The Certified in Healthcare Compliance (CHC) credential is the gold standard for compliance professionals working in healthcare settings. Issued by the Health Care Compliance Association (HCCA), the CHC certification validates that you understand regulatory requirements, know how to implement effective compliance programs, and can protect healthcare organizations from legal and financial risk.
If you're working in a hospital, medical practice, health insurance company, or any other healthcare entity, the CHC exam is likely on your radar. It's one of the most recognized credentials in the field—and for good reason. Healthcare compliance is complex. Federal and state laws overlap. Billing rules change constantly. Privacy regulations carry serious penalties. The CHC proves you can navigate all of it.
In this guide, we'll break down everything you need to know: eligibility requirements, exam structure, content domains, study strategies, and what to expect on test day. Whether you're just exploring the credential or actively preparing, you'll find actionable information here.
Healthcare compliance professionals are in demand. Hospitals, physician groups, insurers, and healthcare vendors all need people who can keep their operations on the right side of the law. The CHC signals to employers that you've met a rigorous, nationally recognized standard.
Beyond the job market, there are practical day-to-day benefits. CHC holders report that the credential deepens their understanding of complex regulations—HIPAA, the False Claims Act, the Anti-Kickback Statute, and the Stark Law among them. That depth makes you more effective in your role and more confident when advising leadership.
Salary data supports the investment too. Compliance officers with the CHC or similar credentials typically earn more than those without certifications. In a field where expertise is hard to demonstrate on a resume, the CHC is a concrete differentiator.
Before you register, confirm you meet HCCA's eligibility criteria. The requirements combine education and professional experience, and you must satisfy one of the approved pathways.
The standard pathway requires at least two years of experience in a healthcare compliance-related role. HCCA defines "compliance-related" broadly—it includes work in compliance, legal, audit, risk management, or related functions within or for healthcare organizations. A four-year degree is required unless you have additional experience to substitute.
Candidates with an associate's degree or some college coursework can qualify with more professional experience—typically three to four years in a compliance-adjacent role. HCCA reviews applications individually, so if you're unsure whether your background qualifies, reach out to them directly before registering.
There's no required pre-exam course, though HCCA offers preparatory education through its annual Compliance Institute and online learning platform. Taking a structured review course is optional but often helpful, especially if your compliance experience is concentrated in one domain.
The CHC exam is a computer-based test administered at Prometric testing centers across the country. You can also sit for the exam remotely under online proctoring, which gives you more scheduling flexibility.
The exam contains 150 multiple-choice questions, of which 135 are scored and 15 are unscored pretest items. You won't know which questions are pretest items, so answer every question as carefully as you can. You have three hours to complete the exam.
Questions are scenario-based. You won't be asked to recite a specific regulation verbatim. Instead, you'll be presented with workplace situations and asked to identify the best course of action, the applicable rule, or the appropriate program element. This format rewards practical knowledge over rote memorization.
HCCA publishes an official exam content outline that breaks the CHC exam into content domains. Understanding these domains is essential for focused study. The domains shift slightly with each content update, but they consistently cover the following areas:
Download the current exam content outline from HCCA's website. It's free and tells you exactly what percentage of questions comes from each domain. That percentage breakdown should drive your study allocation.
Candidates often ask whether the CHC exam is hard. The honest answer: it depends on your background. If you've spent years in healthcare compliance and have exposure across multiple domains, you'll recognize the scenarios. If your experience is narrow—focused on billing compliance, for instance—you may find questions about training programs or investigations more challenging.
HCCA doesn't publish an official pass rate for the CHC exam, so candidate surveys and forum discussions are the best data available. Most sources suggest a pass rate in the range of 70–80% for first-time candidates who prepare adequately. That's encouraging but shouldn't make you complacent. The candidates who pass typically spend 40–80 hours studying, depending on their experience level.
The minimum passing score uses a scaled scoring approach. Raw scores are converted to a scaled score with a passing threshold set by HCCA's standard-setting process. You'll receive a score report immediately after completing the exam showing whether you passed and, if not, which domains need improvement.
Passive reading isn't enough to pass the CHC exam. The scenario-based format requires you to apply concepts, not just recognize them. Here's what works:
Print or bookmark HCCA's exam content outline. Highlight every domain and note the percentage weight. Domains with higher weights deserve more study time. Don't skip low-weight domains entirely—those questions can still be the difference between passing and failing.
Working through CHC exam questions is the single most effective preparation strategy. Practice questions expose gaps in your knowledge, build familiarity with the question format, and reinforce content through application. Aim for at least 300–400 practice questions before your exam date. Review every wrong answer carefully—understanding why an answer is wrong matters as much as knowing the right answer.
You can use our CHC practice test to drill on exam-style questions covering all major content domains.
The CHC exam tests nuance. Summary overviews of the False Claims Act or Anti-Kickback Statute won't always be enough. Read the actual statutory language for major laws and then complement that with HCCA's educational materials or reputable compliance textbooks. Understanding the intent behind a regulation helps you reason through scenario questions even when you're unsure of specific details.
The Office of Inspector General (OIG) has published compliance program guidance documents for nearly every healthcare sector—hospitals, physician practices, nursing facilities, pharmaceutical manufacturers, and more. These documents explain the government's expectations for effective compliance programs. CHC questions frequently draw from OIG guidance, so reading the guidance relevant to your industry (and a few other sectors) is time well spent.
Cramming doesn't work well for a 150-question exam that tests seven content domains. Spread your preparation over eight to twelve weeks. Dedicate specific sessions to specific domains, leave time for review, and schedule several timed practice exams in the final two weeks.
Registration happens through HCCA's website. You'll create an account, complete the application, and pay the exam fee. The fee for HCCA members is lower than for non-members, so if you're serious about healthcare compliance as a career, an HCCA membership may be worth the cost even factoring in the annual dues.
After HCCA approves your application, you'll receive authorization to schedule your exam through Prometric. Scheduling is flexible—you can typically find available dates within a few weeks, though popular test centers book up faster. Once you schedule, you'll receive confirmation details and instructions for test day.
The exam is valid for two years from authorization, though most candidates schedule within a few months to maintain momentum from their studying.
Arrive at the Prometric center 15–30 minutes early. Bring two valid forms of ID—one must be government-issued with a photo. You can't bring notes, study materials, or personal devices into the testing room. The testing center provides scratch paper or a whiteboard for calculations.
The exam interface is straightforward. You can flag questions to revisit, skip questions and return to them, and review your answers before submitting. Use these features strategically. If a question stumps you, flag it, move on, and come back with fresh eyes.
After submitting, your pass/fail result appears immediately on screen. If you pass, your official certificate and digital badge arrive by mail and email within a few weeks.
The CHC certification is valid for two years. To renew, you must earn 20 continuing education units (CEUs) during the two-year period. HCCA offers CEU opportunities through its annual Compliance Institute, regional conferences, webinars, and self-study courses. You can also earn CEUs through other approved providers.
CEU requirements aren't onerous if you stay active in the compliance community. Attending conferences, completing online courses, and participating in HCCA's educational programming can easily generate the required 20 units within a two-year cycle.
If you let your certification lapse, you can reinstate it by paying a reinstatement fee and meeting the CEU requirement. But it's far easier to maintain the credential than to let it expire and have to re-demonstrate compliance.
The CHC is the most widely recognized general healthcare compliance credential, but it's not the only option. Understanding how it compares helps you decide which certification path fits your goals.
The CHPC (Certified in Healthcare Privacy Compliance) focuses specifically on privacy regulations—primarily HIPAA and related state laws. If your role is dedicated to privacy and data security, the CHPC may be more directly relevant than the CHC.
The CHRC (Certified in Healthcare Research Compliance) is tailored for compliance professionals in academic medical centers and research institutions. It covers research regulations including IRB requirements, grant compliance, and conflict of interest rules.
The CPCO (Certified Professional – Compliance Officer), offered by AAPC, is another option in the broader compliance credential market. It's more commonly pursued by billing and coding professionals moving into compliance roles.
For most healthcare compliance professionals, the CHC is the right starting point. It covers the broadest scope and carries the most name recognition with healthcare employers.
Candidates who don't pass the CHC exam often make the same mistakes. Knowing them in advance helps you avoid them.
Underestimating breadth is a common pitfall. The CHC covers seven content domains, and candidates who have deep experience in one or two areas sometimes neglect the others. Your day-to-day job experience doesn't automatically translate to exam readiness across all domains.
Skipping practice questions is another issue. Some candidates study content extensively but do few practice questions. The scenario-based format is a skill you develop through practice—reading about it isn't the same as doing it.
Misreading scenarios costs points. CHC questions often include details that change the correct answer. Slow down when reading. Identify what's being asked before looking at the answer choices.
Finally, don't overlook the regulatory details. The False Claims Act's qui tam provisions, the Anti-Kickback Statute's safe harbors, and HIPAA's breach notification timelines are exactly the kind of specifics that appear on the exam. Know them.
You don't need to spend a fortune preparing for the CHC exam. Several free resources are genuinely helpful:
Supplement free resources with HCCA's official study materials if your budget allows. Their CHC exam prep course is comprehensive and closely aligned with the exam content outline.