National Electrical Code (NEC) 2026 — What It Is and How It's Used
National Electrical Code NEC 2026: what NEC is, how it differs from local codes, key articles for electricians, NEC 2026 vs 2026 changes, and exam prep.

What Is the National Electrical Code?
The National Electrical Code is the most widely adopted electrical installation standard in the world. It establishes minimum requirements for safe electrical installations in residential, commercial, and industrial buildings. The Code covers everything from conductor sizing and circuit protection to grounding, bonding, and specialized equipment.
Key facts about the NEC:
- Publisher: National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) — a nonprofit organization. Available at nfpa.org.
- Update cycle: New edition published every 3 years. Current edition: NEC 2026. Previous: NEC 2026, 2017, 2014.
- Legal status: Not federal law. It becomes law only when a state, city, or municipality officially adopts it. Most of the US uses NEC 2026 or NEC 2026.
- Scope: Covers electrical conductors, equipment, and raceways in public and private premises including residential, commercial, industrial, and agricultural buildings.
- Does NOT cover: Utility power generation and transmission lines (covered by the National Electrical Safety Code, NESC), railways, ships, aircraft.
NEC Article Structure — Key Chapters and Articles
The NEC is organized into nine chapters and approximately 90 articles. Most electrical work falls under Chapters 1–4 (general requirements and wiring methods). Chapters 5–7 cover special occupancies and equipment.
High-priority NEC articles for electricians:
- Article 100 — Definitions: Definitions of terms used throughout the Code. Understanding these is foundational — many exam questions hinge on precise definitions.
- Article 110 — Requirements for Electrical Installations: General installation requirements, working space clearances, conductor identification, and examination of equipment.
- Article 200 — Use and Identification of Grounded Conductors: White or gray conductors, neutral identification, terminal identification.
- Article 210 — Branch Circuits: Circuit ratings, required outlets, small appliance circuits, bathroom circuits, AFCI/GFCI requirements.
- Article 220 — Branch-Circuit, Feeder, and Service Load Calculations: How to calculate electrical loads for sizing circuits, feeders, and services.
- Article 230 — Services: Service entrance conductors, service equipment, service disconnecting means.
- Article 240 — Overcurrent Protection: Fuses, circuit breakers, overcurrent protection requirements for conductors and equipment.
- Article 250 — Grounding and Bonding: One of the most complex and frequently tested articles — grounding of services, equipment grounding conductors, bonding requirements.
- Article 300 — Wiring Methods General Requirements: General wiring method requirements, protection of conductors, securing and supporting.
- Article 310 — Conductors for General Wiring: Conductor ampacity tables (Tables 310.12, 310.16) — used daily for wire sizing.
- Article 314 — Outlet, Device, Pull, and Junction Boxes: Box fill calculations, support requirements, cover requirements.
- Article 404 — Switches: Switch location, grounding of switches, snap switches.
- Article 406 — Receptacles, Cord Connectors, and Attachment Plugs: Receptacle installation, tamper-resistant requirements, GFCI locations.
- Article 408 — Switchboards, Switchgear, and Panelboards: Panel installation, clearances, identification of circuits.

NEC 2026 Key Changes from NEC 2026
Every 3-year NEC revision introduces new requirements. Here are the most significant changes in NEC 2026 that electricians and inspectors need to know:
- AFCI expansion (Article 210.12): Arc fault circuit interrupter (AFCI) protection requirements now extend to all 120V, 15A and 20A circuits in dwelling units, including laundry rooms and garage circuits in some configurations. Many states have not yet adopted NEC 2026, so check your jurisdiction.
- EV charging requirements (Article 625): New requirements for electric vehicle supply equipment (EVSE), including dedicated branch circuits and panel capacity planning for future EV charging in new residential construction.
- Energy storage systems (Article 706): Updated requirements for battery energy storage systems (BESS), reflecting growth in residential solar+storage installations.
- Surge protection (Article 230.67): Surge protective devices (SPDs) now required for all new dwelling unit services. Previously optional, now mandatory for new construction and service replacements.
- Updated load calculations (Article 220): Significant revision to feeder and service load calculation methods, replacing the traditional demand factor approach with an optional EV-inclusive method.
NEC Adoption by State
- Published: 2026 (for adoption starting 2026)
- Who has adopted: Growing list — check NFPA's state adoption map
- Notable adoptions: Several states adopting on a rolling basis
- Published: 2019
- Who uses it: Most US states and jurisdictions as of 2026
- Key changes from 2017: Expanded GFCI requirements, tamper-resistant outlets
- Who still uses it: A handful of states slower to adopt
- Key difference: Less AFCI expansion than 2026
- Check local: Always verify your jurisdiction's adopted edition
- What they are: State/local modifications to the base NEC text
- Examples: Conduit requirements in some cities, fire alarm integration
- Authority: AHJ (Authority Having Jurisdiction) enforces local code

NEC and Electrical Licensing Exams
Most state electrical licensing exams (journeyman and master electrician) are open-book NEC exams administered by PSI Exams or Prometric. The test allows you to bring a physical NEC codebook and look up answers — but you need to know the Code's structure well enough to find answers within the time limit.
Exam tips for NEC-based licensing tests:
- Tab your codebook: Add color-coded tabs to frequently tested articles (Article 100, 110, 210, 220, 230, 240, 250, 300, 310, 314, 408). This saves critical time during the exam.
- Memorize the tables: Table 310.16 (conductor ampacity), Table 250.122 (equipment grounding conductor sizes), and the box fill tables in Article 314 appear on most exams.
- Understand Article 100 definitions: Many questions are answered by knowing the precise NEC definition of terms like 'accessible,' 'bonding,' 'dwelling unit,' 'feeder,' 'separately derived system.'
- Practice with timed questions: Licensing exams give 3–4 hours for 80–100+ questions. Speed in Code navigation matters — practice looking up questions under time pressure.
- Know which NEC edition your state uses: Bring the correct edition. Taking an exam with the wrong NEC edition is a common costly mistake.