How to Become a Master Plumber: Step-by-Step Guide

Learn how to become a master plumber: apprenticeship, journeyman experience, exam requirements, licensing by state, and salary expectations in 2026.

How to Become a Master Plumber: Step-by-Step Guide

Becoming a master plumber is the top of the plumbing trade. It takes years of training, significant hands-on experience, and passing a rigorous licensing exam — but the payoff is a career with real autonomy, strong earning potential, and the ability to run your own business. This guide walks through exactly how the process works, from first steps as an apprentice to passing the master plumber exam.

The Master Plumber Career Path

Plumbing licensure typically follows a three-tier structure:

  1. Apprentice — Entry level. Works under licensed journeyman or master plumber supervision. Typically a 4–5 year apprenticeship program.
  2. Journeyman (or Journeyperson) — Licensed to work independently on most tasks, but cannot pull permits or supervise apprentices in most states. Requires completing apprenticeship and passing a journeyman exam.
  3. Master Plumber — Full licensure. Can pull permits, supervise journeymen and apprentices, start a plumbing business. Requires journeyman experience and passing the master exam.

The path to master is linear — you can't skip to master without the foundational experience. The journeyman experience requirement is real and enforced. Most states require 2–4 years of journeyman experience before you're eligible for the master exam.

Step 1: Complete a Plumbing Apprenticeship

The standard entry point is a formal apprenticeship program, typically run by a union (United Association of Plumbers and Steamfitters is the major union) or through an independent contractor program. Apprenticeships combine on-the-job training with classroom instruction covering plumbing codes, blueprint reading, pipe materials and joining methods, and safety.

Most apprenticeship programs run 4–5 years and include 2,000 hours per year of paid on-the-job training plus regular classroom hours. By the end, you've accumulated roughly 8,000–10,000 hours of supervised plumbing work — the kind of foundation that shows up when you're troubleshooting real problems in the field.

Some states allow direct entry into the journeyman path through work experience alone (without a formal apprenticeship program), but the formal apprenticeship route provides better training, union representation, and in most cases, better wages throughout the training period. For most aspiring master plumbers, the apprenticeship route is the right path.

Step 2: Pass the Journeyman Plumber Exam

After completing your apprenticeship, you apply for the journeyman plumber license in your state. This requires passing a journeyman plumber exam that tests your knowledge of plumbing codes, installation practices, safety, and trade math. In many states, the exam is administered by Prometric or another testing organization using standardized content aligned to the International Plumbing Code or the Uniform Plumbing Code.

The journeyman exam is a prerequisite for the master exam — you can't get there without it. Passing the journeyman license, working under it for several years, and building your practical knowledge base is the foundation on which master-level knowledge builds.

Step 3: Accumulate Journeyman Experience

This is the step most tradespeople find the hardest to wait through — not because it's unpleasant, but because you can feel ready for master status before the time requirement is met.

Requirements vary by state:

  • Texas: 4 years of journeyman experience
  • New York: 7 years of plumbing experience (journeyman + additional)
  • Missouri: 2 years of journeyman experience
  • Pennsylvania: Requirements vary by municipality — Philadelphia and Pittsburgh have separate licensing systems
  • Florida: 4 years experience under a licensed contractor

The specific requirement for your state is the authoritative figure — always verify with your state licensing board, as requirements do change. If you're wondering how to get a master plumber license in your specific state, that guide breaks down requirements by jurisdiction.

Use this period to build the breadth of experience the master exam will test. Commercial work, service and repair, new construction, gas piping, and water heater installation all contribute to the well-rounded knowledge base master-level plumbers need. Plumbers who spend their entire journeyman career doing the same type of work — say, only residential new construction — often find gaps in their exam preparation when they face questions about commercial systems or code applications outside their experience.

Step 4: Prepare for the Master Plumber Exam

The master plumber exam is more demanding than the journeyman exam. It tests deeper knowledge of plumbing codes (you'll likely be working from an open-code-book format in many states), advanced applications, blueprint interpretation, and in some states, business and management knowledge relevant to running a plumbing contracting operation.

What's typically tested:

  • Plumbing codes: International Plumbing Code (IPC) or Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC) — know which your state uses, as they differ in specific requirements
  • Drainage, waste, and venting (DWV): Sizing calculations, slope requirements, trap and vent rules, material compatibility
  • Water supply systems: Sizing, pressure, cross-connection control, backflow prevention
  • Gas piping: Pipe sizing, pressure testing, appliance connections, safety requirements
  • Water heating: Types, installation requirements, safety devices
  • Blueprint reading: Interpreting plumbing plans and specifications
  • Trade math: Calculations for pipe sizing, pressure, offset piping geometry
  • Business and law: Some states include contractor law, bonding, insurance requirements

Study with the master plumber exam preparation guide to structure your study approach. The exam is open-book in most states — meaning you bring the code book and look things up — but that doesn't mean it's easy. You need to navigate the code book quickly and accurately under time pressure. Familiarity with its structure is as important as knowing the content.

How the Master Plumber Exam Works

Format varies by state, but most master plumber exams are:

  • Computer-based: administered at Prometric or PSI testing centers
  • Open-book: you bring specified code books (IPC or UPC + national fuel gas code)
  • Multiple choice: typically 100–200 questions depending on state
  • Timed: usually 3–5 hours depending on state
  • Passing score: typically 70–75% depending on jurisdiction

Some states with locally administered exams (New York City, Chicago, for example) have their own formats that may include essay components or practical elements. If you're in a jurisdiction with local licensing rather than state-level licensing, research that specific exam format.

How to Become a Master Plumber in Specific States

How to Become a Master Plumber in Texas

Texas requires you to have a journeyman plumber license, four years of licensed journeyman experience, and pass the Texas master plumber examination. The exam is administered by Prometric and tests knowledge of the Texas plumbing rules and the International Plumbing Code. Texas also requires a background check and continuing education for license renewal.

How to Become a Master Plumber in New York

New York's plumbing licensing is largely municipal rather than state-level. New York City has its own licensing system through the NYC Department of Buildings — one of the most rigorous in the country. The NYC master plumber license requires documented plumbing experience (typically 7+ years), passing a written exam, and a practical examination. Other cities in New York have their own requirements. If you're pursuing a New York license, identify whether you need city-specific or state licensing.

How to Become a Master Plumber in Missouri

Missouri requires passing the journeyman exam, two years of journeyman experience, and passing the master exam administered by Prometric. Missouri uses the Uniform Plumbing Code as its primary code reference.

How to Become a Master Plumber in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania doesn't have a unified statewide plumbing license — licensing is municipal. Philadelphia and Pittsburgh have their own licensing systems with separate exam requirements. In most other areas of Pennsylvania, local ordinances govern plumbing licensing. Check with your specific municipality or county for the requirements that apply to you.

Master Plumber Salary: What Can You Expect?

Master plumbers earn significantly more than journeymen, reflecting their additional credentials, responsibilities, and ability to run their own operations. According to BLS and industry data:

  • Journeyman plumbers: Median around $60,000–$75,000 per year depending on region and specialization
  • Master plumbers (employed): Median around $75,000–$95,000 per year in most markets
  • Master plumbers (business owners): Highly variable — $100,000–$200,000+ in strong markets for successful operators

Geography matters enormously. Master plumbers in high cost-of-living metro areas (New York, San Francisco, Seattle) earn significantly more than those in rural markets. Specialization — particularly in commercial and industrial plumbing, fire suppression systems, or medical gas systems — also commands premium rates.

The business ownership opportunity is the real financial upside of the master license. You can't legally operate a plumbing contracting business in most states without a master license. For tradespeople with entrepreneurial ambitions, the master license is the key that unlocks that path.

Continuing Education and License Maintenance

Most states require master plumbers to complete continuing education hours to maintain their licenses. Requirements vary — typically 4–16 hours per renewal cycle covering code updates, safety, or business law topics. Code books are updated regularly (the IPC and UPC publish new editions every 3 years), and staying current on code changes is part of the ongoing responsibility of a licensed master plumber.

Some states also require background check renewals, bond and insurance verification, and other administrative compliance at license renewal. Your state licensing board is the authoritative source for renewal requirements.

4–5 year formal apprenticeship program, ~8,000–10,000 hours supervised work plus classroom training

Pass journeyman plumber exam, receive journeyman license from state licensing board

Work 2–7 years as licensed journeyman (varies by state requirement)

Study plumbing codes (IPC or UPC), pipe sizing, DWV, gas, blueprints, trade math

Pass state master plumber examination (open-book, typically 100–200 questions)

Receive master plumber license — can pull permits, run a plumbing business, supervise apprentices
Master Plumber - Master Plumber Exam certification study resource

Common Master Exam Preparation Mistakes

Candidates who fail the master plumber exam often make one of these predictable mistakes.

Not knowing which code book to use. The IPC and UPC have different requirements for many situations. Studying the wrong code for your state means learning content that doesn't appear on your exam. Verify which code your state uses before starting exam prep.

Not practicing with the code book under time pressure. Open-book doesn't mean unlimited time. Candidates who haven't practiced looking up information quickly in the code book during timed practice sessions often run out of time on the actual exam.

Relying entirely on field experience. Years of practical experience build strong intuition, but the exam tests specific code requirements, not just what works in practice. Some code requirements are counterintuitive, or more specific than field practice suggests. Study the code, not just your habits.

Underestimating trade math. Pipe sizing calculations, offset geometry, and pressure calculations appear on master exams. Candidates who haven't worked through these mathematically — relying instead on standard-size intuition from field work — sometimes struggle on the quantitative questions.

Not checking their state's specific requirements. Requirements vary significantly. Experience hours, code book version, exam format, and business law content differ by jurisdiction. Always verify with your state licensing board, not just a generic study guide.

Is Master Plumber Worth It?

For plumbers who plan to stay in the trade, the master license is almost always worth pursuing. The financial premium over journeyman wages is real. The ability to pull permits, run your own business, and take on the full range of plumbing work without supervision represents a meaningful expansion of career options.

The study investment — typically 3–6 months of focused part-time preparation — is modest compared to the years of experience required to be eligible. Most journeyman plumbers who attempt the master exam with structured preparation pass on their first or second attempt. The exam is challenging but not impossible for someone with genuine field experience and solid code knowledge.

The combination of hands-on skill and licensed master status puts you in a relatively small group. Demand for licensed master plumbers is strong and likely to remain so — the skilled trades face a shortage of experienced practitioners, and master plumbers with business skills are in high demand from both employers and clients.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.

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