How to Become an Electrician in Florida (2026)

Written by a licensed IBEW journeyman electrician  ·  Updated May 2026 ·  Reviewed for NEC accuracy

Becoming a licensed electrician in Florida follows the same general path as the rest of the country — apprenticeship, journeyman exam, optionally master license — with state-specific licensing requirements layered on top.

The Path in Florida

  1. High school diploma or GED + 1 year algebra
  2. Apply to an IBEW local in Florida or a non-union apprenticeship
  3. Take the NJATC aptitude test (IBEW route)
  4. Complete the interview, get on the eligibility list
  5. Complete the 4-5 year apprenticeship
  6. Pass the Florida journeyman electrician exam

Florida Licensing

Florida requires registration and licensure through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). Journeyman and master licenses are administered at the state level.

Reciprocity

Florida has limited reciprocity — check with DBPR for specific state-to-state agreements.

IBEW Locals in Florida

Exam Costs & Schedules

  • Journeyman exam fees vary — check with your state board
  • Most states use PSI or Prometric as exam providers
  • Exams typically include 80-100 questions over 3-4 hours
  • NEC code section is the most heavily weighted

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to become an electrician in Florida?

In Florida, the typical path is a 4-5 year IBEW apprenticeship followed by a journeyman licensing exam. Total time from first application to licensed journeyman is usually 5-8 years.

How much do electricians make in Florida?

Electrician pay in Florida varies by region and union status. IBEW journeyman scale tends to be higher than non-union shop rates. See our electrician salary by state page for current ranges.

Do I need a license to be an electrician in Florida?

Florida requires registration and licensure through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). Journeyman and master licenses are administered at the state level.

Does Florida accept out-of-state electrician licenses?

Florida has limited reciprocity — check with DBPR for specific state-to-state agreements.

Related Resources

Michael B. — IBEW Local 134 Journeyman Electrician

Michael B.

IBEW Local 134 Journeyman Electrician · Licensed Electrical Contractor

Michael is a licensed electrical contractor and IBEW Local 134 journeyman with years of field experience. He built Sparky AI after ChatGPT gave him wrong NEC code information on a job — costing him $800 in callbacks. Every answer in Sparky AI is verified against the actual NEC.