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Electrician Apprenticeship: Everything You Need to Know

The three real electrician apprenticeship paths in 2026 (IBEW+NECA, IEC, ABC), with current pay scales by year, application requirements, year-by-year expectations, and the starter tool kit.

Electronics breadboard with colorful jumper wires and a Voltcraft multimeter probe testing voltage, the kind of hands-on circuit work an electrician apprentice trains on before moving to commercial wiring

An electrician apprenticeship is the only path to a journeyman license in almost every U.S. state. It is also one of the best earn-while-you-learn deals in the trades: starting pay around $18 to $25 an hour with health insurance and a pension on most union programs, scaling up every six months to $30+ an hour by year five, and graduating with zero student debt and a six-figure earning potential. Below is what the apprenticeship actually is, the three real paths to enroll in one, how the pay scale works, what to expect year by year, and how to land a slot.

What an Apprenticeship Actually Is

A U.S. Department of Labor registered electrician apprenticeship is a structured 4-to-5-year program combining:

  • On-the-job training (OJT). 8,000 to 10,000 hours of paid field work under a licensed journeyman or master electrician. Roughly 40 hours a week across the full program.
  • Related Technical Instruction (RTI). 576 to 900 hours of classroom and lab instruction over the program. Typically one or two evenings a week, or one full day every other week, depending on the local.
  • Periodic raises. Wage increases every six months as you complete training milestones.
  • A state journeyman exam at the end. Pass the exam, get the license, start commanding journeyman pay.

Registered apprenticeships are tracked through apprenticeship.gov, the Department of Labor's program registry. The credential transfers across states more cleanly than non-registered training.

The Three Apprenticeship Paths

Three real ways into an electrician apprenticeship in 2026:

  • IBEW + NECA (union). The largest electrician apprenticeship in the country. Run through Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee (JATC) programs at local chapters. 5 years, 10,000 hours of OJT plus 900 hours of classroom, full benefits package (health insurance, pension, annuity, paid leave). Starting pay typically 40-50% of journeyman scale in the local market. Find a local at the NECA-IBEW Electrical Training Center.
  • IEC (Independent Electrical Contractors) (non-union). The largest non-union electrician apprenticeship. 4 years, 8,000 hours of OJT plus 576 hours of classroom. Pay and benefits vary by sponsoring employer rather than a master contract. The right pick where IBEW locals are weak or where you want more flexibility in choosing employers.
  • ABC (Associated Builders and Contractors) (non-union). The other major non-union path. 4 years, 8,000 hours of OJT plus 576-800 hours of classroom. Heavy commercial and industrial construction focus. Similar pay and benefits structure to IEC.

All three are DOL-registered and lead to the same journeyman exam. The choice is about benefits structure, geographic strength, and the type of work you want to do.

Apprentice Pay

Apprentice wages scale as a percentage of journeyman scale in the local market. The typical schedule:

  • Year 1. 40-50% of journeyman scale. $18 to $25 per hour in most markets, more in high-cost union markets.
  • Year 2. 50-60%. Around $22 to $30 per hour.
  • Year 3. 60-70%. Around $27 to $35 per hour.
  • Year 4. 70-80%. Around $32 to $40 per hour.
  • Year 5 (IBEW/NECA only). 80-90%. Around $36 to $45 per hour.
  • Journeyman. Full scale. $45 to $65+ per hour in most union markets; $30 to $50 per hour in non-union markets.

Union programs include health insurance, dental, vision, pension, and annuity contributions on top of the hourly wage. The total compensation gap between union and non-union widens significantly when you factor benefits into the math.

How to Apply

Application requirements are similar across the three paths:

  • 18 or older and authorized to work in the United States.
  • High school diploma or GED. Some programs require a transcript showing completion of one year of high school algebra with a passing grade.
  • Aptitude test. Most programs run an entrance exam covering algebra, reading comprehension, and basic reasoning. IBEW uses the standardized Electrical Industry Aptitude Test; ABC and IEC use similar tests.
  • Interview. A panel interview where committee members assess fit, commitment, and trade aptitude. Show up dressed business-casual, on time, and ready to explain why electrical work specifically.
  • Drug screen and physical. Standard pre-employment requirements.
  • Valid driver's license. Required for most programs because the work involves daily site changes.

Application windows for most programs open once or twice a year. Apply to multiple programs in your area if you have geographic flexibility. Acceptance rates vary by market, but the typical IBEW JATC accepts 10-30% of qualified applicants.

What to Expect Year by Year

The shape of a typical apprenticeship:

  • Year 1. Helper-level work. Carrying materials, basic conduit bending under supervision, learning to pull wire, organizing the work area, basic terminations. You will be the person who fetches things and gets the bagels.
  • Year 2. Rough-in work and basic device installations. Running EMT and MC cable. Setting boxes. Pulling wire on residential and light commercial jobs. Learning to read blueprints and schedules.
  • Year 3. Troubleshooting and more complex installations. Three-way and four-way switching. Subpanels. Motor controls. Beginning to lead small subtasks.
  • Year 4. Lead-apprentice tasks. Running portions of jobs under a journeyman's general supervision. Specialty work in commercial, industrial, or service-side. Preparing for the journeyman exam.
  • Year 5 (IBEW/NECA only). Functional journeyman work pending the exam. Most apprentices in year 5 are doing the same work as journeymen, just at apprentice pay until the license is in hand.

Tools You'll Need

Most programs require apprentices to supply their own basic hand tools by the end of year one. Plan to invest $300 to $800 in your starter kit:

  • Lineman pliers, side cutters, channel-lock pliers, wire strippers, multi-bit screwdriver, hex key set, utility knife, tape measure, torpedo level.
  • Voltage tester and a basic multimeter.
  • Tool bag. A basic tool bag from Klein or Veto Pro Pac.
  • PPE. Safety glasses, hard hat, electrical hazard rated boots.

For the full breakdown of the working electrician's kit, see our electrician tools list with current 2025-2026 brand picks and pricing.

Making It Through

The apprentices who graduate are not always the smartest in the class. They are the ones who show up early, ask questions, treat the journeymen they work for with respect, and treat the apprenticeship like the multi-year job interview that it is. The instructors, the contractors, and the journeymen running the program are constantly evaluating who they want to keep, who they want to recommend, and who they want to see leave. Show up like the version of yourself you'd want to hire in five years.

For the broader trade-school comparison, see our 10 best trade schools in the U.S. guide. For the post-apprenticeship economics of running an electrical company, the HVAC startup cost guide covers the analogous math in a related trade.

Smart Service for Electricians

If you are running an electrical company and want a software stack that handles scheduling, dispatch, customer history, mobile invoicing, recurring service contracts, and apprentice-hour tracking for state apprenticeship reporting, Smart Service integrates with both QuickBooks Desktop and QuickBooks Online, and the iFleet mobile app keeps techs synced with the office. Try a free demo to see how it fits!

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