BLS Certification Lookup
BLS certification lookup made simple. Verify any AHA, Red Cross, or HSI BLS provider card by name or ID. Check status, expiration, and renewal in minutes.

BLS Certification Lookup: The Complete Verification Guide
A BLS certification lookup is the fastest way to confirm that a Basic Life Support card is genuine, current, and tied to the right provider. Whether you're an HR coordinator vetting a new ER nurse, a clinical educator auditing a unit, or a candidate making sure your own card landed in the right database, the verification process is built to be quick — if you know where to look.
Most hospitals will not let a clinician onto the floor without a valid BLS card on file. State licensure boards, surgery centers, dental offices, lifeguard programs, and EMS agencies all run the same check. The trouble is that BLS isn't issued by one organization. The American Heart Association (AHA), American Red Cross, Health & Safety Institute (HSI/ASHI/MEDIC FIRST AID), American Safety and Health Institute, and the National Safety Council each maintain separate lookup portals, and each has its own search fields, ID formats, and quirks.
This guide walks you through every major BLS certification lookup tool used in the United States in 2026, what each one needs from you, how to read the results, and what to do when the card you're checking doesn't show up. You'll also see the red flags that signal a fake BLS card, the difference between hands-on and online-only certifications, and how to keep your own record clean so future verifications never fail.
BLS Lookup at a Glance
Why a BLS Certification Lookup Matters
Falsified BLS cards are surprisingly common. A 2024 survey of hospital credentialing managers found that nearly one in twenty submitted provider cards failed initial verification — either because the card was expired, the eCard code was invalid, or the issuing training center had been shut down. The lookup process is your first line of defense.
Verification protects three groups at once. Patients get a clinician who actually knows current AHA guidelines for chest compressions, AED use, and infant CPR. Employers shield themselves from negligent-credentialing lawsuits. And legitimate providers benefit because a strong verification system keeps the credential meaningful in the job market. If anyone could print a card, the certification wouldn't be worth the laminated plastic.
For providers themselves, running a lookup on your own record after class is just good hygiene. Training center data-entry errors do happen — a misspelled name, a transposed digit in your eCard code, the wrong expiration year. Catching the mistake the week of your class is easy. Catching it eighteen months later, the morning of your hospital orientation, is not.

What You Need Before Running a Lookup
Have these four pieces of information ready and your verification will take under a minute: the provider's full legal name exactly as it appeared on the roster, the eCard code or certificate ID (usually 10–16 characters, often alphanumeric), the issue date or completion date from the front of the card, and the training center name or instructor if the issuing organization requires it. If you're missing the eCard code, contact the training site directly before assuming the card is fake. Most credentialing teams keep a four-column intake spreadsheet so this information is captured the moment a new hire is onboarded — that single habit cuts verification time by more than half.
The Four Major BLS Certification Lookup Portals
Each issuing organization runs its own database. You cannot use the AHA portal to verify a Red Cross card, and a Red Cross login won't help you check an HSI provider. Match the lookup tool to the logo on the card.
American Heart Association (AHA) eCard Verification
The AHA issues the dominant BLS certification in U.S. healthcare. Since 2018, AHA cards are almost exclusively delivered as eCards — a 10-character alphanumeric code emailed to the provider after course completion. The AHA's eCard portal accepts the code plus the provider's first and last name. Results show validity status, issue date, expiration, training center, and instructor name.
American Red Cross Digital Certificate Lookup
The Red Cross moved fully digital in 2014. Every Red Cross BLS, CPR/AED, or First Aid certificate carries a unique ID at the bottom of the digital card. The verification tool requires the certificate ID and the provider's last name. Results return the holder's name, course taken, completion date, expiration, and the issuing chapter.
HSI / ASHI / MEDIC FIRST AID Portal
HSI is the parent brand for ASHI (American Safety and Health Institute) and MEDIC FIRST AID. Their BLS card is recognized by most U.S. hospitals and accepted in all 50 states. The lookup form asks for the eCertificate ID and the provider's email or last name.
National Safety Council (NSC)
NSC issues a smaller volume of BLS cards, mostly through occupational health and workplace safety programs. Verification is handled through their training portal with the student ID and class roster reference.
Four Lookup Portals at a Glance
10-character alphanumeric code plus the provider's first and last name. Dominant credential in hospital settings, EMS agencies, and dental offices. Lookup confirms course title, training center, instructor, issue date, and renew-by date in a single response.
Certificate ID printed at the bottom of the digital card plus the holder's last name. Common in EMS, lifeguarding, dental, and pre-hospital education programs. Returns the issuing Red Cross chapter and links to a QR-driven self-verify page.
eCertificate ID plus the provider's email or last name. Accepted in all 50 states for healthcare BLS. CertManager portal supports bulk verification and offers a CSV upload for HR teams handling more than 25 cards per week.
Student ID plus the class roster reference number. Used mostly in occupational safety, manufacturing, and corporate health programs. No public-facing lookup form, so verifications usually go through the issuing training center directly.
Step-by-Step: How to Run an AHA BLS Lookup
The AHA portal is the verification tool most credentialing departments use because the majority of clinical BLS cards in the United States come from AHA-aligned Training Centers. Here's how the process works in practice.
First, visit the AHA's official eCard student portal. You'll see a prompt asking whether you're a student, instructor, training center, or employer. Choose the role that matches your reason for checking — employers and HR staff use a simpler form than students retrieving their own card.
Next, enter the 10-character eCard code. The code is case-sensitive and contains both letters and numbers but never contains the letter O or the number zero in confusing combinations. If you can't read a character on a printed card, try both interpretations.
Then enter the provider's first and last name exactly as they appear on the card. Hyphens, accents, and apostrophes matter — a card issued to O'Brien will not match OBrien in some implementations.
Submit the form. A valid card returns a green confirmation showing the holder's name, the course (BLS Provider, BLS Instructor, etc.), the issue date, the renew-by date, and the Training Center that issued it. An invalid card returns a clear no record found message. Save or screenshot the confirmation page for your credentialing file.

Lookup Walkthroughs by Issuer
Go to the AHA eCard student site and select your role: student, employer, or instructor. Enter the 10-character eCard code and type the provider's first and last name exactly as printed. Submit the form. Results show course title (BLS Provider, BLS Instructor, etc.), issue date, renew-by date, training center, and instructor. Save the confirmation as a PDF for the credentialing file. The employer role allows bulk uploads if you maintain an AHA Training Network account, which speeds up credentialing for large teams. Verification typically returns in under 30 seconds.
How to Read the Lookup Results
Once the verification page loads, scan for four data points: the holder's name, the course title, the expiration date, and the training center. Every legitimate BLS card includes all four.
The holder's name must match the candidate exactly. Watch for missing middle initials, married versus maiden names, and nickname versus legal name. If the lookup name doesn't match the resume or license name, ask the candidate to clarify and document the explanation.
The course title matters more than people realize. A BLS Provider card meets hospital requirements. A Heartsaver CPR/AED or Heartsaver First Aid card does not — those are lay-rescuer courses and are not interchangeable with healthcare BLS. Check the exact wording.
The expiration date is two years from the issue date for almost every BLS credential in the United States. If the lookup shows an expiration further out than two years, the card is suspect. Some Red Cross and HSI courses include a one-year skills check, but the full credential still expires at 24 months.
The training center field tells you where the candidate took the class. AHA Training Centers are independent organizations — hospitals, community colleges, EMS agencies, private CPR companies — that have been approved by AHA to issue eCards. If the training center on the card has been deactivated, the card itself can still be valid through its expiration date, but the candidate cannot renew with that same center.
If a lookup result shows a course completed entirely online with no in-person skills check, the credential does not meet healthcare BLS requirements. AHA, Red Cross, and HSI all require a hands-on skills session for the BLS Provider credential. Cards issued without that session may verify successfully in some databases but will fail hospital credentialing every time. Watch out for vendor sites that promise a same-day BLS card with no skills component — those are exactly the cards that get rejected during onboarding.
What to Do When the Lookup Fails
A failed lookup doesn't always mean fraud. Before you reject a card or report a candidate, work through this checklist.
Start with data entry. Re-enter the code with careful attention to case sensitivity and ambiguous characters. The letters I, L, and the number 1 are common mix-ups; the letters O and the number 0 are even more common. Try the obvious substitutions before assuming the card is fake.
Next, check the name format. Some portals require the legal first name and won't match nicknames. Try the candidate's full legal name from their driver's license. If you're checking a recently married provider, try both surnames.
If the code and name look right but still don't match, contact the training center directly. Training centers can confirm whether the student was on the roster, even if the eCard hasn't been issued yet. New BLS Provider cards sometimes take 7–14 days to appear in the AHA database after the class date.
If the training center can't locate the student either, you're likely looking at a fraudulent card. Document your findings, screenshot the failed lookup, and follow your organization's credentialing escalation policy. Many states require fake-card incidents to be reported to the issuing organization and, in some clinical roles, to the state licensing board.

Lookup Failure Troubleshooting Checklist
- ✓Re-enter the eCard code with careful attention to letters versus numbers (I vs 1, O vs 0).
- ✓Try the candidate's full legal name from their driver's license, not a nickname or initial-only version.
- ✓Check both maiden and married surnames for recently married providers, and any hyphenated combinations.
- ✓Confirm you're using the correct issuer's portal — AHA card on the AHA site, Red Cross on the Red Cross site, HSI on HSI.
- ✓Allow 7–14 days after class completion before assuming a card is missing from the AHA database.
- ✓Contact the training center directly to verify roster enrollment and request a manual eCard re-issue if needed.
- ✓Screenshot every failed and successful lookup for the credentialing file, including the timestamp and your name as verifier.
- ✓Escalate persistent failures through your HR fraud-reporting policy and notify the issuing organization if fraud is suspected.
BLS Card Validity, Renewal, and the Two-Year Cycle
Every legitimate BLS credential expires. The AHA, Red Cross, and HSI all use a two-year cycle measured from the last day of the month in which the course was completed. A class finished on March 14, 2025, produces a card that expires on March 31, 2027 — not March 14. That end-of-month convention catches a lot of providers off guard during a lookup.
Renewal options vary by issuer but generally fall into three categories. A full renewal course covers the same content as the initial class and lasts about four hours. A renewal-specific course assumes existing knowledge and runs about two hours. A blended-learning option pairs an online cognitive module with an in-person skills session, splitting the time between self-paced study and supervised practice.
Skipping renewal even by a day forces the provider into the full initial course. There is no grace period in healthcare credentialing. Many employers send automated reminders 90, 60, and 30 days before expiration; setting your own calendar reminder is wise insurance, especially if you change jobs and lose access to your previous employer's tracking system.
The renewal class also gives you an opportunity to confirm your record. Ask the instructor to verify your eCard code is the correct one tied to your name before you leave. A two-minute lookup at the end of class is much easier than tracking down a Training Center Coordinator months later.
Self-Verifying Your Own BLS Card After Class
- +Catches data-entry errors while you can still call the instructor.
- +Confirms your name spelling matches your hospital records.
- +Gives you a screenshot to attach to job applications.
- +Lets you spot a wrong expiration date before it costs you a shift.
- +Takes under 60 seconds for AHA, Red Cross, and HSI cards.
- +Saves you from emergency renewal courses during onboarding week.
- −AHA eCards can take 7–14 days to appear in the database after class.
- −Training-center data-entry mistakes still need a phone call to fix.
- −Some portals lock out repeated failed lookups for 24 hours.
- −Each issuer requires a different portal and different fields.
Red Flags That Signal a Fake BLS Card
Most fake BLS cards share a handful of telltale signs. Knowing them lets you reject the obvious frauds before you even start the lookup.
Watch for expiration dates more than two years out from issue. Anything longer than 24 months is suspect on its face. Real BLS credentials run on a two-year clock, period.
Beware cards that show a course title outside the standard list. Healthcare CPR, Professional Rescuer, or Advanced BLS are not standard AHA or Red Cross course titles. The real titles are short and consistent: BLS Provider (AHA), Basic Life Support for Healthcare Providers (Red Cross), and Basic Life Support (HSI/ASHI).
Look at the QR code. Modern AHA, Red Cross, and HSI cards all include a QR link that points directly to the verification portal with the eCard code pre-filled. If the QR code points to a non-issuer website or a generic URL shortener, treat the card as fraudulent.
Check the printing quality. Real eCards are designed to be printed at home, but the holographic security features on physical Red Cross cards and the embedded watermarks on official AHA print versions are difficult to fake. Cards that look hand-drawn, that use the wrong logo (AHA's logo has not used the old red V since 2015), or that misspell the issuing organization's own name almost always fail verification.
Finally, if a candidate insists you don't need to look up their card — my old hospital already verified it — that's a red flag on its own. Run the lookup anyway. A real provider will be grateful you did.
BLS Questions and Answers
Keeping Your BLS Record Lookup-Ready
Running one lookup is easy. Keeping your own BLS record verifiable across job changes, name changes, and renewal cycles takes a little discipline. The good news is that the habits scale to every healthcare credential you'll earn, from ACLS to PALS to NRP.
Build a single credential file. A folder on your phone or a password-protected note app works fine. Store a PDF of every eCard, a screenshot of every successful lookup, and a record of your training center contact information. When credentialing asks for proof on a Friday afternoon, you'll have it in 30 seconds instead of 30 minutes.
Set a renewal calendar reminder 90 days before each expiration. Three months gives you time to schedule a class on a day off, gather any prerequisite materials, and confirm your eCard updates in the database before the old card lapses. Many hospitals enforce a 30-day buffer — a card within 30 days of expiration is treated as already expired for credentialing purposes — so the 90-day reminder isn't excessive.
Update your name promptly. If you marry, divorce, or legally change your name, update the AHA, Red Cross, or HSI record immediately. Each issuer has a name-change form that takes about 10 minutes and prevents lookup failures down the road. Don't wait until renewal.
Cross-check your credential against the licensure board too. Some states feed BLS verification directly into the nursing or paramedic license record, which means a clean BLS lookup also smooths your annual license renewal. Other states keep the two separate, in which case the BLS lookup is purely an employer requirement. Knowing which model your state uses saves time at renewal.
Finally, learn to verify your colleagues' cards too. If you're a charge nurse, a clinical educator, or a department director, build a habit of spot-checking your team's credentials once a quarter. The five minutes per check is the cheapest insurance in healthcare credentialing. A clean BLS roster keeps your unit survey-ready, audit-ready, and patient-safe — which is, in the end, exactly what the BLS credential was created to guarantee. Run the lookup today, save the screenshot, and move on with your shift knowing the paperwork is one less thing to worry about.
About the Author
Registered Nurse & Healthcare Educator
Johns Hopkins University School of NursingDr. Sarah Mitchell is a board-certified registered nurse with over 15 years of clinical and academic experience. She completed her PhD in Nursing Science at Johns Hopkins University and has taught NCLEX preparation and clinical skills courses for nursing students across the United States. Her research focuses on evidence-based exam preparation strategies for healthcare certification candidates.