FREE GUIDE · CHECKED JULY 2026

The Washington journey-level plumber exam (PL01): the complete guide

Fees, eligibility, the three closed-book portions, retake rules, every test center — with links to the primary sources so you can verify it all yourself.
2015 UPC + WAC 51-56 · ADMINISTERED BY PSI · 70% ON EACH PORTION

What the PL01 actually is

The journey-level plumber certificate is a credential issued by the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries (L&I). To earn it, you pass the journey-level examination — commonly called the PL01 — which the testing company PSI administers on L&I's behalf at test centers around the state.

It's a serious exam: three separately-scored portions in one sitting, all closed book, 70% required on every one of them. Here's the whole thing at a glance.

≈$282
per attempt — $202.10 L&I (non-refundable) + $80 PSI
150 items
100 code/trade + 25 waste & vent + 25 water sizing
70%
required on each portion — not on the average
90 min
per portion, all three closed book
15
PSI test centers in Washington
14 days
minimum wait before a retake — plus a new $202.10 fee

Eligibility: 8,000 hours before you can sit

Under WAC 296-400A-121, you may take the journey-level examination after completing 8,000 hours — and not less than four years — of documented training, which must include 4,000 hours of commercial plumbing experience under the direct supervision of a certified journey-level plumber.

You apply through L&I. Once your application is approved, it's good for one year — that's your window to schedule, sit, and pass. Let it lapse and you're reapplying (and re-paying).

What it costs

The retake math is brutal. Fail any portion on your first three attempts and you're back to a new $202.10 application, PSI fees again, and a 14-day wait — roughly $282 per additional attempt. That's the number to keep in mind when you decide how seriously to prepare.

The format: three portions, one sitting, 70% on each

PORTIONITEMSTIMEFORMAT
1. Code & trade knowledge10090 minMultiple choice, closed book
2. Waste & vent drawings2590 minDrawing-based sizing, closed book
3. Water sizing drawings2590 minDrawing-based sizing, closed book

You need 70% on each portion. Averaging doesn't help you: score 90-90-60 and you've failed. And on your first three attempts, failing any single portion means retaking all three. Only from the fourth attempt on do you retake just the failed portion.

Per L&I's advisory-board transcripts, the portion that most often sinks candidates is the waste & vent drawings — water-sizing pass rates run high by comparison. We wrote a whole guide on it: Waste & vent: the part of the exam most candidates fail.

Closed book — but a few tables are provided

You don't bring a code book. The exam does hand you a small set of reference tables:

What it does not provide is Table 703.2 — the drainage and vent sizing table your waste & vent answers depend on. Those maximum fixture-unit loads and vent lengths have to be in your head.

Which code? 2015 UPC + Washington amendments

Per L&I, the exam is based on the 2015 Uniform Plumbing Code with the Washington State amendments (WAC 51-56).

Yes — Washington adopted the 2021 UPC for installations back in March 2024, and no, the exam hasn't switched. You could be installing under one code edition at work and tested on another. If that sounds confusing, it is: we broke down exactly what to study in 2015 vs 2021 UPC: which code the exam actually tests.

Scheduling the exam

Once L&I approves your application, you schedule directly with PSI:

Take the appointment seriously: missing it without rescheduling in time is treated as a failed attempt.

The 15 Washington test centers

PSI runs the PL01 at fifteen locations across the state:

WESTERN WAPUGET SOUND / NORTHCENTRAL & EASTERN WA
Bremerton
Lakewood
Olympia
Puyallup
Tacoma (Spanaway)
Vancouver
Arlington
Everett
Seattle (Factoria/Bellevue)
Snohomish
Ellensburg (CWU)
Kennewick
Liberty Lake
Spokane Valley
Yakima

If you fail: the retake rules

  1. Wait 14 days minimum before retesting.
  2. Reapply to L&I with a new, non-refundable $202.10 fee.
  3. Attempts 1–3: fail any portion, retake all three (full $80 PSI sitting).
  4. Attempt 4 and beyond: retake only the failed portion ($50 per portion at PSI).
  5. Your approved application is valid for one year — repeated failures can burn through the window.

Prep like the exam is closed book. Because it is.

JourneyWorthy is built for the actual Washington exam — 2015 UPC + WA amendments, closed book, all three portions — with every answer cited to its code section and content verified by trade professionals. Launching soon on iOS and Android.

Join the waitlist
One-time payment, not a subscription. One email when it's live — that's the whole list.

A realistic 8–12 week study plan

Most candidates study two to three months. Here's a structure that fits around a full-time work week:

Weeks 1–2 · Baseline and orientation

Weeks 3–6 · Chapter-by-chapter drills

Weeks 7–9 · The drawing portions

Weeks 10–12 · Simulate, patch, taper

QUICK ANSWERS

PL01 FAQ

How much does the WA journey-level plumber exam cost?

The L&I application and exam fee is $202.10, non-refundable. PSI charges $80 more for the three-portion sitting, so a first attempt runs about $282. PSI single-portion retests are $50 per portion, but those only apply from the fourth attempt on.

How many questions are on the PL01?

150 total across three portions: 100 code/trade knowledge items, 25 waste & vent drawing items, and 25 water sizing drawing items — 90 minutes per portion.

What score do I need to pass?

70% on each of the three portions. On your first three attempts, failing any single portion means retaking all three; from the fourth attempt you retake only the failed portion.

Is the exam open book?

No — all three portions are closed book. The exam provides tables 702.1, 610.3, 610.4, and 610.10, but not Table 703.2, so those drainage and vent sizing values must be memorized.

Does it test the 2015 or 2021 UPC?

The 2015 UPC plus Washington amendments (WAC 51-56). Washington adopted the 2021 UPC for installations in March 2024, but as of July 2026 the exam still tests the 2015 edition. Full breakdown here.

How soon can I retake it if I fail?

After a 14-day wait — and you must submit a new application with a new non-refundable $202.10 fee first.

How long is my eligibility valid?

One year from approval. Schedule, prepare, and pass inside that window or you'll need to reapply.

Where can I take it?

At any of 15 PSI centers: Arlington, Bremerton, Ellensburg (CWU), Everett, Kennewick, Lakewood, Liberty Lake, Olympia, Puyallup, Seattle (Factoria/Bellevue), Snohomish, Spokane Valley, Tacoma (Spanaway), Vancouver, and Yakima.

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