How to Get CPR Certified

CPR certification class at Orlando training center for life-saving skills.

Getting CPR certified sounds simple until a form, employer, or school uses one course name and a search result uses another. The mistake is easy: book something that says CPR, then learn later that the requirement meant AHA BLS.

Start by matching the class to the reason you need the card, not by hunting for the fastest listing. If the paperwork says BLS, the answer is AHA BLS. If the role also needs First Aid, that is an add-on decision after the BLS question is clear.

A good CPR class gives you more than a certificate transaction. It is where you feel how hard compressions actually are, practice with an AED trainer, and get corrected before the skill is ever needed outside the room.

Where to Get CPR Certified

If your need is tied to work, school, clinical placement, or any formal requirement, the clear starting point is a hands-on AHA BLS class. That course covers adult, child, and infant CPR, AED use, and choking relief in one class, which is why it keeps showing up on job and school paperwork.

Broad searches create noise fast. If location is the open question, areas we serve sorts that part out. If the real problem is course names, start with the class page instead of guessing from marketplace listings that blur the difference between a serious hands-on class and a vague certificate.

For the main training path, go straight to the AHA BLS CPR class. It is the cleanest route when the card may be reviewed by someone else later.

In-Person vs Online CPR Certification

In-person hands-on training and online-only certificates are not the same thing. A hands-on class lets you practice compressions, AED use, the rescue sequence, and skills testing with an instructor. That matters when the card is for an actual requirement, not casual awareness or a quick checkbox.

If your job, school, or clinical site might check the card later, take the in-person hands-on class. It is much easier to get that decision right up front than to explain a mismatch later.

What Actually Happens in a BLS Class

AHA BLS is physical training. You practice adult, child, and infant CPR on manikins, use an AED trainer, work through choking relief, and learn how the response changes when a second rescuer is helping. The instructor is not just presenting slides; they are watching your hands, your pace, your depth, and whether you let the chest recoil.

That feedback is the part an online-only course cannot recreate. Many students understand CPR as an idea before class. The room teaches the difference between knowing the phrase “push hard and fast” and actually keeping strong compressions going when your arms start to tire.

The class ends with required course checks, including hands-on skills. Successful students receive their BLS CPR Card the same day after completion. That combination of practice, instructor correction, and a specific card name is why the class matters when the credential will be reviewed later.

Step-by-Step CPR Certification Process

  1. Choose your class. Book BLS if the requirement says BLS. Book BLS + First Aid if your employer or role needs the broader emergency-response training too.
  2. Register online for the class that matches your actual requirement.
  3. After registration, watch for the email with the link to purchase the required AHA eBook directly from AHA.com.
  4. Attend the hands-on class and complete the training in person.
  5. Pass the skills test and course requirements.
  6. Receive your 2-year AHA BLS card the same day after successful completion.

If you want the broader emergency-response add-on, the CPR and First Aid class is the right second option. It adds bleeding, burns, allergic reactions, and other first-aid topics. It does not replace the BLS card decision, and it should not be treated as if it does.

If you already have a current BLS card and just need to stay current, the BLS renewal class is the next step. It is cleaner than starting over with a generic search as if you were brand new.

How Long Does CPR Class Take?

Class length matters less than booking the right class. A short wrong course costs more time than a longer right one, especially if you have to turn around and book again.

At CPR Certification Orlando, the AHA BLS class runs about 4 to 4.5 hours. That time covers the hands-on work people are actually trying to get when they say they need CPR certification that will hold up later.

FAQ

If the paperwork names BLS, take AHA BLS. It covers adult, child, and infant CPR, AED use, and choking relief in one hands-on session, and the card name is specific enough for an employer, school, or licensing program to recognize. A generic online CPR certificate does not fill the same gap.

They are not the same thing. A hands-on BLS class involves practicing compressions, AED use, and the rescue sequence with an instructor present and a skills test at the end. An online-only certificate skips that physical practice, which is exactly the part many employers and clinical programs care about.

Start by identifying the right class for your specific requirement. BLS if the paperwork says BLS, BLS + First Aid if the role needs broader emergency-response coverage. Register online, then watch for the email with the link to purchase the required AHA eBook directly through AHA.com. Bring the eBook to the hands-on session, complete the training and skills test, and receive your two-year AHA BLS card the same day.

The required AHA eBook, purchased directly through AHA.com. The link to buy it is sent by email after registration is confirmed, so students do not need to track it down themselves. The eBook serves as the course material, and showing up without it will delay the class. Everything else, including practical skills, instructor guidance, and the skills test, happens in the room on the day of class.

Students who complete the AHA BLS class and pass the skills test receive their two-year BLS CPR Card the same day. The card is issued after successful completion and carries the AHA course name employers and schools are usually looking for when they say their requirement is BLS.

First Aid training covers things BLS does not. Bleeding control, burns, allergic reactions, and other medical situations beyond cardiac arrest. The CPR and First Aid class adds all of that to the BLS training in one session, making it the right choice when the job or role calls for broader emergency-response coverage. What it does not do is change the BLS card decision: if the requirement says BLS, BLS is still the credential that needs to be on the card.

If the card is still current or coming up on expiration, book BLS renewal instead of starting over with a generic first-time certification search. At CPR Certification Orlando, renewal is the same full-length hands-on BLS class path as regular BLS, not a shortened online shortcut.

Employers, schools, and licensing programs usually check the specific course name on the card, not just whether CPR appears somewhere in the title. A BLS card and a generic CPR course title are not interchangeable when the requirement is narrow.

If you want a class name that holds up later, start with the AHA BLS class. If you already have the right BLS card and need to stay current, use the CPR renewal class instead of starting the search over again.