYC: 7 years within 10 years prior to application (at least 2 years in NYC), or 3 years with EE degree (2 years in NYC). Buffalo: 11 years / 22,000 hours total. |
| Fees | apprentice registration fee: $115; journeyman license fee: $115; master license fee: $150; exam fee: $65; renewal fee: $150; total initial fees: $215; confidence: high | confidence: high |
| Renewal / CE Requirements● | Period: 3 years; CE hours: 15; Fee: $150 | Period: Varies by local jurisdiction. NYC: annually (expires on licensee's birthday each year).; CE hours: null; Fee: null |
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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