EMT Exam Prep / North Carolina
EMT — NC
How to Get Your EMT Certification in North Carolina
To become a certified EMT in North Carolina, you must pass the NREMT cognitive and psychomotor exams, then apply for state certification through North Carolina Office of EMS (NC OEMS). Here's everything you need to know.
Certification Details
- Certifying Body
- North Carolina Office of EMS (NC OEMS)
- Exam Provider
- NREMT
- Passing Score
- 70% (NREMT adaptive)
- Exam Fee
- $70
- Recertification Cycle
- Every 4 years
- CE Hours Required
- 80 hours
Note: Always verify current requirements with North Carolina Office of EMS (NC OEMS).
North Carolina EMT Notes
North Carolina credentials EMTs through NC OEMS on a 4-year cycle with a fixed expiration date. EMTs need roughly 80 CE hours over the cycle, or may renew by maintaining an active NREMT certification. CE must be CAPCE-accredited.
About the NREMT Exam
The NREMT EMT cognitive exam is a computer-adaptive test (CAT) with 70–120 questions. The exam adapts based on your performance — you must demonstrate entry-level competency across all content areas including airway management, cardiology, trauma, medical emergencies, and EMS operations. The exam is administered at Pearson VUE test centers nationwide and costs $70 per attempt.
How to Get Your EMT Certification in North Carolina
- 1
Complete an approved EMT training program
Most states require 120–150 hours of EMT-Basic training from a state-approved program (community college, fire department, or private school).
- 2
Pass the NREMT cognitive exam
The NREMT EMT exam is computer-adaptive with 70–120 questions. You need to demonstrate competency at the entry-level EMT standard. The exam is administered at Pearson VUE test centers.
- 3
Pass the NREMT psychomotor exam
In addition to the written exam, you must pass a hands-on skills exam covering airway, patient assessment, and trauma. Contact your state EMS office for testing locations.
- 4
Apply for state certification
After passing both NREMT exams, apply for state certification through North Carolina Office of EMS (NC OEMS). Processing times vary. You must be state-certified to work on an ambulance.
- 5
Recertify every 4 years
Maintain your certification with 80 hours of continuing education every 4 years. This includes mandatory topics in airway management, patient assessment, and trauma.
Start on the web
Practice for the North Carolina EMT certification path
Use this state guide to understand certification steps, then drill NREMT-style EMT questions in your browser. Web access and native app purchases are separate.