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This page summarizes how a prospective emergency medical technician obtains and maintains the credential that authorizes practice in Georgia. The entry below reflects the credential type the state issues or accepts, the responsible authority, and the practical requirements that most affect a candidate's timeline and budget. It complements the national profession overview and the Georgia licensing hub.

ProfessionEmergency Medical Technician (EMT)
JurisdictionGeorgia (GA)
Credential typeState license required
Issuing authorityGeorgia Office of Emergency Medical Services
Required training120 contact hours
ExaminationNREMT cognitive examination plus state-administered psychomotor exam
Background checkRequired (fingerprint)
Application fee$120
Renewal fee$57
Renewal cycleEvery 3 years
Continuing education60 contact hours per cycle

Education and Training

Candidates intending to work as emergency medical technicians in Georgia are expected to complete approximately 120 contact hours of formal training prior to credentialing. For this profession, that benchmark is typically met by a Postsecondary nondegree award (120-150 hour course). Training programs that lead to the recognized credentials in this field — NREMT EMT, State EMT License — are commonly delivered through community colleges, technical schools, hospital-based academies, and the larger online career-school networks. Where a program is offered through distance education, the clinical or laboratory practicum component must still be completed in person, and most state boards require that the practicum take place at an approved clinical site supervised by a credentialed preceptor. Candidates should verify program accreditation status before enrolling, as some Georgia employers will only recognize training delivered by programs accredited by the relevant national accrediting body for this profession.

Examination Requirements

The credentialing examination accepted in Georgia for this role is the NREMT cognitive examination plus state-administered psychomotor exam. Examinations are administered at commercial testing centers under standardized conditions, and most candidates schedule an exam within 30 to 60 days of completing their training program in order to keep recently studied content fresh. A typical first-attempt pass rate for the relevant examination across this profession ranges from sixty-five to eighty-five percent depending on program length and the candidate's preparation strategy. Detailed exam blueprints, recommended study schedules, and sample-question sources are summarized in the Emergency Medical Technician exam preparation guide. Candidates who do not pass on the first attempt are typically eligible to retest after a short waiting period — frequently 30 days — and after paying a retake fee that is set independently of the original examination fee.

Verification portalLook up an active Emergency Medical Technician credential issued in Georgia: Georgia Health Credential Verification

Application Process

The application process in Georgia is administered by the Georgia Office of Emergency Medical Services. Applicants will typically submit (1) a completed application form with current contact information, (2) primary-source verification of their training program completion sent directly from the school registrar, (3) verification of any required examination passing scores sent directly from the testing body, (4) a fingerprint-based background check processed through both state and federal channels, and (5) the application fee of $120. Most complete applications are processed within four to eight weeks. Applicants whose education or examination occurred outside the United States may be subject to additional credential evaluation requirements through an approved foreign credential evaluation service. Status updates and verification of issued credentials can be obtained through the Georgia Office of Emergency Medical Services public verification portal.

Renewal & Continuing Education

Once issued, the emergency medical technician credential in Georgia must be renewed every 3 years. Renewal requires payment of the renewal fee — $57 at present — and documentation of 60 contact hours of continuing education completed during the renewal period. Acceptable continuing education typically includes formal coursework from approved providers, conference attendance with documented contact hours, employer-delivered in-service training that meets minimum content standards, and a defined number of self-study hours. Audit selection is random and should be expected: credential holders are advised to retain certificates of completion for the full renewal period plus at least one additional cycle. Late renewal almost always carries an additional reinstatement fee and, beyond a defined grace period, may require resitting one or more components of the original examination sequence.

Reciprocity & Endorsement

Georgia is a member of the relevant interstate compact for this profession; compact-state credentials are recognized at the multistate privilege level.

Practical Notes

Bilingual (Spanish/English) credential holders are in particular demand in metropolitan markets; some employer sign-on bonuses now exceed the cost of the entire training program. Candidates entering this profession in Georgia should also be aware that scope-of-practice rules can vary at the employer level: a hospital system may operate under stricter internal credentialing rules than the state minimum, and may require completion of a profession-specific orientation, additional health-system credentialing applications, and competency validation by a unit-based educator before a new hire is permitted to work independently.

Salary dataState median wage, 10th–90th percentile bands, employment, and projected openings: Emergency Medical Technician Salary & Job Outlook in Georgia

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