CRCST certification is the gold-standard credential for sterile processing professionals in the United States โ and increasingly, it's the baseline hospitals expect before they'll consider you for any central service technician role. CRCST stands for Certified Registered Central Service Technician, and the credential is administered by IAHCSMM (the International Association of Healthcare Central Service Materiel Management).
Here's what that actually means for your career: the certification signals to employers that you've demonstrated competency across decontamination, sterilization, instrument assembly, and regulatory compliance โ not just that you've been doing the job for a while. Those are different things. One is time served. The other is verified skill.
If you're working in a sterile processing department (SPD) and haven't certified yet, you're likely leaving money on the table. Certified techs earn $3,000โ$8,000 more per year than uncertified counterparts, and leadership roles in the SPD increasingly require it outright. This guide walks you through the exam format, eligibility rules, fees, content domains, and a study strategy that actually works โ so you can pass the first time.
The SPD is one of those hospital departments that most patients never think about โ but every surgeon relies on it. Before a single incision is made, the instruments on that tray have passed through central service: decontaminated, inspected, assembled, packaged, sterilized, and delivered. If any step in that chain fails, the consequences fall on the patient. CRCST certification exists to set a professional standard for the people responsible for that chain. It's not just a resume line item. It's a signal that you understand the stakes.
The demand for CRCST-certified technicians is growing. Hospital mergers, increased surgical volumes, and regulatory scrutiny of sterile processing departments have all pushed healthcare employers to require or strongly prefer certified staff. In some facilities, uncertified techs are given a deadline โ pass the CRCST within a year of hire or face reassignment. That's how seriously the healthcare industry has come to take this credential. If you're already in the SPD and haven't tested yet, the window to do it without external pressure is now.
Central service technicians don't work in the spotlight, but their work makes surgery possible. Every day, you're decontaminating used surgical instruments, inspecting them for damage, assembling procedure trays, packaging and sterilizing devices, and distributing them to operating rooms and clinical departments on time. Get it wrong โ a contaminated instrument, a sterility breach, a missing component โ and patients are at risk.
That's why infection prevention organizations, The Joint Commission, and state health departments all pay attention to central service departments. It's also why CRCST certification carries real professional weight. You can check out our CRCST certification guide for an overview of the full credential landscape before diving into the exam specifics below.
The exam itself is administered at Prometric testing centers nationwide. You sit down at a computer, answer 150 multiple-choice questions over 2.5 hours, and walk out knowing you either passed or didn't โ your result appears on screen immediately after you submit. The 50 unscored pretest items are mixed in with the real questions, so you won't know which ones count. Treat every single question exactly the same. Don't try to identify pretest items โ it's a losing strategy.
The passing threshold is 70% on the 100 scored questions. That means you need to answer at least 70 scored questions correctly. The pretest items don't affect your score in any direction. Some candidates find this comforting โ there's a buffer of sorts built into the format. Others find it anxiety-inducing because you can't know in real time how you're tracking. Either way, the strategy is the same: read every question carefully, eliminate obvious wrong answers, and move at a pace that leaves you time to review flagged items before the clock runs out.
The content domains on the CRCST exam are spelled out by IAHCSMM, and they're worth understanding before you open a study book. Knowing how the exam is weighted tells you where to spend your time โ and where you can afford to be slightly less thorough.
Sterilization carries the heaviest weight โ roughly 25% of the scored content. That means time-temperature-pressure parameters for steam sterilization, ethylene oxide, hydrogen peroxide plasma, and dry heat. You need to know specific values, not just concepts. What's the minimum temperature for a gravity-cycle steam sterilizer? What's the exposure time for wrapped items in a pre-vacuum cycle? These aren't trivia โ they're patient safety fundamentals that show up on the exam with precision-level expectations.
Cleaning and decontamination covers about 20% of the exam. This domain hits manual cleaning techniques, ultrasonic cleaners, automated washer-disinfectors, point-of-use treatment, and the biological principles behind why decontamination matters. Inspection, assembly, and packaging rounds out another 20% โ testing instruments for function and integrity, packaging material selection, external and internal chemical indicators, and load configuration principles.
The remaining domains are smaller but still tested: sterile storage and distribution (~15%), regulatory compliance and documentation (~10%), and anatomy and medical terminology (~10%). That last domain surprises some people. Yes, you'll be asked to identify anatomical regions and surgical instrument types by their proper names. Knowing the difference between a laparoscopic trocar and an arthroscopic cannula isn't optional โ it's on the test.
If you want to work through the sterilization domain specifically, our CRCST sterilization methods practice test covers those parameters in detail. The decontamination domain has its own dedicated resource โ the CRCST decontamination practice test. Both are good warmups for the actual exam format and phrasing style.
The sterilization domain is the highest-weighted section of the CRCST exam. Expect questions on:
Decontamination is where patient safety starts. The exam tests your knowledge of:
Getting instruments through decontamination isn't enough โ they have to be verified as functional before packaging. This domain covers:
Sterile items don't stay sterile automatically โ storage and handling conditions matter. The exam tests:
The remaining 20% spans regulatory compliance/documentation (~10%) and anatomy/medical terminology (~10%):
Here's the eligibility situation โ it's simpler than most people expect. To sit for the CRCST, you must be currently employed in a central service department and have completed a minimum of 400 hours of on-the-job experience. That's it. No formal degree required. No prerequisite coursework mandated by IAHCSMM โ though some employers prefer candidates who've completed an IAHCSMM-approved training program before testing.
The 400-hour minimum works out to roughly 10 weeks of full-time work. If you've been in the SPD for three months or more, you likely qualify. The key word is "currently" โ you have to be actively working in central service at the time you apply, not just planning to.
One thing that trips people up: the application asks you to verify your employment through your supervisor or department manager. Have that conversation early. Your manager will need to sign off confirming your hours and current role. Don't wait until the last minute to involve them โ delays in getting supervisor sign-off are one of the most common reasons applications stall.
There's no age requirement, no prior certification required, and no waiting period after starting your SPD job (beyond accumulating the 400 hours). If you've been in the department for a year or more and haven't applied yet, the only thing stopping you is the application itself.
Can you count part-time hours? Yes โ the 400-hour requirement isn't based on weeks or months, it's based on total hours worked in the central service department. If you're working part-time, just track your cumulative hours and apply once you've crossed the threshold. Keep a log if your employer doesn't provide timesheets that break down department-specific hours. You'll need documentation to support your application.
Another eligibility question that comes up frequently: what if you work at an ambulatory surgery center (ASC) rather than a hospital? Good news โ IAHCSMM recognizes central service work performed at ASCs, same-day surgery facilities, and outpatient procedure centers, not just inpatient hospital departments. As long as the work involves decontamination, sterilization, and instrument management, it qualifies. If you're unsure whether your specific setting counts, contact IAHCSMM directly before applying โ they're generally helpful in clarifying edge cases, and a quick email can save you from an application rejection.
The IAHCSMM-approved training programs are worth mentioning separately from the 400-hour requirement. These programs โ offered through community colleges, vocational schools, and online platforms โ aren't required to sit for the exam, but they're extremely helpful as a structured study pathway. Many programs align their curriculum directly to the CRCST exam content domains. If you're newer to central service and feel underprepared for self-study, an approved program gives you a framework that covers the material systematically. Some employers even partner with local community colleges to offer these programs to new hires.
Complete the application online at iahcsmm.org. Have your employment verification ready โ your supervisor must confirm your hours and current SPD role.
$150 for IAHCSMM members, $200 for non-members. If you're not a member yet, IAHCSMM membership costs about $135/year โ it pays for itself immediately through the fee discount.
After IAHCSMM approves your application, you'll get an Authorization to Test (ATT) by email. This is your ticket to schedule at a Prometric center.
Use your ATT to schedule your exam date at prometric.com. You have 90 days from ATT issuance to test โ don't let it expire.
Arrive with valid photo ID. The exam is computer-based, 150 questions, 2.5 hours. Your result appears on screen when you submit.
Pass, and IAHCSMM mails your official certificate. Your credential is active for 3 years from the date you pass.
Study strategy matters more than study hours. You can grind through 80 hours of unfocused review and still walk out of Prometric having failed โ or you can spend 30 focused hours on the right material and pass comfortably. Here's what works โ and what most candidates skip.
Start with the IAHCSMM Central Service Technical Manual. This is the primary textbook, and it's written specifically to align with the exam content. Don't skim it. Read it chapter by chapter with a focus on memorizing specific parameters โ sterilization cycles, chemical indicator types, storage requirements. The exam tests precision. "Around 250ยฐF" won't cut it; you need to know it's 250ยฐF (121ยฐC) for gravity-cycle steam sterilization at 15โ30 minutes depending on load configuration.
Practice exams are essential โ not because they'll repeat the exact questions, but because they train you to read exam-style language. IAHCSMM question stems are often long and scenario-based. You're not just recalling a fact; you're being asked what the technician should do next in a specific situation. That requires practice with the format, not just the content. Aim for at least 300 practice questions before your test date.
Focus extra attention on AAMI standards (particularly ANSI/AAMI ST79 for steam sterilization), AORN perioperative guidelines, and TJC standards for sterile processing. The regulatory domain (~10% of the exam) is often undertested by candidates who focus entirely on sterilization parameters. Don't neglect it โ those 10 questions can make the difference between 69% and 71%.
A parallel credential worth knowing about: HSPA (Healthcare Sterile Processing Association), formerly known as CBSPD, offers its own sterile processing certification. Some employers accept either credential; others specifically require CRCST. Learn more about the HSPA sterile processing certification if you want to compare the two pathways. The CSSD sterilization operations resource covers the operational side of sterilization in clinical settings, which is useful context for both exams.
Build a study schedule that runs 4โ6 weeks before your test date. That's long enough to cover all domains without burning out. One chapter of the technical manual per day, supplemented by 20โ30 practice questions per session, will carry you through the content systematically. Don't cram the week before โ at that point, you should be reviewing weak spots, not learning new material.
Test-day strategy matters too โ not just content knowledge. Time management on the CRCST is generous. You have about 1 minute per question. Don't spend more than 90 seconds on any single item โ flag it and move on.
Most candidates who fail aren't running out of knowledge; they're running out of time because they got stuck on hard items early. Treat the exam like a triage exercise: answer what you know, flag what you're unsure about, return to the hard ones at the end. This approach consistently outperforms grinding through questions in linear order.
Renewal is non-negotiable. Your CRCST credential expires every 3 years, and IAHCSMM requires 12 continuing education credits (CEUs) to renew. Let the credential lapse, and you don't just need to apply for renewal โ you may need to retest entirely. Don't let that happen. Mark the expiration date in your calendar the day you pass your exam, and start earning CEUs in year one โ not month 35.
The good news: CEUs aren't hard to accumulate if you stay active in the field. IAHCSMM offers webinars throughout the year, an annual conference with multiple CEU sessions, and an online learning management system with on-demand modules. Many of them are free for members. If you're doing one webinar every three months, you'll hit 12 credits well before the deadline.
Some employers will pay for your CEU costs as part of continuing education benefits โ ask your manager. Others offer time off for IAHCSMM conference attendance. If those benefits are available to you, use them. It's professional development that costs you nothing out of pocket.
One more thing: keep records of your CEU completion. IAHCSMM's online portal tracks most of them automatically if you complete them through IAHCSMM channels, but if you attend an outside training or conference, you'll need to submit documentation manually. Don't lose certificates of completion. Save them digitally the day you receive them โ a simple folder in your email or cloud storage is enough. Three years goes faster than you think, and scrambling to document CEUs in the final month before renewal is an entirely avoidable headache.
One renewal tip that's easy to overlook: IAHCSMM lets you carry forward excess CEUs into the next renewal cycle โ but only a limited amount. If you earn 15 credits in one cycle, you can't bank all the extras for the next. Check the current IAHCSMM renewal policies for the exact carryforward rules, since these are updated periodically. The safest approach is to treat each 3-year cycle as its own obligation and aim for 12 credits per cycle without relying on carryovers.