Entries open for SkillELECTRIC 2026

Entries open for SkillELECTRIC 2026

SkillELECTRIC 2026 is open for entries across the UK. The NET-run competition will test electrotechnical students and apprentices through online assessment, regional heats and a national final, covering safe isolation, installation quality, inspection and testing, and low-carbon installation capability.


IN Brief:

  • Entries for SkillELECTRIC 2026 opened on 2 March and close on 27 March, with regional qualifying heats due to run across the UK in May and June.
  • The competition assesses core electrotechnical competencies including health and safety, wiring and terminations, inspection and testing, positioning, and installation quality.
  • Low-carbon installation is embedded through the competition pathway, with top performers progressing to the UK final and potentially on to WorldSkills selection.

SkillELECTRIC 2026 is now open for entries, with National Electrotechnical Training launching the latest edition of the UK electrical industry’s flagship skills competition as part of the WorldSkills UK network.

The entry window runs from 2 March to 27 March. All entrants begin with an app-based, timed online task designed to test electrotechnical knowledge across health and safety, inspection and testing, regulations, electrical principles and installation practice. The strongest performers from that stage will move on to nine national qualifying heats scheduled around the UK in May and June, with the leading competitors then progressing to the UK final in November.

The competition is built around the practical and procedural standards expected in electrical installation work. The 2026 technical handbook sets out a staged competency framework covering safe isolation, theory knowledge, accurate positioning from drawings, cable selection and termination, containment work, continuity and insulation resistance testing, and, at the higher stages, earth fault loop impedance and RCD operation. Installation quality, safe working, time management and planning also form part of the assessment framework.

That structure makes SkillELECTRIC more than a showcase event. It is a formal benchmark of the core technical standards that underpin compliant electrical work, from safety controls through to fault finding and final verification. The 2026 framework also embeds low-carbon installation content, reflecting the way electrification, smart systems and newer electrical loads are changing the trade.

NET positions SkillELECTRIC as the industry’s main route into WorldSkills competition for electrical installation, giving the strongest performers a potential pathway to international competition. For the 2026 cycle, competitors who meet the required standard may ultimately be considered for the UK route towards WorldSkills 2028 in Aichi, Japan.

The timetable now moves quickly. Registrations close at the end of March, the entry-stage assessment is due in mid-April, qualifying heats follow in late spring, and the national final will take place in Wales in November alongside the wider WorldSkills UK finals programme.


  • NERC steps up grid monitoring after PLC warning

    NERC steps up grid monitoring after PLC warning

    NERC is monitoring the grid after a PLC threat warning. The advisory described Iranian-affiliated activity targeting internet-exposed industrial control systems across critical infrastructure sectors, including energy.


  • TenneT signs Sequoia capacity control deal

    TenneT signs Sequoia capacity control deal

    TenneT has signed its first battery congestion-control contract in the Netherlands. The 200 MW/800 MWh Sequoia project in Oosterhout is due to energise in 2027.