How long did the CPCA certification take from start to passing the exam?
I'm looking into getting my CPCA certification to move from a companion care role into a more formal personal care aide position. My current employer will reimburse the training cost but only if I pass within 90 days of starting the program, which creates some pressure around scheduling. I've been trying to find realistic timelines from people who've actually done it, not just what the program marketing says.
From what I've gathered, the CPCA involves both a competency evaluation and a written exam. My concern is less about the written test and more about whether the clinical skills evaluation can be scheduled quickly or if there's typically a wait. The written content covering personal hygiene assistance, mobility support, and documentation all feels comfortable given my current work.
What I really need to know is the realistic scheduling timeline for the clinical component. Some people mention waiting 3–4 weeks for an evaluator slot after finishing training. If that's the norm, my 90-day window gets very tight very fast. Has anyone navigated this recently?
Evaluator wait times really depend on your region. In rural areas it can stretch to 4–5 weeks because there aren't as many approved evaluators. In urban areas I've heard of people getting slots within a week. Call your training program coordinator directly and ask what the typical turnaround is in your specific area — don't rely on the general estimate.
The written exam honestly wasn't hard — 70 questions, multiple choice, and I passed with 88% on my first attempt. If you're already doing hands-on care work, the content will feel familiar. The clinical evaluation is where people get nervous because you're being watched, but they're checking for safety and procedure, not perfection.
I completed my CPCA through a community college program last year. Classroom and skills training took 6 weeks at 3 days per week, then I waited about 2.5 weeks for an evaluator appointment. Total time from day one to passing was around 9 weeks, so 90 days is workable but not comfortable. Start scheduling the evaluation before you finish training, not after.
The documentation section of the written test catches people off guard. Things like proper incident report language, privacy requirements, and what to escalate to a supervisor versus handle independently. Spend extra time on that module even if the clinical skills feel easy to you — it's more detailed than most people expect.