CNA Training

How Long Does CNA Training Take? A Complete Timeline

A detailed breakdown of every phase — from enrollment paperwork to walking out of the testing center with your certification in hand.

8 min read Updated March 2026 75–180 training hours

The short answer

Quick answer

CNA training takes 4 to 12 weeks for the classroom and clinical portion. Add 1–3 weeks for exam scheduling and testing, plus 1–4 weeks for state registry processing. Total time from day one of class to being legally certified: 6 to 16 weeks. The biggest variable is your program format — full-time students finish fastest, evening and weekend students take longest.

But that range is wide, and your actual timeline depends on several factors: which state you live in, which program format you choose, how quickly testing slots are available, and how fast your state processes registry applications. Let’s break each phase down so you know exactly what to expect.

The complete timeline, phase by phase

From the moment you decide to become a CNA to the day you start working, here’s every phase and how long each one actually takes:

Phase 1
1–2 wks

Pre-enrollment paperwork

Applying to a program, submitting proof of age and identity, getting fingerprinted for the background check, scheduling your physical exam, getting immunizations (Hepatitis B series takes the longest — ask about accelerated schedules), and getting CPR certified. Many students underestimate this phase. Start your background check and immunizations immediately — don’t wait until orientation day.

Phase 2
2–8 wks

Classroom instruction

This is the lecture portion where you learn anatomy basics, medical terminology, infection control theory, patient rights law, communication skills, and documentation procedures. Full-time programs compress this into 2–3 weeks of intensive 8-hour days. Part-time evening programs spread it over 6–8 weeks with 3-hour classes, 2–3 nights per week. You’ll take written quizzes and a midterm exam during this phase.

Phase 3
2–4 wks

Skills lab & clinical rotations

The hands-on portion — first in a skills lab at your school (practicing on mannequins and classmates), then at a real healthcare facility with actual patients under instructor supervision. You’ll practice vital signs, transfers, bed baths, feeding, catheter care, and all the clinical skills tested on the certification exam. Federal law requires at least 16 clinical hours, but most states require 30–60+. This is where your training becomes real.

Phase 4
1–3 wks

Exam prep & certification testing

After completing training, you’ll schedule your state certification exam. Most testing vendors (Prometric, Credentia, Pearson VUE) have slots available within 1–3 weeks, though popular dates fill fast. Use this gap to study with practice tests and review your weakest clinical skills. The exam itself takes one day — morning for written, afternoon for clinical skills demonstration.

Phase 5
1–4 wks

Registry listing & job start

Once you pass both exam sections, your state adds you to the Nurse Aide Registry. Processing time varies wildly — some states do it in 3–5 business days, California can take 60+ days. Good news: many employers hire you with “registry pending” status, so you can start working before your listing is officially posted. Apply to jobs as soon as you get your passing confirmation.

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4 program formats compared

The same certification, four very different timelines. Your choice of program format is the single biggest factor in how long training takes:

Full-Time Daytime

4–6 weeks

Monday–Friday, 8 AM – 4 PM. The fastest path. Expect 30–40 hours per week of instruction. You’ll complete classroom and clinicals back-to-back with minimal gaps. Ideal if you can dedicate a full month without other commitments.

Best for: Unemployed, between jobs, students on break

Evening Program

8–12 weeks

Typically 6 PM – 9:30 PM, 2–3 nights per week, plus Saturday clinicals. Around 10–15 hours per week. Takes roughly twice as long as full-time, but lets you keep your day job. Clinical rotations usually happen on weekends since facilities need daytime access.

Best for: Working adults, parents with daytime childcare

Weekend-Only

10–14 weeks

Saturday and Sunday, typically 8 AM – 4 PM. Around 12–16 hours per week. The slowest format but preserves your entire work week. Some programs add one or two weekday evenings to speed things up. Clinical rotations are built into the weekend schedule.

Best for: Full-time workers who can’t take evenings off

Online Hybrid

6–10 weeks

Classroom lectures completed online at your own pace, then in-person skills lab and clinical rotations compressed into 2–3 intensive weeks. Flexible for the lecture portion, but clinicals still require physical attendance. Not available in every state — check your state Board of Nursing.

Best for: Self-disciplined learners in participating states

What you learn week by week

Here’s what a typical 6-week full-time CNA program looks like from the inside. Evening and weekend programs cover the same material — just stretched over more calendar weeks:

Week 1
Foundations & Safety
Orientation & program overview. CNA scope of practice and legal boundaries. Healthcare team roles. Hand hygiene technique (you’ll wash your hands hundreds of times). Body mechanics for safe lifting. Fire and emergency procedures. Introduction to medical terminology.
Week 2
Infection Control & Vital Signs
Standard precautions and PPE (donning/doffing order). Isolation types: contact, droplet, airborne. Blood pressure measurement (expect to practice 50+ times). Pulse, respiration, and temperature techniques. Normal vs. abnormal ranges. Accurate documentation.
Week 3
Patient Care & ADLs
Bed baths and shower assistance. Oral care (natural teeth and dentures). Dressing and grooming techniques. Feeding assistance and aspiration prevention. Toileting, bedpan use, and incontinence care. Skin assessment and pressure ulcer prevention. Bed making (occupied and unoccupied).
Week 4
Rights, Communication & Mental Health
Patient rights and OBRA law. Informed consent and advance directives. Abuse recognition and mandatory reporting. Communication with hearing/vision impaired patients. Dementia and Alzheimer’s care techniques. End-of-life care. Cultural sensitivity in diverse settings.
Weeks 5–6
Clinical Rotations
2–3 weeks at a real nursing home or hospital. You’re assigned actual patients (under instructor supervision). Morning care routines: waking, toileting, bathing, dressing. Meal assistance. Vital signs on real people (nerve-wracking at first, routine by day 3). Documentation in real medical charts. Final skills checkoff exam.
Clinical rotation insider tip

Your clinical site may offer you a job before you even finish the program. Nursing homes observe student CNAs during rotations and often recruit the best performers directly. Show up early, volunteer for difficult assignments, and be kind to every resident — you’re essentially on a multi-week job interview.

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Training hours by state

The federal minimum is 75 hours (set by OBRA in 1987), but most states require significantly more. Here’s how the most populated states compare — the more hours your state requires, the longer your training takes:

StateRequired HoursClassroomClinicalTypical Duration
California160 hrs100 hrs60 hrs8–12 weeks
Texas100 hrs60 hrs40 hrs4–8 weeks
Florida120 hrs80 hrs40 hrs6–10 weeks
New York100 hrs70 hrs30 hrs4–8 weeks
Illinois120 hrs80 hrs40 hrs6–10 weeks
Pennsylvania80 hrs37.5 hrs42.5 hrs4–6 weeks
Ohio75 hrs59 hrs16 hrs4–6 weeks
Oregon155 hrs80 hrs75 hrs8–12 weeks
Maine180 hrs90 hrs90 hrs10–14 weeks
Federal min.75 hrs16 hrs min4 weeks min

For a full 50-state breakdown including exam fees and registration details, see our CNA Exam Cost by State guide.

Real schedule examples for different life situations

Three real-world scenarios showing how different people fit CNA training into their lives:

Scenario 1

Recent high school grad, no job

Program: Full-time daytime at community college
Schedule: Mon–Fri, 8 AM – 3 PM
Training: 5 weeks classroom + 2 weeks clinicals
Exam: Scheduled 10 days after completing training
Registry: Listed within 2 weeks
Total: ~10 weeks from enrollment to working
Scenario 2

Working mom, full-time retail job

Program: Evening at vocational school
Schedule: Tue/Thu 6–9:30 PM + Sat clinicals
Training: 8 weeks classroom + 3 weeks clinicals
Exam: Scheduled 2 weeks after (needed weekend slot)
Registry: Listed within 3 weeks
Total: ~16 weeks from enrollment to working
Scenario 3

Career changer, works remotely

Program: Online hybrid
Schedule: Online lectures on own time + 2-week intensive clinicals
Training: 4 weeks online + 2 weeks in-person
Exam: Scheduled 1 week after (weekday slot)
Registry: Listed within 1 week
Total: ~8 weeks from enrollment to working

5 ways to finish faster

1. Get your prerequisites done before classes start. Don’t wait for orientation day to begin your background check, physical exam, and immunizations. Start these the day you decide to enroll — the background check alone can take 1–3 weeks, and Hepatitis B vaccination requires multiple doses spread over weeks.

2. Choose a program with built-in clinical rotations. Some programs schedule clinicals immediately after classroom instruction with no gap. Others have a 2–4 week waiting period because clinical sites have limited capacity. Ask before enrolling: “How soon after classroom do clinicals begin?”

3. Pick an accelerated or intensive program. Many community colleges and Red Cross chapters offer “boot camp” style programs that compress everything into 3–4 weeks of full-time instruction. These are grueling but get you certified fastest.

4. Schedule your exam before you finish training. Testing slots book up 1–3 weeks in advance. Schedule your exam date during your final week of training so there’s no gap between finishing clinicals and testing day. Your training coordinator can tell you when you’ll be eligible to register.

5. Move to a state with lower hour requirements. This sounds extreme, but it matters. A CNA trained in Ohio (75 hours) finishes in roughly 4 weeks. The same person in Maine (180 hours) needs 10–14 weeks. If you’re near a state border, check whether a neighboring state has lower requirements and allows reciprocity.

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4-Week CNA Study Schedule — Day-by-Day Plan
Covers every exam topic. Also available as a free printable PDF.

Frequently asked questions

Can I finish CNA training in 2 weeks?

Technically, some accelerated programs run 2–3 weeks, but only in states with the minimum 75-hour requirement (like Ohio). These are full-time, 10+ hour days with clinicals immediately following. They exist but are rare and physically exhausting. Most accredited programs take at least 4 weeks even at full-time pace.

How many hours a day is CNA training?

Full-time daytime programs typically run 6–8 hours per day (8 AM to 2 PM or 3 PM). Evening programs run 3–4 hours per night (6 PM to 9:30 PM). Clinical rotations are usually full days — 7 AM to 3 PM — to match actual nursing shift schedules.

Is CNA training hard to complete?

The material itself is not overly difficult — most of it is practical, common-sense patient care. The challenge is the pace and the physical demands of clinical rotations. Dropout rates are highest during weeks 1–2 when students realize how physical the work is. If you can make it through the first two weeks, you’ll almost certainly finish.

What happens if I fail a CNA class exam?

Most programs allow one retake of written classroom exams. If you fail the retake, you may need to repeat that module or the entire program depending on the school’s policy. For clinical skills checkoffs, instructors usually give you additional practice time and a second attempt. Failing the state certification exam is separate — you can retake it without repeating training.

Do CNA training hours expire?

Yes. In most states, you must take the certification exam within 24 months of completing your training program. If you wait longer than 24 months, your training is considered expired and you’ll need to retake the entire program. This is why we recommend scheduling your exam within 2–3 weeks of finishing — don’t let your training go stale.

Can I do CNA training online?

Partially. The classroom lecture portion can be completed online in states that allow hybrid programs. However, the hands-on clinical rotation must always be done in person at a healthcare facility — there’s no way around this since you need to practice physical skills on real patients. Online-hybrid programs typically take 6–10 weeks total.

How long after CNA training can I take the exam?

You can schedule your exam as soon as your training program submits your eligibility to the testing vendor. This usually happens within a few days of completing your program. Testing slots are available 1–3 weeks out in most areas. We strongly recommend testing within 2–3 weeks of finishing training — candidates who wait longer than a month have significantly lower pass rates.

Done with training? Time to practice.

Take our free 70-question CNA practice test to see how ready you are for the certification exam.

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