Louisiana Electrician License Requirements
Official classification: Electrical Work (Statewide) classification · Issued by the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC).
⚡ ElectricianLA ✔ Verified 2026-06-22
In Louisiana, electricians must hold the Electrical Work (Statewide) classification, issued by the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC), and no state surety bond is required. Full requirements — experience, exams, fees, insurance, renewal and reciprocity — are detailed below.
How to become a licensed electrician in Louisiana
Follow these steps to earn your Electrical Work (Statewide) classification. Every figure is verified against the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC); full detail for each step is further down the page.
- Build the required experience. No fixed hour requirement is set in statute; the qualifying party must pass the board trade exam. Louisiana has no separate individual statewide journeyman/master electrician license — electrical contracting is licensed only through the LSLBC company classification.
- Pass the Electrical Work trade examination and Business and Law examination exams. Providers, passing scores and fees are in the Exams section below.
- Secure your surety bond. Louisiana requires No board-mandated surety bond. An applicant who cannot show the required $10,000 net worth may instead post a bond/letter of credit for the shortfall (an alternative to net worth, not a standing requirement).
- Line up insurance. You'll need liability insurance (Not mandated for commercial classifications (commercial applicants are exempt from the board insurance filing)), and workers' compensation coverage.
- Clear the background check. A Background Financial Investigation is conducted on applicants (the board charges an investigation fee). No statewide criminal fingerprint check is specified in the licensing law.
- Meet the credit / financial requirement. Financial statement showing net worth of at least $10,000 (current within 12 months); a shortfall may be covered by a bond or letter of credit.
- Submit your application and fees. Apply through the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC) — License/application fee is capped at $100 by statute; the board also charges processing fees on top — confirm current amounts with LSLBC. application fee, plus a $100 statutory cap per classification (additional classifications cost extra) license fee. Processing time: Variable; applications are acted on at scheduled board meetings.
- Keep the license active. Renew 1, 2, or 3 years (licensee elects); expires on the anniversary of the issue date.
License types
- Electrical Work (Statewide) - Commercial — Commercial electrical work where the project exceeds $10,000 (labor + materials).
- Electrical Work - Residential specialty — Electrical work on residential projects within the residential licensing framework.
Requirements at a glance
| Experience required | No fixed hour requirement is set in statute; the qualifying party must pass the board trade exam. Louisiana has no separate individual statewide journeyman/master electrician license — electrical contracting is licensed only through the LSLBC company classification. |
|---|---|
| Application fee | License/application fee is capped at $100 by statute; the board also charges processing fees on top — confirm current amounts with LSLBC. |
| License fee | $100 statutory cap per classification (additional classifications cost extra) |
| Renewal fee | $100 statutory cap |
| Renewal period | 1, 2, or 3 years (licensee elects); expires on the anniversary of the issue date |
| Continuing education | None required for commercial classifications |
| Bond required | No board-mandated surety bond. An applicant who cannot show the required $10,000 net worth may instead post a bond/letter of credit for the shortfall (an alternative to net worth, not a standing requirement). |
| Liability insurance | Not mandated for commercial classifications (commercial applicants are exempt from the board insurance filing) |
| Property damage | — |
| Workers' comp | Required under LA Title 23 if you have employees; filed for residential/home-improvement work |
| Background check | A Background Financial Investigation is conducted on applicants (the board charges an investigation fee). No statewide criminal fingerprint check is specified in the licensing law. |
| Credit requirement | Financial statement showing net worth of at least $10,000 (current within 12 months); a shortfall may be covered by a bond or letter of credit. |
| Reciprocity | As of 2024, LSLBC accepts any out-of-state exam passed without waiver, exemption, or grandfathering in the same classification — there is no fixed reciprocal-state list, and the business/law portion is never waived. |
| Processing time | Variable; applications are acted on at scheduled board meetings. |
Exams
| Electrical Work trade examination | Provider: PSI · Passing: Not publicly disclosed · Fee: $50 statutory cap per classification exam |
|---|---|
| Business and Law examination | Provider: PSI · Passing: Not publicly disclosed · Fee: $50 statutory cap |
Local / municipal notes
Electrical work up to $10,000 generally does not require LSLBC licensure. The statewide license preempts local/parish exam requirements for electrical contractors.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a Louisiana electrician license cost?
Application: License/application fee is capped at $100 by statute; the board also charges processing fees on top — confirm current amounts with LSLBC.. License: $100 statutory cap per classification (additional classifications cost extra). Renewal: $100 statutory cap.
Do electricians in Louisiana need a surety bond?
No board-mandated surety bond. An applicant who cannot show the required $10,000 net worth may instead post a bond/letter of credit for the shortfall (an alternative to net worth, not a standing requirement).
What experience is required for a Louisiana electrician license?
No fixed hour requirement is set in statute; the qualifying party must pass the board trade exam. Louisiana has no separate individual statewide journeyman/master electrician license — electrical contracting is licensed only through the LSLBC company classification.
Is insurance required for electricians in Louisiana?
Liability: Not mandated for commercial classifications (commercial applicants are exempt from the board insurance filing) Workers' compensation: Required under LA Title 23 if you have employees; filed for residential/home-improvement work
How often must a Louisiana electrician license be renewed?
1, 2, or 3 years (licensee elects); expires on the anniversary of the issue date.
Official sources
lslbc.gov/exams-classifications
lslbc.gov/types-of-licenses
lslbc.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Rules-Regulations-Effective-March-20-2021.pdf
lslbc.gov/continuing-education