AED certification lasts 2 years for almost every standard course from the American Heart Association, American Red Cross, National Safety Council, and ASHI. The clock starts when the certification is issued — AHA cards are valid through the end of the issue month, while other providers may show a specific expiration date on the certificate.
Once the certification expires, the person should no longer be counted as a current certified AED responder until they renew or recertify. For workplace and compliance tracking, an expired card creates a gap even if it expired recently.
The 2-year rule is clean and consistent enough that most people assume it applies universally. It mostly does, with a few specific exceptions that matter depending on your industry, your state, and which course your staff completed. Healthcare providers on AHA BLS certification follow the same 2-year cycle but renew through a different course than layperson Heartsaver. Some employer-specific internal credentials expire in 1 year. And where state AED laws, workplace policies, or insurance requirements reference trained or certified responders, an expired certification is not just an HR paperwork issue — it can become a compliance and documentation gap.
This guide covers exactly how long each major certification lasts, what renewal looks like vs. the original course, what happens when someone’s cert lapses, and how most programs quietly lose track of expiration dates once they scale past a handful of staff.
How long each major AED certification lasts
| Certification | Issuing body | Duration | Renewal course |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heartsaver CPR/AED | American Heart Association | 2 years | Heartsaver renewal (shorter) |
| BLS for Healthcare Providers | American Heart Association | 2 years | BLS renewal |
| Adult and Pediatric First Aid/CPR/AED | American Red Cross | 2 years | Red Cross renewal |
| CPR, AED, and First Aid | National Safety Council | 2 years | NSC renewal |
| CPR/AED/First Aid | HSI/ASHI | 2 years for most programs | HSI/ASHI renewal |
| CPR/AED/First Aid | ECSI | 2 years | ECSI renewal |
| Employer-specific internal certification | Varies | Often 1 year | Internal retraining |
| Instructor-level certification | AHA / Red Cross / NSC | 2 years | Renewal + continuing education |
Every standard layperson certification is 2 years. Every healthcare provider certification is 2 years. The only consistent exception is internal employer credentials, which many organizations set at 1 year to stay ahead of state inspection cycles.
⚠️ Not all certificates are equal. An AED certification from a fully online provider with no hands-on skills check is not the same as an AHA Heartsaver or Red Cross CPR/AED certification. OSHA has stated that online-only training does not meet requirements where physical first-aid or CPR skills must be practiced, and Red Cross notes that online-only CPR classes do not qualify for workplace certification needs. A staff member holding a $15 online certificate is not a certified responder in most compliance environments, regardless of what that certificate says or how long it lasts.
Why 2 years specifically
The 2-year cycle isn’t arbitrary. It’s anchored to two realities about CPR and AED training retention.
📉 Skill decay
Research consistently shows that CPR compression depth, rate, and hand placement accuracy degrade significantly within 6 to 12 months of training without practice. AED pad placement and sequencing shows similar decay. The AHA and ILCOR use 2 years as a practical compromise between ideal retention intervals (every 6 months) and operational reality for workplaces (where annual training is often the ceiling of what’s feasible).
📋 Guideline updates
The AHA updates its CPR and ECC guidelines on a rolling basis, with major revisions roughly every 5 years and interim updates more frequently. A 2-year certification cycle ensures that trained responders are recertified against current standards before those standards drift too far from what they were trained on.
Key implication: A certification isn’t just a piece of paper proving someone took a class once. It’s a proxy for current, functional readiness. That’s what the 2-year clock is protecting.
What renewal looks like vs. the original course
Renewal courses are shorter than initial certification, almost always by half or more.
| Course type | Initial duration | Renewal duration |
|---|---|---|
| AHA Heartsaver CPR/AED | 3.5 to 5 hours | 2 to 3 hours |
| AHA BLS for Healthcare Providers | 4 to 5 hours | 2 to 3 hours |
| Red Cross Adult CPR/AED | 3 to 4 hours | 2 hours |
| NSC CPR/AED | 3 to 4 hours | 2 hours |
Renewal courses skip introductory content and focus on skills refresh, updated guideline elements since the last certification, and a final hands-on skills assessment.
⚠️ Catch #1 — Renew before expiration, not after. There is no grace period. Many abbreviated renewal courses are intended for people whose credentials are still current and near expiration. If the card has already expired, the person may need to complete a full certification course again. The safest policy: renew before the expiration date.
⚠️ Catch #2 — Skills check is non-negotiable. Blended learning (online coursework followed by in-person skills) works fine for renewal. Fully online renewals with no skills check are not accepted in most regulated environments. The skills check is the defensible element.
What happens when AED certification expires
The certification becomes void on the expiration date. There is no grace period, no “it’s close enough,” no 30-day runway after expiration where the person remains a certified responder. In practice this matters in three distinct ways:
⚠️ Compliance gap
Some state AED programs, industry rules, employer policies, and workplace safety plans require trained responders to be available. An organization where every designated AED responder’s certification has lapsed is technically non-compliant with those requirements — even if the physical AED is perfectly maintained. The device can be rescue-ready. The program can still fail a compliance review because nobody on shift is certified.
⚖️ Legal exposure
State Good Samaritan statutes that protect AED users often tie immunity to completing a training course recognized by the state. In states or policies that require current training, a lapsed certification may create avoidable legal, compliance, or documentation risk after an AED incident. It’s exactly the kind of detail a plaintiff’s attorney checks first when reviewing an AED-related incident.
🏛 Insurance implications
Many employers and liability insurers require documented evidence of certified AED responders as a condition of coverage or premium calculation. Lapses discovered during an audit or post-incident review can affect claims processing.
The fix for all three is the same: a system that surfaces expiration dates before they pass, not after. Certification tracking that relies on individuals self-reporting when their card expires misses the people who don’t know their expiration date, the staff who changed roles, and the cards issued under a maiden name nobody cross-referenced in the tracking system.
How certification tracking quietly breaks at scale
One certified staff member in one facility is easy to track. Ten certified staff across three locations, each certified on a different date through a different provider, each with a 2-year expiration on a different month, is a different problem.
The spreadsheet version usually looks like this: a column for “CPR cert expiration” in an HR file, maintained by someone in HR, updated when an employee renews. It works until:
- The person who maintained the spreadsheet leaves
- An employee renews through a new provider and the old expiration isn’t deleted
- A location manager assumes “HR handles that” while HR assumes “the safety manager handles that”
- Two employees in the same location both let their certs lapse in the same month because neither realized they were the only two on the list
What follows is a discovery during an audit — or worse, during a post-incident review — that the designated responders were not certified on the date the AED was needed.
💡 AED Log tracks every responder’s certification alongside every device’s battery and pad expirations — alerts fire before the gap opens, not after it’s discovered.
Certification Tracking in AED Log keeps every responder’s certification logged alongside every AED’s battery and pad expirations. Alerts fire ahead of each expiration so renewal gets scheduled before the gap opens. The same dashboard runs monthly AED Inspections, Pad Tracking, and Battery Tracking — the people side of the program and the device side stay in sync in one place. Pricing is tier-based, not per device, and certification tracking is included in every plan, including the free tier on 1 AED.
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