I'm a high school varsity coach considering the NIAAA Registered Athletic Administrator (RAA) designation. Total cost with courses and exam runs about $650-800 depending on which state association you go through. My AD told me it's basically required to move into an AD role at a larger district.
The LTC course series covers everything from budget management to legal liability - LTC 501 through LTC 506. Each module takes roughly 4-6 hours and there's a proctored exam at the end. I've seen first-time pass rates around 78% cited in a few places.
What I'm trying to figure out is how much the credential actually moves the needle in hiring. I've applied to two AD positions this year and both listed RAA as preferred but not required. Does it actually change interview outcomes or salary? Also - is 50 CEU every 3 years still the maintenance requirement?
I got my RAA four years ago and it directly helped me land my current role. The hiring committee mentioned it specifically during the interview - said it showed I was serious about the administrative side, not just coaching. Worth every penny of the $700.
LTC 504 on legal issues is the hardest module - lots of case law and liability scenarios. Give yourself more than 4 hours for that one. I failed the module exam once and had to retake it.
Salary bump depends entirely on your district. In Ohio the RAA added about $3,200 annually once I moved from coach to AD. Some districts have a specific lane for it in the salary schedule.
The 50 CEU every 3 years is correct as of last year. NIAAA conferences count toward it and most state associations run approved workshops. It's not hard to hit if you're attending events anyway.