
If you’ve just completed your CNA training program and you’re trying to figure out which testing company handles your state’s certification exam, you’ve discovered a frustrating gap in the system. Your training program probably said “register for the exam” without explaining that three different vendors operate in different states, each with different registration portals and procedures.
That confusion isn’t your fault. The vendor system is genuinely confusing because you can’t choose your vendor; your state assigns one through contracted agreements.
This guide removes that blocking question by providing complete vendor-specific registration walkthroughs, test day expectations, and scheduling realities that no other resource offers. We’re drawing on state nursing board documentation, official vendor handbooks, and real student experiences to give you exactly what you need to move forward with confidence.
Which CNA Testing Vendor Does Your State Use?
Your state determines which testing vendor you’ll use through multi-year testing contracts. You can’t choose between vendors in most states.
The blocking question that’s probably brought you here is simple: “I’m in [State], which vendor do I use?” Here’s your answer.
50-State CNA Exam Vendor Directory
Use the search tool below to instantly find your state’s testing vendor and direct registration portal. Simply type your state name to see which vendor you’ll use and get immediate access to the correct registration link.
Why You Can’t Choose Your Testing Vendor
States award multi-year testing contracts through competitive bidding. Your neighbor who certified three years ago might have used a different vendor than you will.
When states change vendors, it creates confusion for students whose training programs may reference outdated vendor names. The system isn’t designed with student clarity in mind.
Some states use multiple vendors for different exam components or regions. California uses both Headmaster and Credentia depending on your training program type. Washington contracts with Credentia but allows some tribal programs to use alternative vendors.
If your state has multiple vendors, your training program should specify which one handles your certification pathway.
Understanding the Three Major CNA Testing Vendors

Three companies dominate CNA certification testing across the United States. For students completing their CNA certification, understanding which testing vendor operates in your state determines everything about your registration process, scheduling timeline, and test day experience.
Quick Vendor Comparison
| Vendor | States Served | Key Distinguishing Feature | Results Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| NNAAP/Credentia | 29 states | Standardized NNAAP exam nationwide | Same-day online access |
| Prometric | 5 states | Peer-pairing skills testing | 7-10 business days |
| Headmaster | 14 states | Correction policy during skills exam | 24-48 hours online |
NNAAP (Credentia) – Most Common National Vendor
NNAAP stands for National Nurse Aide Assessment Program, the standardized examination developed by the National Council of State Boards of Nursing. Credentia administers NNAAP testing in 29 states, making it the most widely used vendor nationwide.
Exam Format Details:
| Component | Specifications | What This Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| Written Questions | 70 total (60 scored + 10 field-test) | Field-test questions don’t count toward your score |
| Written Time Limit | 2 hours | Approximately 1.7 minutes per question |
| Skills Tested | 5 randomly selected | From your state’s approved skill list |
| Skills Time Limit | 30 minutes | 6 minutes per skill on average |
| Testing Equipment | Mannequins | Consistent conditions, no peer interaction |
Results through Credentia typically appear within hours via their CNA365 online portal. That same-day turnaround reduces the anxious waiting period compared to other vendors.
Students testing with Credentia can log into their portal the evening of their exam to check results, though official registry reporting to your state board may take several additional days. Pennsylvania charges $135 for both exams combined through Credentia, with $50 written retakes and $85 skills retakes.
Fees vary by state contract, so check your state-specific Credentia portal for exact pricing.
Prometric – Florida, Connecticut, New York & Select States
Prometric operates CNA testing in 5 states: Florida, Connecticut, New York, Kentucky, and Texas. If you’re in one of these states, you’ll navigate Prometric’s registration system and encounter their unique peer-pairing skills testing format.
Prometric Exam Specifications:
- Written: 60-70 questions in approximately 90 minutes
- Skills: 5 skills, including mandatory Handwashing and Indirect Care
- Time Limit: 31-40 minutes for skills portion
- Unique Feature: Peer-pairing system where students test skills on each other rather than mannequins
“If you are a nurse aide waiting to take your exam with Prometric, this post is for you!!! I have waited an entire year to take my exam, as they were not ready to take over the testing in my state. When I arrived at the test site, my instructor showed up an hour late. After finally being able to take my exam, they failed to provide my information to the state so I could appear on the registry. They have also written down the wrong address, even though I have corrected it several times. I emailed the registry to see what was going on, and they flat out responded with ‘Prometric has been very unreliable.'” (518 upvotes – Reddit user)
Students consistently report administrative challenges with Prometric that extend beyond scheduling. While you can’t choose your testing vendor, understanding these challenges helps you prepare backup plans and document your communications carefully.
If scheduling feels impossible, that’s because it genuinely is difficult with some vendors. Florida charges $155 for combined testing through Prometric, with $35 written retakes and $120 skills retakes.
These higher fees compared to Credentia make thorough initial preparation financially important. At typical starting CNA wages of $13-15 per hour, the exam fee represents nearly a full day’s pay.
Headmaster (D&S Diversified) – 14-State Regional Vendor
Headmaster operates CNA testing in 14 states, primarily in the Midwest, the West, and parts of New England. Students searching for “Headmaster CNA Michigan” or similar state-specific terms will find that the Headmaster’s TestMaster Universe (TMU) portal manages their entire testing process.
For Michigan-specific requirements, see our Michigan CNA certification guide.
Headmaster’s Distinctive Exam Format:
| Exam Component | Headmaster Specs | How This Differs |
|---|---|---|
| Written Questions | 75 questions | 15 more questions than Credentia |
| Written Time | 60 minutes | 60 minutes LESS time than Credentia |
| Pace Required | 1.25 questions/minute | Faster-paced written exam |
| Skills Tested | 3-4 skills | Fewer skills than other vendors |
| Skills Time | 30 minutes | 7.5-10 minutes per skill |
| Testing Format | Live actors | Staff role-play patients |
The live actor format means you’ll perform skills on staff members who role-play patients. Many students find this more realistic than mannequin testing once they adjust to the interactive nature.
You’ll speak with your “patient,” respond to their reactions, and demonstrate communication skills alongside technical procedures.
Headmaster’s Unique Advantage:
“My state uses D&S Headmaster for testing. You can pass with an 80%. However if you miss any critical steps (they are highlighted in bold in your booklet) then you fail. However, D&S lets you correct before you say you are finished with the skill. So if somehow you forget to wash your hands (which is a critical step on a skill that requires hand washing) you can say ‘I want to make a correction. I forgot to wash my hands’. Then you go ahead and do so. You can correct for any step you believe you missed.”
This correction policy can significantly reduce test anxiety, since you’re not automatically failing for a single forgotten step. However, you must catch the error before verbally indicating you’re done with that skill.
How to Register for Your CNA Exam (Step-by-Step by Vendor)

Many students abandon registration due to portal complexity and fear of mistakes. These step-by-step walkthroughs remove that barrier with the specific portal navigation guidance competitors don’t provide.
If registration challenges indicate your training program didn’t prepare you properly, see our guide on choosing the right CNA program for future reference.
Before You Start: Required Documents Checklist
Gather these documents before opening any vendor portal to prevent incomplete registrations that delay scheduling.
Universal Requirements (All Vendors):
- Social Security number (some vendors require original card at test site)
- Government-issued photo ID (driver’s license, state ID, or passport)
- Training program completion certificate or certificate number
- Training program name and location
- Personal email address (Gmail or Yahoo recommended for Prometric)
- Payment method (credit/debit card)
State-Specific Requirements:
- Background check documentation (if required by your state)
- State nursing assistant registry number (if previously registered)
- Training program approval number (some states)
NNAAP/Credentia Registration Walkthrough
Step 1: Access Your State’s Credentia Portal
Navigate to credentia.com/test-takers/[your-state-abbreviation]. Each state has a dedicated portal, even though they all use the same CNA365 platform.
IMPORTANT: Using the wrong state portal will cause errors.
Step 2: Create Your CNA365 Account
Click “Create Account” in the upper right corner. You’ll need:
- Email address (becomes your username)
- Strong password (minimum 8 characters)
- Security questions (remember your answers – password recovery requires them)
Verify your email immediately. Some states require email confirmation before you can continue registration.
Step 3: Complete Your Candidate Profile
Enter your personal information exactly as it appears on your government ID. Mismatches between your registration and ID cause test day problems.
Include:
- Legal first and last name (middle name optional)
- Current mailing address
- Phone number
- Date of birth
- Social Security number
Step 4: Enter Training Program Information
Select your training program from the dropdown menu. If your program doesn’t appear, contact them for their CNA365 program code.
You’ll need:
- Program name and location
- Completion date
- Certificate number (if applicable)
Your training program must submit completion verification to Credentia before you can schedule exams. Some programs do this automatically; others require you to request it.
Step 5: Select Which Exam(s) to Take
Credentia allows you to schedule written and skills exams separately or together:
| Option | When to Choose | Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Both exams together | First-time test-taker | Most cost-effective, fewer test center visits |
| Written exam only | Failed written, passed skills | Target the weak area |
| Skills exam only | Passed written, failed skills | Focus on practical demonstration |
Most first-time test-takers should schedule both tests together to complete certification faster.
Step 6: Choose Test Center and Date
The portal displays available dates at test centers near your ZIP code. Availability varies significantly by location:
- Rural areas: May show only one test center with monthly testing dates
- Urban areas: Multiple sites with weekly appointments
If you don’t see appointments within your desired timeframe, check back frequently. Cancellations open new slots throughout the day. Some students check the portal twice daily for weeks before finding suitable dates.
Step 7: Pay Exam Fees
Fees vary by state. Pennsylvania charges $135 for both exams, with separate retake fees ($50 written, $85 skills).
Payment confirms your registration. Save your confirmation number.
Step 8: Receive Confirmation
Credentia sends on-screen confirmation immediately and an email confirmation within 24 hours. If you don’t receive email confirmation, check your spam folders and verify the email address in your profile.
You can log back into CNA365 anytime to view your scheduled appointments.
Prometric Registration Process
Prometric’s registration system differs significantly from Credentia’s portal-based approach. The process varies by state, with some states requiring training program approval before individual registration.
Step 1: Verify Eligibility
Contact your state nursing board or training program to confirm they’ve submitted your completion information to Prometric.
Unlike Credentia’s self-service portal, many Prometric states require program directors to initiate registration on your behalf.
Step 2: Receive Eligibility Notice
Once your state approves you for testing, Prometric sends an Authorization to Test (ATT) letter via email. This contains:
- Your eligibility number
- Testing window (typically 90 days from issue date)
Step 3: Access Prometric Portal
Visit prometric.com/test-takers/search/cna and create your account using:
- Email address (Gmail or Yahoo addresses work most reliably)
- Eligibility/ATT number from your approval letter
- Personal information matching your ID exactly
Students report that Prometric’s registration system has technical quirks. If you encounter errors, try a different browser or clear your cache before calling support.
Step 4: Search for Test Appointments
Enter your ZIP code to find nearby test centers. Here’s where Prometric’s scheduling challenges become apparent:
“Prometric is just terrible to deal with. They don’t schedule 30 days out, it’s more like two weeks, as in- I send apps in – In Sept and i’ll find out 2 weeks from the actual test date in November they can staff a testing event.” (152 upvotes – Reddit user)
While Prometric states appointments are available 30 days in advance, students consistently report appointments appearing only 2-3 weeks out. This isn’t a quirk of your state or a sign you’re doing something wrong.
It’s a systemic vendor capacity issue.
Step 5: Select and Confirm Appointment
When you find an available date, select it immediately. Slots fill within hours of posting.
You’ll choose morning or afternoon sessions, though exact start times vary by test center.
Step 6: Pay Exam Fees
Florida charges $155 combined through Prometric, with $35 for written retakes and $120 for skills retakes. Fees are non-refundable, but rescheduling is possible with 5+ days’ notice.
Step 7: Print Confirmation Letter
Prometric requires you to bring printed confirmation to your exam. Electronic versions on phones are not accepted at most test centers.
PREPARATION TIP: Print multiple copies in case one is lost or damaged.
Headmaster/D&S Registration Guide
Headmaster uses the TestMaster Universe (TMU) platform for all registration, scheduling, and results access.
Step 1: Access TMU Platform
Navigate to hdmaster.com and select “Testing” then your state from the dropdown menu. Each state has dedicated TMU access even though the platform looks similar.
Step 2: Create TMU Account
Click “Register for Testing” and create your account with:
- Email address
- Password
- Personal information matching your government ID
- Social Security number
Step 3: Enter Training Program Details
Your training program must be approved in the TMU system. Select it from the dropdown menu or enter the program approval number your school provided.
If your program doesn’t appear, contact Headmaster’s candidate support at 888-534-3627.
Step 4: Select Exam Components
Choose written-only, skills, or both exams. Michigan students benefit from the Headmaster’s correction policy during skills testing, reducing the pressure of automatic failure for single mistakes.
Step 5: Schedule Testing Appointment
TMU displays available dates approximately 30 days in advance. Test centers vary by state:
- California: Multiple locations throughout the state
- Wyoming: One or two sites
- Major cities: Weekly testing dates
- Smaller markets: Monthly testing dates
Step 6: Pay Fees
Headmaster fees vary significantly by state contract. Massachusetts charges different rates than Michigan.
Check your state-specific TMU portal for current pricing.
Step 7: Confirmation
Headmaster provides on-screen confirmation only. No mail confirmations are sent.
Print your confirmation page or save the PDF to your device. You’ll need to present this at the test center.
Scheduling Your Exam – What to Expect by Vendor
Federal regulations allow you to work as a CNA for 120 days while awaiting exam results. If vendor scheduling delays push you past this window, you may need to stop working until certification is completed.
Understanding realistic scheduling timelines helps you plan appropriately.
NNAAP/Credential Scheduling Timeline
Credentia typically opens scheduling 4-6 weeks in advance, though this varies by state and test center capacity.
What to Expect:
- Urban areas: Multiple test centers with weekly availability
- Rural areas: Monthly testing dates
Students report multi-month wait times when test center capacity is limited:
“I’m sick and tired of this exam. For the record, I have been a practicing tech for over a year. I live in South Carolina. It takes 45 minutes without traffic to get to the closest test center, and other people I meet there drove 3+ hours. I took my first exam yesterday, and it was waseye-opening to see people’s reactions to failure. One girl is not able to pay to take another exam and walked away completely defeated as a single mom.” (208 upvotes – Reddit user)
Test center locations create real hardships for students in rural areas or states with limited testing sites. Long drives and retake costs are systemic access barriers requiring advocacy, not personal failures.
Plan for travel time and retake costs as you budget for certification.
Rescheduling Policy:
| Timing | How to Reschedule | Fee Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 9-10+ business days’ notice | Online through CNA365 | No penalty |
| Within 10 days | Call Credentia directly | Possible fee |
| Less than 24 hours | Call Credentia directly | Forfeit fees |
Prometric Availability Challenges
The scheduling window that Prometric advertises doesn’t match what students actually experience. Check the portal daily for new appointments rather than waiting for your preferred date to appear.
Students in high-volume states often check portals twice daily for weeks before finding appointments that work with their schedules.
Rescheduling Requirements:
- 5+ days notice: Can reschedule
- Within 5 days: Forfeit fees
Students frustrated with scheduling delays may consider online CNA training options for flexible learning paths that accommodate unpredictable testing availability.
Headmaster Booking Windows
Headmaster scheduling opens approximately 30 days in advance through the TMU portal.
Typical Availability:
- Rural areas: One testing day per month
- Cities: Weekly sessions
- Lead time: At least one month is common in Michigan and similar Headmaster states
Rescheduling Policy: Requires 1 business day notice – Headmaster’s policy is more flexible than other vendors.
Check your state-specific TMU portal immediately after completing training to understand realistic availability.
Test Day Experience – What Happens at Each Vendor

While this guide covers vendor-specific logistics and registration, actual exam content preparation requires focused study. For comprehensive skills test preparation, including step-by-step demonstrations of all 25 skills, see our Complete CNA Skills Test Guide.
Arrival Time and Check-In Process
All vendors require early arrival for check-in, but exact timelines differ:
| Vendor | Required Early Arrival | What to Bring |
|---|---|---|
| Credentia | 30 minutes | Two forms of ID (one photo), both signed |
| Prometric | 30 minutes | Printed confirmation letter + two IDs |
| Headmaster | 20-30 minutes | Printed confirmation + two IDs |
Arrive at the early end of that window to avoid test day stress.
Check-in includes:
- ID verification (two forms – one must be photo-bearing, both signed)
- Signature comparison
- Personal belongings secured (phones, bags, watches not allowed in testing area)
- Test center rules explanation
“On testing day, you have to arrive at your testing facility 30 minutes before your start time. And plan on being there ALL DAY. They started testing us at 0930. I didn’t leave until 1530, I was literally the last person to take their skills test!” (240 upvotes – Reddit user)
Plan for an all-day commitment regardless of your scheduled start time. Even if your exam is scheduled for 9 AM, you may not leave until mid-afternoon.
Bring snacks and arrange childcare for the entire day. Don’t schedule work shifts immediately after testing.
Written Exam Format Differences
All three vendors test similar knowledge content but use different question counts and time limits:
| Vendor | Questions | Time Limit | Pace Needed | Special Options |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Credentia/NNAAP | 70 (60 scored + 10 unscored) | 2 hours | 1.7 min/question | Oral exam available in most states |
| Prometric | 60-70 | 90 minutes | 1.3-1.5 min/question | Computer-based only |
| Headmaster | 75 | 60 minutes | 0.8 min/question | Fastest pace required |
The faster pace of the Headmaster’s 75 questions in 60 minutes means you have less time per question than other vendors. Practice with timed exams to build pacing skills.
Skills Test Setup by Vendor (Peer Pairing vs Mannequins)
All vendors test the same core clinical skills, though the setup differs significantly. Universal skills like hand hygiene procedures are tested by every vendor and serve as the foundation for infection control across all practical tasks.
| Vendor | Skills Count | Time Limit | Testing Format | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Credentia/NNAAP | 5 randomly selected | 30 minutes | Mannequins | Standardized conditions |
| Prometric | 5 (including mandatory Handwashing) | 31-40 minutes | Peer-pairing | Test on another student |
| Headmaster | 3-4 | 30 minutes | Live actors | Staff role-play patients |
Credentia/NNAAP: You’ll perform each skill start to finish while an evaluator observes and checks off steps on a standardized evaluation form.
Prometric: Adopted a peer-pairing system during COVID that allows them to test more candidates with fewer evaluators. You’ll perform skills on another student while being observed, then trade roles.
Many test-takers find peer-pairing less stressful than mannequin testing once they understand the format. Your testing partner is equally nervous, and you’re both working toward the same goal. The human interaction feels more natural than mannequin procedures for some students.
Headmaster: Staff members role-play patients, responding to your communication and reacting realistically. This interactive format evaluates both technical skills and patient interaction simultaneously.
Total Time Commitment – Plan for All Day
Students consistently report that the test day takes much longer than expected. The combination of check-in procedures, written exam, wait time between sections, and skills testing creates an all-day experience.
Typical Test Day Timeline:
| Time | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 8:30 AM | Arrival and check-in | 30 minutes |
| 9:00 AM | Written exam begins | 60-120 minutes |
| 11:00 AM | Break/wait time | 30-60 minutes |
| 12:00 PM | Skills testing begins | 30-40 minutes per student |
| 1:00-3:00 PM | Wait for your skills slot | Varies |
| 3:30 PM | Final student completes testing | – |
Some test centers schedule skills exams in order of written completion, while others use pre-assigned slots that may create hours of waiting.
Expect to be at the test center for 5-7 hours total. Pack snacks since many test centers have limited food options nearby. Arrange transportation that accommodates late afternoon pickup, even if you’re scheduled for morning testing.
Vendor-Specific Study Resources
Beyond official vendor handbooks, students who pass despite inadequate training programs often credit vendor-specific YouTube resources:
“since you’re in florida, i recommend following 4yourcna on youtube for the 22 skills you need to know for prometric. i had an awful instructor that legit taught us like 5 skills total, so i spent my free time memorizing the rest using 4yourcna videos and prometric’s online skills checklist, and passed my first try.” (180 upvotes – Reddit user)
While your training program should prepare you thoroughly, vendor-specific resources provide valuable supplementary preparation tailored to your exact testing format.
Recommended Study Materials by Vendor
| Vendor | Official Resources | Community-Recommended Resources |
|---|---|---|
| NNAAP/Credentia | • Credentia Candidate Handbook (state-specific)• CNA365 portal practice questions • State nursing board skill checklists | State-specific YouTube channels |
| Prometric | • Prometric CNA Skills Checklist (state-specific) • State board examination bulletins | • 4YourCNA YouTube channel (Florida/Prometric skills) • Prometric practice exams |
| Headmaster | • Headmaster Candidate Handbooks (state-specific)• TestMaster Universe practice exams • State nursing board competency guidelines | State-specific preparation groups |
For additional study materials beyond vendor-specific resources, explore our comprehensive CNA Resources Hub.
Common Problems and How to Fix Them
“I Can’t Find Available Test Dates”
This is the most common vendor complaint. If you don’t see appointments within your desired timeframe, check back frequently.
Action Steps:
- Set a daily reminder to check your vendor portal at the same time each morning and evening.
- Call vendor support to ask when new testing dates are typically posted
- Ask if some states add dates on specific days of the month
- Consider test centers in neighboring counties if your state allows
Reality Check: For Prometric, the 2-week reality instead of the 30-day policy makes planning difficult. This is a known system issue, not your fault.
“My Registration Portal Isn’t Working”
Vendor portals occasionally have technical issues. Try these steps in order:
Troubleshooting Checklist:
- Clear browser cache and cookies
- Try a different browser (Chrome works most reliably)
- Disable browser extensions/ad blockers
- Try a different device (computer vs phone)
- Check the vendor’s website for system maintenance announcements
If problems persist after trying these solutions, contact us for assistance in navigating your testing vendor’s system. Document your attempts with screenshots before calling vendor support.
“I Need to Reschedule or Cancel”
Know your vendor’s rescheduling deadlines to avoid losing your exam fees:
| Vendor | Minimum Notice Required | How to Reschedule | Fee Forfeiture |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credentia | 9-10 business days | Online through CNA365 | Less than 24 hours |
| Prometric | 5 days | Through Prometric portal or phone | Within 5 days |
| Headmaster | 1 business day | Through TMU portal | Day of exam |
Calendar your exam date and set reminders for the rescheduling deadline in case emergencies arise.
“My Results Haven’t Been Sent to the State”
Vendors submit results to state registries on different timelines:
| Vendor | Portal Results | State Registry Submission |
|---|---|---|
| Credentia | Within hours in CNA365 | 5-7 business days |
| Prometric | 7-10 business days | 7-10 business days |
| Headmaster | 24-48 hours in TMU | 7-10 business days |
If more than 15 business days have passed, contact your state nursing board registry office directly. They can verify whether the vendor submission was received and identify processing delays on their end versus vendor delays.
Frequently Asked Questions
No vendor is objectively easier or harder. Exam content is similar because all vendors test NNAAP competencies or equivalent state standards. Format differences matter more than difficulty. Headmaster’s correction policy reduces single-mistake failures, Prometric’s peer-pairing feels more natural to some students, and Credentia’s mannequin testing provides consistent conditions. Your success depends more on preparation quality than vendor assignment.
Generally no. You must test in the state where you completed your training program, and states don’t accept out-of-state exam results during initial certification. After you’re certified and listed on a state registry, you can apply for endorsement/reciprocity to work in other states without retesting.
Your training program determines which vendor you’ll use. California uses both Headmaster and Credentia depending on program type, while Washington contracts primarily with Credentia but allows some tribal programs to use alternatives. Ask your program director which vendor handles your certification pathway.
Your CNA training program should specify the testing vendor during orientation or final coursework. If they haven’t told you, ask your program director or clinical coordinator directly. Don’t wait until after graduation to find out.
Credentia offers remote proctoring for the written exam portion using a dual-device setup (computer for exam, phone for monitoring). However, the skills exam must be completed in person at approved test centers for all vendors. No vendor offers fully remote CNA certification testing.