From Apprentice to Journeyman
Welcome
Hello, and welcome. This is Super Structures General Contractors — a national general contractor headquartered in Powhatan, Virginia — here to help you and your clients build something that lasts. We're glad you're with us, and we look forward to connecting with you.
Here's a topic that quietly separates the good from the great — From Apprentice to Journeyman. Bottom line — write this one down: Finish your hours and classroom, pass the exam, and earn your journeyman card — a real, marketable, lasting credential. Stick with me — by the end, this just clicks.
Becoming a journeyman is a real milestone — the day you're trusted to work on your own. Earn it fully.
Completing your apprenticeship makes you a journeyman — a skilled, independent worker.
What it takes
- Complete your required OJT hours and classroom instruction.
- Pass any required exams.
- Receive your completion credential / journeyman card.
What changes
As a journeyman you earn more, work independently, and can begin working toward master status and licensing (where applicable). You've turned years of effort into a real, marketable credential — one nobody can take away.
Going Deeper (Intermediate)
Completing the apprenticeship makes you a journeyman — a fully-qualified, fully-paid tradesperson who works independently. It requires your hours + classroom + (in licensed trades) a journeyman exam, and it's a portable credential.
Advanced / Pro-Level
The journeyman milestone and beyond:
- You've completed the required hours/competencies and related instruction, and passed the journeyman exam where required.
- It brings a wage jump and the ability to work independently and supervise apprentices.
- The credential is portable and may reciprocate across jurisdictions.
- From here the path continues to master (more experience + exam) and eventually a contractor's license — for which your logged apprentice/journeyman hours count as the experience requirement. Journeyman is the foundation everything else builds on.
Practice Challenge
How do the hours you logged as an apprentice and journeyman pay off when you later pursue a contractor's license? (Answer: they count as the documented experience licensing boards require to qualify for the contractor exam/license — the journeyman credential and its hour record are the foundation that makes master and contractor licensure attainable.)
In Practice
Completing the required hours and passing the exam earns the journeyman card — a credential that travels with you to any employer or state. Years of effort become something nobody can take away.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Not documenting your on-the-job hours
- Neglecting exam prep until the last minute
- Letting the apprenticeship lapse
From the Field
A personal word from a builder who's been there:
Finish strong: complete your hours, pass the exam, own your craft. That credential is portable and it's the foundation for everything after — master, foreman, contractor. The hours you log now are the experience that qualifies you for your license down the road, so document all of it.
Takeaway: Finish your hours and classroom, pass the exam, and earn your journeyman card — a real, marketable, lasting credential.
Educational content — not financial or investment advice. Run real numbers with your CPA and lender, and verify apprenticeship details with the program/sponsor.