CST certification verification โ confirming that a Certified Surgical Technologist holds a valid, current credential โ is a routine step in healthcare hiring, credentialing, and compliance processes. Whether you're an employer verifying a candidate's credentials, a surgical technologist confirming your own certification status, or an HR professional managing healthcare credentialing, this guide covers how the verification process works.
The CST credential is issued and maintained by the National Board of Surgical Technology and Surgical Assisting (NBSTSA). All CST verification goes through NBSTSA โ there is no third-party registry. If someone claims to hold a CST credential, their status can and should be confirmed directly with NBSTSA.
NBSTSA maintains a public credential verification system. Here's how it works:
NBSTSA offers an online credential verification tool on their official website (nbstsa.org). You can search by the credential holder's name to verify:
The online database is the most current, most reliable method. It's updated as credentials are renewed or lapsed. Employers performing credentialing should use this tool โ not rely on a credential holder's self-reported status or a photocopy of a certificate.
For formal credentialing purposes โ hospital privileging, state licensure applications, or legal documentation โ NBSTSA also processes written verification requests. This provides an official letter confirming credential status. There may be a fee for written verification; check NBSTSA's current fee schedule.
Many hospitals use medical credentialing services or Primary Source Verification (PSV) platforms that handle credential checks on behalf of employers. These services contact NBSTSA directly as part of their process. If you're applying for a position that uses a credentialing service, they'll verify your CST status as part of their background process โ you don't need to do anything separately other than ensuring your credential is current.
Healthcare employers โ particularly hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers โ have credentialing requirements that typically include:
Joint Commission-accredited facilities are required to verify credentials from primary sources โ meaning directly from the issuing body (NBSTSA), not from the credential holder. This is a regulatory requirement, not just a best practice. If you're applying to a Joint Commission-accredited hospital or surgery center, assume your credentials will be rigorously verified.
If you're a CST and want to confirm your own credential status โ to prepare for a job application, confirm your renewal is processed, or simply check your expiration date โ you can:
A common issue: CSTs who submit CE credits or renewal applications sometimes experience processing delays. Your credential status in the NBSTSA portal reflects processing status. If you've submitted renewal materials but your status still shows as pending or expired, contact NBSTSA directly rather than assuming the system is in error.
Understanding what keeps your CST credential active is essential โ because an lapsed credential is a significant career disruption. Here's how CST certification maintenance works:
CST credentials are valid for four years. When you pass the CST exam, your certification is active for four years from that date. You must renew before your expiration date.
To renew your CST credential, you must earn Continuing Education (CE) credits during your 4-year certification period:
CE credits can be earned through professional association events, online CE courses, employer-provided training, national conferences, and approved CE providers. NBSTSA maintains a list of approved CE providers on their website.
If your credential expires, you enter a late renewal grace period (check NBSTSA's current policies, as these can change). During this window, you can still renew with additional requirements or fees. After the grace period closes, you must retake the CST exam to recertify โ you can't simply renew a fully lapsed credential.
Don't let your credential lapse โ the consequences extend beyond administrative hassle. Many employers require active certification as a condition of employment. An expired CST credential can trigger suspension from clinical duties until the credential is reinstated.
Several situations create confusion or delays in CST credential verification:
NBSTSA issues two credentials, and they're sometimes confused during verification:
When verifying credentials, confirm which credential you're verifying. A CSFA is not interchangeable with a CST โ the scope of practice differs. Employers hiring for first assistant roles should confirm CSFA, not just CST.
CST certification is a national credential, but state requirements vary. Some states require surgical technologists to be licensed, registered, or certified at the state level in addition to or instead of national CST certification. A few states specifically accept NBSTSA's CST credential as evidence of competency for state registration.
If you're relocating or applying for positions in a new state, check that state's surgical technology regulatory requirements. States that have state-level licensing include Texas, Tennessee, South Carolina, and others โ the list changes as legislation evolves. Your state's surgical technology regulatory board (or department of health) is the definitive source for state-specific requirements.
NBSTSA has disciplinary procedures for credential holders who violate professional standards, are convicted of certain crimes, or misrepresent their credentials. If your credential was suspended or revoked:
If you believe a suspension or revocation was issued in error, NBSTSA's appeals process is your first step. Consult a healthcare attorney if the matter involves significant employment or legal consequences.
Whether you're preparing for your first CST exam or recertifying via exam, strong preparation is what determines your outcome. The CST exam is rigorous โ it covers perioperative care, surgical procedures across specialties, instrument and equipment knowledge, sterile technique, and professional practice standards.
Use our free CST practice tests to identify knowledge gaps, build exam fluency, and get comfortable with the types of questions the NBSTSA exam asks. Regular practice testing โ with active review of your wrong answers โ is one of the most effective preparation strategies. Pair it with a systematic content review and hands-on clinical experience for the strongest preparation foundation.