Studying for a Michigan water or wastewater operator exam? You're in the right place. Pick your discipline below — each tab has the certification levels, how Michigan names them, and the practice tests that match.
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A free account saves every score across devices and shows you which Michigan exam topics are pulling you down — so you know exactly where to focus next.
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Choose your certification
How Michigan classifies drinking-water operators
Michigan's operator certification is governed by Act 399, P.A. 1976 and Administrative Rules R 325.11910-1915 (Part 19, Examination and Certification of Operators).
Full breakdown in the FAQ below.
Choose your certification level
F-4 (entry)
Entry-level certification. Small system operation, basic sampling, terminology, and maintenance.
Michigan certificationF-3
Intermediate-level exam prep. Treatment processes, operator math, regulations, troubleshooting.
Michigan certificationF-2
Advanced-level certification. Process control, optimization, compliance for medium/large systems.
Michigan certificationF-1 (highest)
Highest-level certification. Plant management, complex treatment trains, large-utility regulations.
Practice by topic
Drill the specific subject areas on the Michigan drinking-water exam.
Michigan certifies wastewater treatment operators separately from drinking-water operators. The cards below map our four wastewater practice tests to Michigan's wastewater class names.
Class I → Class D
Entry-level wastewater operator. Wastewater characteristics, collection systems, preliminary/primary treatment, activated-sludge basics, disinfection, solids handling, lab work, and operator math.
Michigan wastewaterClass II → Class C
Intermediate wastewater operator. Secondary treatment, process control, troubleshooting, regulations, and two-step operator math.
Michigan wastewaterClass III → Class B
Advanced wastewater operator. Process optimization, nutrient removal, biosolids handling, lab analyses, and compliance for medium and large plants.
Michigan wastewaterClass IV → Class A
Expert wastewater operator. Plant management, complex treatment trains, advanced nutrient removal, and large-utility regulations.
Distribution operator practice tests for Michigan are coming soon. In the meantime, see the Distribution hub to get notified, or start with drinking water or wastewater — they share a lot of the same operator math and fundamentals.
Collections operator practice tests for Michigan are coming soon. In the meantime, see the Collections hub to get notified, or start with drinking water or wastewater — they share a lot of the same operator math and fundamentals.
About the Michigan operator exams
Water operator certification in Michigan is administered by EGLE (Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy) — Operator Training and Certification Unit (OTCU). The exact certification structure, exam format, and continuing-education requirements vary and change over time, so always confirm the current scope and eligibility directly with the agency. Our practice content focuses on the underlying technical material — the same operating principles, math, regulations, and treatment chemistry that show up on virtually every US drinking-water operator exam.
Frequently asked questions
How does Michigan classify water operators?
Are these the exact questions on the Michigan exam?
Are these practice tests free?
Disclaimer: WaterOperatorPracticeTest.com is an independent study aid. We are not affiliated with EGLE (Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy) — Operator Training and Certification Unit (OTCU) or any state primacy agency. Always confirm current exam requirements with your state's certification body.