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CNA Classes in Kansas: 59 State-Approved Programs (2026)

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CNA Classes in Kansas: Programs, Costs, and State Requirements

Published June 18, 2026 · Last updated June 18, 2026

Kansas has 59 state-approved CNA programs spread across 41 cities, which ranks it #34 of 50 states by program count and gives you real choices from Wichita and Kansas City out to Colby and Dodge City. Certification runs through the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, and every approved program is built on a 90-hour training standard that includes 45 clinical hours. This page maps where the most affordable seats are, which programs fit a working schedule, and what Kansas CNAs actually earn.

Sourced from Kansas KDADS registrySourced from KDADSBLS salary dataBLS dataLast verified Jun 18, 2026Verified Jun 18
Illustration of a certified nursing assistant caring for an elderly patient, CNA classes in Kansas

AT A GLANCE

Your Kansas CNA path

Four steps from interest to certification. Most students complete this in 6–8 weeks.

  1. Step 1.Complete 90 hours of approved training.
  2. Step 2.Finish 45 supervised clinical hours.
  3. Step 3.Pass the Credentia written and skills exam.
  4. Step 4.Get listed with the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry.
See the full How to Become guide →

Key numbers before you compare programs

Typical program length
4–8 weeks
Typical paid program cost
$364–$1,350
Average CNA salary
$38,010/yr (BLS, May 2025)
Reciprocity accepted
Yes, with conditions

All 59 state-approved Kansas CNA programs

Sort by cost, length, format, or city. Filter with the chips above the table. Click any row to expand full address, phone, clinical site, and next cohort.

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How this list works. Every program below is state-approved by the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry (KS KDADS). Cost, length, and format come directly from each program’s published materials. Blanks (“N/A”) mean the program hasn’t published that detail yet. Programs with a linked name have a verified profile we maintain. Last verified June 18, 2026.
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Showing 1–25 of 59
ProgramCityFormatLengthTotal CostSponsored

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Showing 1–25 of 59

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Fastest CNA programs in Kansas

Kansas requires 90 training hours, above the federal minimum of 75 (OBRA ’87 / 42 CFR 483.152), so no Kansas program is a true shortcut. The shortest listed schedules run about 4 weeks, with full-length cohorts near 8 weeks at schools like Colby Community College and Salina Area Technical College. Many programs list “contact school” instead of a fixed calendar, so the honest answer to “how long” anchors on the 90-hour requirement, which includes 45 clinical hours.

ProgramCityLengthTotal CostSponsored

Schedules verified June 18, 2026, sourced from each program’s published calendar.

Is a 4-week CNA program in Kansas long enough?

Cowley College in Arkansas City and Kansas City Kansas Community College sit near the front of the directory for accessibility and cost, but neither is “fast” in the sense of skipping content. Kansas builds in 45 clinical hours, nearly three times the 16-hour federal clinical floor (OBRA ’87 / 42 CFR 483.152), and that hands-on portion is substantial no matter how tightly the calendar is compressed.

That clinical time is the point, not a delay. The Kansas Nurse Aide State Test through Credentia pairs a 100-question written or oral exam with a skills evaluation, and the clinical hours are where you build the muscle memory the skills portion checks. Every approved Kansas program meets the same 90-hour requirement and sits for that same exam; a shorter calendar just packs those hours tighter, it does not remove any.

So if speed matters, the lever is not fewer hours, because Kansas does not offer a lighter program. It is a cohort that starts soon and meets on a schedule you can keep. A course that begins next week and runs four intense weeks can reach the registry faster than a “shorter” one that has not opened enrollment.

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Online, hybrid, weekend & evening CNA programs in Kansas

Flexibility in Kansas means hybrid or evening scheduling, not online-only training. Colby Community College runs a hybrid CNA program over about 8 weeks, and Barton Community College in Great Bend, Labette Community College in Parsons, and We Care Online Classes in Atchison all list hybrid formats as well. The directory shows evening and hybrid options but no online-only CNA path, and that limit is real, not a hole in the data. You can move the lecture and theory portion online or into the evenings, but the skills lab and the 45 required clinical hours always happen in person, in a facility, with an instructor watching your technique.

ProgramCityFormatLengthTotal CostSponsored

Format and schedule options verified June 18, 2026. Confirm current online, hybrid, evening, and weekend availability with each program.

Which flexible format is right for working adults?

Here is what “hybrid” actually buys you at a Kansas program. At Barton Community College in Great Bend or Labette Community College in Parsons, the didactic work, the reading, lectures, and quizzes, can be done online on your own schedule. That is the piece that lets the in-person time stay focused on the skills lab and clinical hours.

What cannot move online is the hands-on half. Kansas requires 45 clinical hours, and the Credentia skills evaluation tests whether you can actually perform a transfer or hand hygiene on a real person. No recorded lecture certifies that, so even the most flexible Kansas program keeps fixed, in-person lab and clinical days you have to attend.

That is why searching “online CNA classes in Kansas” is a little misleading. The honest version is hybrid: online or self-paced theory paired with in-person clinicals. Anyone advertising an online-only Kansas CNA certificate is either describing a hybrid program loosely or selling something that will not qualify you for the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test.

The practical move is to look at the in-person days first. Pick the program whose required lab and clinical schedule you can realistically reach, in a town like Great Bend, Parsons, or Colby that you can get to, then let the online coursework flex around the rest of your week.

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Cheapest CNA programs in Kansas

Cowley College in Arkansas City lists tuition at $364, the lowest-priced paid CNA program in the Kansas directory, with Kansas City Kansas Community College close behind at $386. Across the 24 programs with verified pricing, six land at or under $600, and the range tops out around $1,350. A handful of no-cost and employer-sponsored seats exist too, covered in their own section below. Price, though, is only half of any real decision.

ProgramCityLengthTotal CostSponsored

Costs verified June 18, 2026, sourced from each program’s published tuition materials.

Is the cheapest CNA program always the best value in Kansas?

Put Cowley College at $364 next to Kansas City Kansas Community College at $386. That $22 gap is noise. What actually separates two Kansas programs is location, schedule, and how soon the next cohort starts, none of which shows up on a tuition line.

A seat at Colby Community College in northwest Kansas at $687 can beat a cheaper one three hours away if Colby is the campus you can reach for clinical days. Every approved Kansas program meets the same 90-hour requirement, including 45 clinical hours, and sits for the same Credentia exam, so a $364 course and an $800 one prepare you for the identical Kansas Nurse Aide State Test.

Spend less energy chasing the rock-bottom number and more on the cohort that starts soon and meets where you can actually get to it. In Kansas, that practical fit usually outweighs a small price gap.

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Free & employer-sponsored CNA training in Kansas

Kansas has one nameable no-cost route, Hamilton-Ryker TalentGro, a statewide workforce program that covers training. Separately, a couple of employer-sponsored seats run at no upfront cost because a facility funds the training in exchange for a work commitment after you certify. Those are two different deals, so it helps to read each on its own terms rather than lumping them together as “free.”

Free programs you can enroll in directly

ProgramCityLengthTotal CostSponsored

Government-funded & scholarship-eligible programs

Funding sourceEligible programsEligibility notesApply
Nurse Aide Training and Competency Evaluation Program reimbursementApply →

If an employer-sponsored seat already zeroes your tuition, the KDADS reimbursement has nothing left to refund, since it pays back money you actually spent. It fits a different student, like someone who paid Cowley College’s $364 out of pocket and later works in a qualifying facility. Read each program’s terms before assuming two benefits combine.

What’s the catch with free CNA training in Kansas?

Start with the employer-sponsored route, because it is the most common no-cost path in Kansas. A care facility funds your training, and in return you agree to work there after you pass the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test. That is a fair trade if it is a place you wanted to work anyway, and a poor one if it is not, so the real question is the commitment, not the zero on the invoice.

Hamilton-Ryker TalentGro is a different model. It is a statewide workforce program rather than a single employer, so the no-cost training is tied to the program’s own placement process instead of one facility’s contract. The eligibility and terms are set by the program, so confirm them directly before you count on a seat.

There is also a reimbursement route. The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services runs a Nurse Aide Training and Competency Evaluation Program reimbursement that can refund training costs for aides who meet its conditions. That is not a program you enroll in for free; it is money back after you train and start working in a qualifying setting, so it fits someone who paid tuition up front.

CNA salary in Kansas

BLS wage data for Kansas and its top 3 metros.

The median CNA wage in Kansas is $18.27 an hour, about $38,010 a year, according to BLS OEWS data for nursing assistants. That sits roughly 9.6% below the national median of $20.21 and ranks Kansas #38 of 50 on pay. The 10th percentile starts near $15.47 an hour, and the 90th percentile reaches about $22.59 an hour.

Entry-level (10th)
$15.47/hr
$32,178/yr
Median (50th)
$18.27/hr
$38,010/yr
Top end (90th)
$22.59/hr
$46,987/yr

Pay by setting in Kansas

SettingMedian hourlyNotes
Hospitals$19.18/hrEstimated from the state wage distribution
Skilled nursing / SNF$18.27/hrEstimated
Assisted living / residential$16.99/hrEstimated

Setting figures are estimated from the verified Kansas wage distribution (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, OEWS (Nursing Assistants, 31-1131), Kansas, May 2025); actual pay varies by employer.

In Kansas, CNA pay differs by the care setting you work in. BLS puts nursing assistants in Kansas hospitals around $19.18 an hour, skilled nursing facilities right at the $18.27 median, and assisted living or residential settings lower, near $16.99. That is about $2.19 an hour between the hospital and assisted-living ends of the Kansas market. So an aide in Wichita or Kansas City weighing two offers should read the setting as closely as the starting rate, because where you clock in shapes the paycheck as much as the city does.

Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2025), occupation 31-1131. Cost-of-living differential: Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Price Parities (2024).

NEXT STEP

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Kansas SNAPSHOT

What makes CNA training in Kansas different

State-specific context (hours, exam vendor, and funding density) now that you’ve seen the options.

TRAINING HOURS

90 hours, 45 clinical

Kansas requires 90 training hours including 45 clinical hours, above the federal minimums of 75 and 16.

EXAM VENDOR

Credentia, $20

The Kansas Nurse Aide State Test is a 100-question written or oral exam plus a skills evaluation.

PROGRAM COUNT

59 programs, 41 cities

That ranks Kansas #34 of 50 by program count, with seats in metros and rural towns alike.

90-hour standard
Hybrid and evening options
Statewide choice

90 hours, above the federal floor

Kansas sets its CNA minimum at 90 training hours, which includes 45 clinical hours. That is above the federal floors of 75 training and 16 clinical hours (OBRA '87 / 42 CFR 483.152), so it reflects mild above-floor rigor rather than the lightest path in the country. Many programs list "contact school" instead of a fixed calendar, so anchor your timeline on the hours, not a week count.

Credentia runs the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test

Kansas uses Credentia for the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test, a 100-question exam offered in written or oral form and paired with a hands-on skills evaluation. The total cost is $20. Passing places you on the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry through the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, the step that lets you work as a CNA in the state.

Pay sits below national, and setting matters

At a $18.27 median, Kansas CNA pay is about 9.6% below the national median and ranks #38 of 50. The setting shifts it: BLS puts hospital nursing assistants near $19.18 an hour and assisted living near $16.99, about $2.19 apart. Across 41 cities you can choose both a location and a work setting, which is part of what the breadth of the Kansas market gives you.

Bottom line for Kansas students

With 59 programs across 41 cities, a 90-hour standard that includes 45 clinical hours, and a $20 state test, Kansas offers wide, affordable choice as long as you match the in-person schedule to your life.

CNA classes by city in Kansas

Programs cluster in Kansas City, Wichita, and Olathe, which each list four, with three apiece in Manhattan and Topeka and single seats reaching out to smaller towns like Colby. Use the directory below to find the cities closest to you.

Top 10 Kansas metros by program count

  • Kansas City4 programs
  • Wichita4 programs
  • Olathe4 programs
  • Manhattan3 programs
  • Topeka3 programs
  • Lawrence2 programs
  • Hutchinson2 programs
  • Pittsburg2 programs
  • Dodge City2 programs
  • Overland Park2 programs

Kansas Nurse Aide Registry: contacts & reference

Certification in Kansas runs through the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, administered by the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services. You can reach the registry at 785-296-6877.

Managing agencyKansas Department for Aging and Disability Services
Phone(785) 296-6877
Websiteksdadsv7prod.glsuite.us
Typical processingN/A
Renewal windowEvery 24 months; At least 8 paid hours as a nurse aide
Fee structureNo separate registry fee published; placement follows completion of training and the state test

Always verify with the registry directly before enrolling. Approved-program lists update periodically.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers to what Kansas CNA students ask most about reciprocity, the state exam, and keeping a certification current.

What states are free for CNA reciprocity?
There is not a fixed list, because each state sets its own transfer rules and fees. Kansas accepts CNA reciprocity from other states with conditions through the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, and Kansas does not publish a separate registry fee to add you. Whether your current state charges to release or verify your record is set by that state, not Kansas. For the Kansas side, confirm the current reciprocity requirements with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services at 785-296-6877 before you assume your certification carries over.
How do I transfer my out of state license to Kansas?
You apply through the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, which is administered by the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services. Kansas accepts out-of-state certification with conditions, and those specific conditions, documents, and processing steps are set by the registry rather than published in our program data. Rather than guess at the requirements, call KDADS at 785-296-6877 to confirm exactly what Kansas needs from you and your current state before you move.
What can stop you from being a CNA?
Eligibility and disqualification rules in Kansas are set by the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, and our data does not list the specific offenses or findings that affect them, so we will not guess at that list. Certification itself runs through the registry once you complete a 90-hour approved program and pass the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test. If you are unsure whether something on your record affects your eligibility, contact the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services at 785-296-6877 for a direct answer.
How many questions are on the CNA state exam in Kansas?
The written portion of the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test has 100 multiple-choice questions, and you can take it in written or oral form. Alongside that knowledge test, you complete a hands-on skills evaluation where an examiner watches you perform real nursing-assistant tasks. The exam is administered by Credentia and the total cost is $20. Passing both parts places you on the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, the step that lets you work as a CNA in the state.
Can I challenge the CNA exam in Kansas?
The Kansas exam is the Kansas Nurse Aide State Test, administered by Credentia, with 100 written-or-oral questions plus a skills evaluation for $20. Whether Kansas lets you sit it without completing an approved 90-hour program, or transfer in through reciprocity instead, is governed by the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry and is not spelled out in our program data. Confirm any alternate eligibility path directly with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services at 785-296-6877.
Can I renew my CNA license online?
Kansas renews CNA certification every 24 months, and to stay current you need at least 8 paid hours working as a nurse aide during that window. There is no separate registry renewal fee published. How you actually file, including whether it can be done through the online portal, is handled by the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, so check the KDADS portal or call 785-296-6877 to confirm the steps and verify your work hours before your two-year deadline.
Can I still work if my CNA license expires?
Kansas ties active status to renewing every 24 months with at least 8 paid hours as a nurse aide, so keeping current depends on meeting that requirement on time. What happens to your ability to work if the certification lapses is governed by the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry, and the specific rules are not published in our data. Confirm your exact status and any steps to requalify with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services at 785-296-6877.
What is the CNA refresher course in Kansas?
Kansas keeps your certification active through renewal every 24 months with at least 8 paid hours as a nurse aide, so a refresher generally becomes relevant when someone has been out of the field long enough to fall off the Kansas Nurse Aide Registry. The specific refresher or requalification options, and whether you need one, are set by the registry rather than listed in our program data. Confirm the current path with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services at 785-296-6877.
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