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.

  1. 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.
  2. Pass the Electrical Work trade examination and Business and Law examination exams. Providers, passing scores and fees are in the Exams section below.
  3. 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).
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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.
  7. 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.
  8. Keep the license active. Renew 1, 2, or 3 years (licensee elects); expires on the anniversary of the issue date.

License types

Requirements at a glance

Experience requiredNo 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 feeLicense/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 period1, 2, or 3 years (licensee elects); expires on the anniversary of the issue date
Continuing educationNone required for commercial classifications
Bond requiredNo 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 insuranceNot mandated for commercial classifications (commercial applicants are exempt from the board insurance filing)
Property damage
Workers' compRequired under LA Title 23 if you have employees; filed for residential/home-improvement work
Background checkA 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 requirementFinancial 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.
ReciprocityAs 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 timeVariable; applications are acted on at scheduled board meetings.

Exams

Electrical Work trade examinationProvider: PSI · Passing: Not publicly disclosed · Fee: $50 statutory cap per classification exam
Business and Law examinationProvider: PSI · Passing: Not publicly disclosed · Fee: $50 statutory cap
Preparing for the Electrician exam? State-specific contractor exam-prep courses help you pass the first time. Start exam prep →

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.

Fees and rules change frequently (often annually). This page was last verified on 2026-06-22 — always confirm current requirements directly with the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC) before applying. This is not legal advice.

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

Other Louisiana contractor licenses

🔧 Plumber
LSLBC Plumbing classification (company) + State Plumbing Board of Louisiana Journeyman/Master Plumber (individual)
❄️ HVAC
Mechanical Work (Statewide) classification
🏗️ General Contractor
Building Construction classification (Commercial) and Residential Building Contractor license
🏠 Roofer
Roofing and Sheet Metal, Siding (commercial specialty classification) / Roofing (residential specialty)

Electrician licensing in other states

Alabama
Electrical Contractor License / Journeyman Electrician License
Arizona
CR-11 / C-11 / R-11 Electrical
Arkansas
Master Electrician / Journeyman Electrician
California
C-10 Electrical Contractor
Colorado
Journeyman Electrician; Master Electrician; Residential Wireman
Connecticut
Unlimited Electrical Contractor (E-1) / Unlimited Electrical Journeyperson (E-2)
Florida
Electrical Contractor (Certified / Registered)
Georgia
Electrical Contractor License (Class I or Class II)
Hawaii
Journeyworker Electrician (EJ) / Supervising Electrician (ES) — individual licenses; C-13 Electrical Contractor classification
Iowa
Class A Master Electrician / Class A Journeyman Electrician
Kentucky
Electrician License
Maryland
Master Electrician / Journeyperson Electrician License
Massachusetts
Electrician License (Journeyman Class B / Master Class A)
Michigan
Electrical Contractor License (requires qualifying Master Electrician)
Minnesota
Electrical Contractor License (with Master Electrician as Responsible Licensed Individual)
Mississippi
Commercial Electrical Contractor (Certificate of Responsibility) / Residential Electrical Contractor
Missouri
Statewide Electrical Contractor License (OSEC) — optional; journeyman/master licenses are issued locally
Nevada
C-2 Electrical Contractor
New Jersey
Electrical Contractor License
New Mexico
EE-98 Residential and Commercial Electrical Wiring Contractor
New York
Master Electrician License; Special Electrician License
North Carolina
Electrical Contractor License (Limited / Intermediate / Unlimited / Special Restricted)
Ohio
Electrical Contractor License
Oklahoma
Electrical Journeyman and Electrical Contractor
Oregon
General Journeyman Electrician (J) — issued by BCD; a separate CCB Electrical Contractor license is required to operate a contracting business
Pennsylvania
No Statewide License; Municipal Licensing System (Philadelphia Electrical Contractor example)
South Carolina
Mechanical Contractor - Electrical (EL) [commercial]; Residential Specialty Contractor - Electrical [residential]
Tennessee
Contractor License, CE (Electrical) classification
Texas
Journeyman / Master Electrician (TDLR)
Utah
E200 General Electrical Contractor / E201 Residential Electrical Contractor (contractor license); individual Apprentice, Journeyman, and Master Electrician licenses are separate
Virginia
Contractor License (Class A/B/C) with Electrical (ELE) specialty; plus individual Electrician Tradesman license (Journeyman/Master)
Washington
Electrician Certificate of Competency (Journey Level / Specialty) + Electrical Contractor License
Wisconsin
Electrician License (Registered / Journeyman / Master / Electrical Contractor)