The Certified Safety Professional (CSP) is the premier credential in occupational health and safety—and its requirements reflect that status. You can't just sign up and take the exam. The CSP has multi-step eligibility requirements involving education, professional experience, and a prerequisite certification. Understanding exactly what's required before you start the process saves time and prevents surprises.
This guide breaks down every CSP certification requirement, explains how the ASP pathway works, and covers what counts as qualifying experience.
The CSP is administered by the Board of Certified Safety Professionals (BCSP), a not-for-profit credentialing organization based in Indianapolis. BCSP sets the eligibility requirements, develops the exam content, and maintains the certification program. All CSP applications go through BCSP at bcsp.org.
BCSP uses an ISO-accredited certification process. The CSP is ANSI/ISO/IEC 17024 accredited, which means it meets international standards for personnel certification programs. This accreditation matters because it's increasingly required for government contractor positions and federal agency recognition.
To be eligible for the CSP exam, you must meet requirements in four areas: educational degree, professional safety experience, Associate Safety Professional (ASP) certification (or equivalent), and application approval by BCSP.
You need a bachelor's degree or higher from an accredited college or university. The degree does not have to be in safety—any academic discipline qualifies. However, having a degree in a related field (safety science, industrial hygiene, environmental health, engineering, biology) tends to help with the exam content. Candidates without a traditional 4-year degree path have a few alternatives — see BCSP's website for associate degree + experience equivalency pathways.
You must have worked full-time in a professional safety function role for a minimum period that depends on your educational background:
Professional safety function experience is specific—it must involve safety as a primary responsibility, not as a secondary or incidental part of another role. BCSP defines professional safety as safety, health, or environmental work that requires applying safety knowledge and judgment to identify and control hazards. A manufacturing engineer who occasionally reviews safety plans doesn't typically qualify. A safety coordinator whose primary job is hazard identification, training, and regulatory compliance does.
This is the most important requirement to understand: you must hold the ASP (Associate Safety Professional) certification before you can take the CSP exam. The ASP is not optional—it's a mandatory step in the BCSP certification pathway.
The ASP is BCSP's entry-level credential. It has its own exam and eligibility requirements, which are less demanding than the CSP. Getting your ASP first is the pathway to the CSP.
BCSP allows certain credentials to satisfy the ASP prerequisite, meaning you don't have to obtain the ASP if you already hold one of these equivalent credentials:
If you hold one of these credentials, you may be able to skip the ASP step and apply directly for the CSP. Confirm with BCSP before proceeding.
Since most candidates need to obtain the ASP before the CSP, understanding the ASP requirements is essential:
The ASP exam tests safety knowledge at a foundational level — math of safety (statistics, probability, engineering calculations), safety management fundamentals, hazard recognition, and loss control. It's a serious exam but more focused and approachable than the CSP.
Most candidates spend 3-6 months preparing for the ASP before sitting for the exam. After passing the ASP, maintaining it while accumulating additional experience and then applying for the CSP is the standard path for most safety professionals.
This is where many applicants get confused. BCSP's definition of qualifying experience is specific, and submissions are reviewed carefully. Here's what typically counts:
Qualifying activities:
Non-qualifying activities:
When in doubt, describe your experience precisely in the application and let BCSP determine if it qualifies. Being vague or using generic language increases rejection risk.
Once approved for the CSP exam, here's what you're facing:
The CSP exam covers eight domains: advanced sciences and math, safety management systems, ergonomics, fire prevention and protection, industrial hygiene, emergency response and planning, environmental management, and training/education. The exam blueprint is available on BCSP's website and should guide your study plan.
For full preparation guidance, see our Certified Safety Professional exam guide and the Board of Certified Safety Professionals overview.
The CSP is valid for 5 years. Recertification requires earning 75 continuing education points (CEPs) during each 5-year cycle through qualifying professional development activities including: professional safety conferences, training courses, academic coursework, professional publications, and leadership roles in safety organizations. There is no recertification exam—only the continuing education requirement.
If you don't complete the 75 CEPs before the cycle ends, you can request a waiver or extension from BCSP, but this is not guaranteed. Letting your CSP lapse is a serious professional setback—most CSP holders plan their CEPs proactively throughout the 5-year period rather than scrambling in year 4 or 5.