How to Become an Electrician in Illinois (2026)

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

Becoming a licensed electrician in Illinois 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 Illinois

  1. High school diploma or GED + 1 year algebra
  2. Apply to an IBEW local in Illinois 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 Illinois journeyman electrician exam

Illinois Licensing

Illinois licensing is municipality-driven rather than state-level. Chicago, for example, has its own licensure through the Department of Buildings.

Reciprocity

Municipality-by-municipality basis — check with your local jurisdiction.

IBEW Locals in Illinois

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 Illinois?

In Illinois, 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 Illinois?

Electrician pay in Illinois 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 Illinois?

Illinois licensing is municipality-driven rather than state-level. Chicago, for example, has its own licensure through the Department of Buildings.

Does Illinois accept out-of-state electrician licenses?

Municipality-by-municipality basis — check with your local jurisdiction.

Related Resources

Michael — IBEW Local 134 Journeyman Electrician and pre-apprenticeship instructor

Michael B.

IBEW Local 134 Journeyman · Licensed Contractor · IL Educator

Michael started in the IBEW at 18 and made foreman as a 3rd-year apprentice. Thirteen years in, he’s a Local 134 journeyman, a licensed electrical contractor, a licensed Illinois teacher, and OSHA 30 and EPA 608 certified. He teaches a federally recognized pre-apprenticeship on the south side of Chicago — where he’s helped 100+ students get into the IBEW. He built Sparky AI around exactly what the NJATC exam tests and what trips people up. Prep with this and you walk in ready.

13-yr journeymanLicensed contractorLicensed IL teacherOSHA 30EPA 608100+ into IBEW
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