An AED certification is a credential confirming that someone has been trained to use an Automated External Defibrillator safely during a cardiac emergency, almost always issued as part of a combined CPR/AED course and valid for two years from the date it was earned.
Here’s what trips most employers up though: the certification is for the person, not the device, and not the program. A fully certified staff of twenty can still sit inside a workplace that fails a state AED audit, because the audit is asking whether the device has a maintenance log, whether the program has medical direction, and whether the records survived the last two years. The certification card in someone’s wallet has nothing to do with any of that.
Which is why the question “what is an AED certification” almost always comes up when something bigger is being figured out: a new hire, a state inspection, a lapsed renewal, a school district rolling out AEDs across 30 buildings. The short version fits in a sentence. The version that actually helps is everything below, who issues one, which ones get rejected, how long you really have before it expires, and where certification sits inside the compliance picture most programs don’t see until an audit surfaces the gap.
AED certification is about the person, not the device
This is the single most common confusion, so worth settling up front.
A workplace can have fully certified staff and still fail a compliance audit because the device itself has expired pads or no maintenance log. Certified responders do not make a device legal. Certified responders also do not replace the need for a physician-led medical direction agreement in states that require one.
Put differently: certification answers “is this person trained?” Compliance answers “is this program legal?” The two run in parallel, not in sequence.
AED Log flags every lapse before it happens. Free on 1 AED.
What a typical CPR/AED certification course actually covers
Most courses are delivered as a combined CPR/AED certification, with AED use integrated into the adult CPR module. A standard course runs 2 to 5 hours depending on provider and whether it is blended (online plus in-person skills check) or fully classroom-based.
Core curriculum across AHA Heartsaver, Red Cross, NSC, and ASHI courses typically includes:
| Topic | Skill taught |
|---|---|
| Cardiac arrest recognition | Identifying unresponsiveness, no normal breathing, no pulse |
| Chest compressions | Correct hand placement, 100 to 120 per minute rate, 2-inch depth for adults |
| Rescue breathing | Optional in hands-only CPR courses, required in full CPR/AED |
| AED operation | Turning on the device, pad placement (adult and pediatric), clearing the patient, delivering shocks |
| Device-specific use | How the Philips HeartStart, Zoll AED Plus, Cardiac Science Powerheart, or Physio-Control Lifepak delivers voice prompts and analyzes rhythm |
| Scene safety | Recognizing hazards, moving victims when necessary, handling wet or metal environments |
| Post-event steps | Calling 911, handing over to EMS, documenting the event |
Most courses close with a written test (usually 20 to 30 questions) and a hands-on skills check on a manikin and AED trainer unit. Passing both produces a digital certification card, typically valid for 2 years from the date of completion.
Who issues AED certifications (and which ones count)
Not all AED certifications are recognized equally. Employers, state agencies, and insurance auditors usually only accept certifications from nationally recognized training organizations.
- American Heart Association (AHA): Heartsaver CPR/AED, BLS for Healthcare Providers
- American Red Cross (ARC): Adult and Pediatric First Aid/CPR/AED
- National Safety Council (NSC): CPR, AED, and First Aid
- American Safety and Health Institute (ASHI): CPR, AED, First Aid
- Emergency Care and Safety Institute (ECSI)
- Fully online “certifications” with no in-person or virtual skills check
- PDF certificates from unaccredited providers
- Expired credentials (even by one day, in strict compliance environments)
Facility managers usually discover this the hard way: an employee shows up with an “AED certification” from a $15 online course, and the insurance auditor, OSHA inspector, or state PAD program coordinator does not accept it.
⚠️ Rule of thumb: If the course does not include a hands-on skills verification, it is not a defensible certification in most regulated environments.
How long does an AED certification last?
Most AED/CPR certifications are valid for 2 years from the date of issue. A few variations to know:
- Healthcare Provider BLS (AHA): 2 years
- Heartsaver CPR/AED (AHA): 2 years
- Red Cross Adult CPR/AED: 2 years (per Red Cross certification policy)
- Some instructor-level certifications: 2 years, with continuing education requirements
- Employer-specific internal cards: sometimes shorter (1 year) depending on workplace policy
The certification expires on a fixed date, not a rolling window. Recertification courses are usually shorter than initial certifications (1 to 3 hours) because they skip introductory material and focus on skills refresh plus any updates to national resuscitation guidelines.
Running a program with more than a handful of certified staff means tracking dozens of individual expiration dates, one per person, each on a different 2-year cycle from when they first took the course. That is where most certification compliance quietly falls apart, and it’s exactly the kind of tracking AED Log handles automatically alongside device maintenance.
💡 5 people = 5 separate renewal dates. 20 people = 20. AED Log flags every one before it lapses.
Does your organization legally need certified AED users?
This is where state law, federal guidance, and employer policy diverge.
Federal
There is no single federal law requiring private employers to have AED-certified staff. However:
- OSHA’s General Duty Clause requires workplaces “free from recognized hazards.” Once an AED is installed, OSHA expects trained users to be reasonably available.
- Federal agencies and buildings are governed by the Cardiac Arrest Survival Act (CASA), which encourages but does not always mandate certified responders.
- Aviation, maritime, and certain DOT-regulated industries have specific AED and training requirements under their own rules.
State
Most US states have AED laws, and many tie Good Samaritan immunity to the presence of trained, certified responders. Examples:
- California Health & Safety Code 1797.196: requires AED users to complete training and the program to have designated individuals responsible for maintenance and testing
- New York Public Health Law 3000-b: requires a collaborative agreement with an emergency healthcare provider and designated, trained individuals
- Illinois Automated External Defibrillator Act: requires training that complies with AHA or equivalent standards
- Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 779: requires expected users to complete a training course approved by the state
The AED laws hub covers state-specific certification and training requirements in more depth.
Industry-specific
- Schools: many states require staff certification (teachers, coaches, athletic trainers) under laws like Zach’s Law and similar statutes
- Fitness centers and health clubs: most states require certified staff on duty during operating hours
- Dental and medical offices: often required by state practice boards
- Daycare and childcare: varies by state, some require certified staff per child ratio
Employer policy
Even when not legally required, many employers require certification internally because:
- Insurance carriers often reduce premiums for certified staff presence
- It reduces liability exposure in a failed-rescue lawsuit
- It meets corporate safety compliance frameworks like ISO 45001 or OSHA VPP
AED certification vs AED medical direction (don’t confuse these)
These two get mixed up constantly. They are completely different things, and in states like California and New York you need both, not one or the other.
| AED certification | AED medical direction | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Training credential for a responder | Physician oversight of the AED program |
| Who holds it | Individual employees or laypersons | Licensed physician under contract |
| Purpose | Proves someone is trained to use the device | Satisfies state-level program oversight rules |
| Duration | Usually 2 years | Ongoing, renewed annually |
| Required by | OSHA posture plus some state laws | State law in many jurisdictions (CA, NY, IL, etc.) |
| Can software track it? | Yes, the expiration dates and renewal records | Yes, the agreements, signoffs, and renewals |
Certified responders alone do not make a program compliant. Treating certification and medical direction as interchangeable is how programs fail audits. The what is AED program management page breaks down the full component list.
How AED certification fits into the wider compliance picture
A complete AED program has 5 moving parts. Certification is one of them:
- The device: AED purchased, registered, serviced, pads and battery current
- The responders: staff with valid CPR/AED certification
- Medical direction: physician agreement where state-required
- Maintenance routine: monthly inspections, expiration tracking, incident readiness
- Recordkeeping: documented logs of all of the above, retained for 3 to 7 years depending on state
Most programs track parts 1 and 2 well (someone bought the AED, someone got certified) and lose parts 3, 4, and 5 over time. Then 18 months later, a state audit, an insurance review, or, worst case, a failed rescue surfaces the gap.
FAQ
Next step
Here’s the part that trips up almost every program past 5 certified staff: every person’s 2-year expiration clock starts on a different day. Five people, five separate renewal dates. Twenty people, twenty. And the moment someone’s card lapses, in many states, so does the legal protection around using the device.
This is the exact problem Certification Tracking inside AED Log is built to handle. Every certified employee is logged with their issue date, expiration date, and issuing body, and the system flags renewals ahead of time so nobody’s card expires in silence. Certification tracking sits alongside AED inspections, pad and battery alerts, incident reports, and the mobile app with QR code scanning, so the people side and the device side of the program live in one place instead of two spreadsheets.
Pricing is tier-based, not per device, which means covering a growing list of certified staff and a growing list of AEDs costs the same flat fee either way. For most organizations that flips the math against per-AED competitors well before 10 devices.
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