The two-clock rule
Every nationally-recognised first-aid qualification in Australia runs on two separate clocks, and you need to keep both wound up:
- CPR — refresh every 12 months. The CPR component (HLTAID009 Provide cardiopulmonary resuscitation) is the shorter clock and the one most people forget. Twelve months from the date your last face-to-face CPR assessment was signed off, your CPR currency lapses.
- First aid — refresh every 36 months. The broader first-aid qualification (HLTAID011 Provide first aid, HLTAID010 Provide basic emergency life support, HLTAID012 Provide first aid in an education and care setting) runs on a three-year clock. At three years from the date of issue, your full first-aid Statement of Attainment lapses and you need to do the whole course again, not just the CPR top-up.
These intervals are not arbitrary numbers — they are set by the broader Australian health and safety community (Safe Work Australia's Model Code of Practice: First Aid in the Workplace, ARC's training-currency recommendations, and the workplace risk-assessment guidance that almost every state regulator references). Your employer's policy will lean on the same intervals.
§ Instructor's note
Learners often arrive thinking the certificate is valid until expiry "like a driver's licence". The teaching point is that the expiry is not punitive — it is the recognised, evidence-based interval at which CPR skills decay below useful in untrained hands. Studies of first aiders out of practice show measurable degradation in compression depth, rate, and decision-making within 6 to 12 months of last training. The yearly refresh isn't a bureaucratic hoop — it is the interval at which the skill stops being reliable.
Why CPR specifically needs an annual refresh
CPR is unusually skill-perishable. Three things make it different from most knowledge:
- It is a physical motor skill — compression depth, hand position, rate, recoil — and motor skills degrade with disuse. Compression depth in particular drifts shallower over months as the rescuer forgets how hard "5 to 6 cm" actually feels on a real chest.
- It is performed under stress, in panic conditions — and stress strips away anything that isn't fully automatic. A CPR sequence that you can just barely remember on a calm Tuesday is a CPR sequence that will desert you completely when an actual collapse happens in front of you.
- The protocol changes. ANZCOR updates the resuscitation guidelines on a roughly five-year cycle (see the ARC guidelines chapter) and individual elements can change between cycles. Annual refresh is how the workforce stays in step with the current numbers.
The annual CPR top-up (HLTAID009) is short — typically a few hours including the practical assessment — and is designed to be the smallest unit you can refresh on its own without redoing the entire first-aid course. Most RTOs, including Australia Wide First Aid, run CPR-only refreshers as standalone half-day courses for exactly this reason.
Why the broader first aid runs on a three-year clock
The wider first-aid skill set — bleeding, shock, burns, choking, anaphylaxis, asthma, snake bite, stroke, fractures — is more stable than CPR but still drifts. Three years is the consensus interval at which:
- Most learners need a substantive refresh of the recognition material (the signs and symptoms part) because the conditions are encountered rarely enough that none of it has been rehearsed in real life.
- The clinical guidelines have moved at least once or are about to move (ANZCOR's five-year revision cycle means a three-year certificate is always trained against an in-date guideline set).
- The legal framework (consent, duty of care, work health and safety reporting) has typically had at least one update.
Three years is also the interval written into the Safe Work Australia Model Code of Practice and into most state work health and safety regulations as the maximum acceptable interval between full first-aid training events for designated workplace first aiders. An employer who relies on first aiders whose certificates are older than three years is exposed; a coroner or WHS inspector would treat that as the kind of thing they'd ask about.
The three-year clock starts on the date your Statement of Attainment was issued, not the date you booked the course or the date the certificate landed in your inbox. If your SoA is dated 14 March 2024, your first-aid currency runs out at the end of 13 March 2027 — and your CPR currency, on its own clock, runs out at the end of 13 March 2025 unless you refresh it sooner.
Where the rule comes from
There are three stacked sources for the currency rule, and a competent first aider should know all three exist:
- The Australian Resuscitation Council publishes ARC Guideline 10.1 (Basic Life Support Training) and adjacent education guidelines, which recommend annual CPR refresh and three-yearly first-aid refresh on clinical grounds.
- Safe Work Australia's Model Code of Practice: First Aid in the Workplace is the document state and territory work health and safety regulators reference, and it adopts the same intervals as the operational standard for designated workplace first aiders.
- Each state and territory's WHS regulator (SafeWork NSW, WorkSafe Victoria, Workplace Health and Safety Queensland, etc.) enforces the Model Code locally. The wording varies slightly but the intervals are the same in every jurisdiction.
When somebody asks "where does it say I have to refresh every year?" — those are the three documents you point at. None of them is a law of physics; they are clinical and regulatory consensus, updated as evidence accumulates.
Refresh, not redo (mostly)
The Australian training package is structured deliberately so that the annual CPR refresh and the three-yearly full first-aid refresh are separate, stackable products. The relationship:
- HLTAID009 — Provide cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The CPR-only unit. About 3 hours face-to-face. This is the annual refresh.
- HLTAID010 — Provide basic emergency life support. CPR plus basic emergency response. Includes HLTAID009.
- HLTAID011 — Provide first aid. The broader workplace first-aid course. Includes HLTAID010, which includes HLTAID009.
- HLTAID012 — Provide first aid in an education and care setting. HLTAID011 plus child- and infant-specific content. Includes everything above.
Because each unit nests inside the next, completing HLTAID011 today resets all three clocks (CPR, basic life support, first aid) to today. Twelve months later, you only need to refresh HLTAID009 to keep the CPR clock current — your HLTAID011 certificate keeps running on its three-year clock independently. Three years later, you do the full HLTAID011 course again to reset both clocks together.
When to refresh — and how to plan it
The practical rules:
- Diary the CPR-refresh date the day your certificate arrives. Twelve months minus a fortnight is a sensible reminder so you have time to book a course before the lapse.
- Diary the full-refresh date as well — three years minus a month.
- Do not let it lapse before you book. If your CPR currency expires on Friday and your next CPR refresher is on the following Monday, you are technically uncertified for the weekend and your employer's first-aid roster has a gap. Most WHS regulators treat that as a workplace control failure.
- Coordinate with your workplace. Many employers run group bookings annually for their first aiders; your job is to be on the list, not to have to chase your own course.
If a workplace incident goes badly and a coroner reviews it, the currency of the responding first aider's certificate is one of the first things they ask about. A first aider who responded with a CPR certificate that had lapsed eight months earlier is in a much weaker position than one whose certificate was current — even if the actual care given was identical. The currency record is the documentary evidence that the first aider was a competent responder at the time of the incident.
Where this site fits in
The page you are reading is part of an online study aid, not the assessment. Australia Wide First Aid is the RTO that issues the actual nationally-recognised Statement of Attainment, and the practical assessment — the part that matters for currency — happens face-to-face in their classroom under a qualified assessor's eye.
This means two things:
- Completing this online module does not start or reset any currency clock for HLTAID009, 010, 011 or 012. The clock starts when the AWFA assessor signs off your practical assessment.
- The Certificate of Study issued at the end of the online HLTAID011 module is a non-accredited record that you have completed the theory — useful as a learning checkpoint, useful as evidence to your employer that you have prepared, but not a substitute for the SoA. See the credentialing decision document for the regulatory framing.
The smartest way to use this site is as the prep for the face-to-face course — work through the chapters in the weeks before your booking, so you arrive at the classroom with the theory already in your head and can focus your face-to-face time on the practical skills.
Skills in basic life support deteriorate rapidly after training. Annual retraining and assessment is recommended for all individuals who may be required to perform CPR. The broader first-aid skill set should be refreshed at intervals of no more than three years. Workplace first aiders should maintain currency in line with the relevant work health and safety code of practice in their jurisdiction.
What not to do
- Do not treat the certificate as a piece of paper to be filed and forgotten. Diary the refresh dates the day it arrives.
- Do not assume a CPR refresher is a formality you can skip if you "remember it from last year". The whole point of the refresher is that you don't.
- Do not let the CPR clock lapse and assume the broader first-aid certificate "covers" you. The two clocks run independently.
- Do not rely on the online study module alone as your currency — only the face-to-face assessment with the RTO resets the clock.
- Do not use a certificate from another country as evidence of Australian currency. ANZCOR protocols differ from American Heart Association and European Resuscitation Council protocols in places, and an Australian employer is required to use Australian-recognised qualifications.
Your AWFA assessor will issue your Statement of Attainment at the end of the practical assessment. The date of issue is the date your three-year first-aid clock and twelve-month CPR clock both start running. Take a photo of the SoA on the day, set two calendar reminders before you leave the classroom, and you will not have to think about currency again until the reminders fire.
Currency is not bureaucracy. It is the gap between "I learned this once" and "I can do this now". The gap closes faster than you think, and the only way to keep it closed is to walk back into the classroom on schedule.
— ARC Guideline 10.1 (Basic Life Support Training)