Ambulatory Care Nursing Certification (RN-BC): Complete Guide 2026

Everything about the AAACN ambulatory care nursing certification (RN-BC). Eligibility, exam format, cost, renewal, and study tips for the AMB-BC credential.

Ambulatory Care Nursing Certification (RN-BC): Complete Guide 2026

What Is Ambulatory Care Nursing Certification?

The ambulatory care nursing certification — officially the AMB-BC credential — is a specialty nursing certification offered by the American Academy of Ambulatory Care Nursing (AAACN). It designates registered nurses who have demonstrated specialized competency in ambulatory care settings: outpatient clinics, physician offices, same-day surgery centers, telehealth programs, and other non-acute environments.

The AMB-BC is a voluntary credential, but earning it signals professional commitment and advanced practice knowledge in a specialty that's growing rapidly as healthcare continues shifting from inpatient to outpatient settings. Many health systems and large ambulatory care practices specifically encourage or reward certification.

If you're an RN working in an outpatient or clinic setting and you want to formalize your expertise, this guide covers everything: who qualifies, what the exam tests, what it costs, and how to prepare effectively.

AMB-BC Eligibility Requirements

To sit for the ambulatory care nursing certification exam, you must meet all of the following requirements:

  • Current RN license: Hold an active, unrestricted registered nurse license in the U.S. or Canada
  • Experience: Minimum 2 years of experience as an RN, with at least 2,000 hours in ambulatory care nursing within the past 3 years
  • Continuing education: Completion of 30 contact hours of continuing nursing education (CNE) in ambulatory care nursing within the past 3 years

The 2,000-hour requirement is the key filter — it means this certification is for nurses who are actively working in ambulatory care, not those who are transitioning into the specialty without current practice experience.

AMB-BC Exam Format

The AAACN ambulatory care nursing certification exam is computer-based and administered through Prometric testing centers. Here's what the exam looks like:

SectionQuestionsTime
Clinical Practice66
Care Coordination & Transition Management30
Patient Education & Professional Practice24
Telehealth & Technology10

The exam contains 130 questions total, of which 115 are scored and 15 are unscored pilot items. You won't know which questions are unscored — answer all questions as if they count. You have 2 hours and 45 minutes to complete the exam.

The passing score is determined through a criterion-referenced standard-setting process, typically requiring approximately 70-75% of scored items answered correctly, though the exact passing standard can vary by exam form.

Exam Content: What You Need to Know

The AMB-BC exam reflects the AAACN's Core Curriculum for Ambulatory Care Nursing. The content weighting shows that clinical practice is the largest domain, but care coordination is increasingly central given the direction of outpatient healthcare delivery.

Clinical Practice Domain

This section tests your ability to apply clinical knowledge in the ambulatory care context — which is meaningfully different from inpatient nursing. Ambulatory care nurses often work with less physician oversight, compressed timeframes, and patients who are managing conditions at home. Questions cover physical assessment, triage protocols (phone triage and in-person), medication management, chronic disease management (diabetes, hypertension, asthma), and care for vulnerable populations.

Care Coordination and Transition Management

This domain has grown in importance as health systems emphasize reducing readmissions and supporting patients across care settings. Expect questions on care plan development, referral management, discharge planning, patient navigation, and how ambulatory care nurses interface with inpatient teams, home health, and community services.

Patient Education

Teaching is central to ambulatory care nursing in a way it isn't always in inpatient settings. Questions test your knowledge of adult learning principles, health literacy assessment, motivational interviewing, and how to evaluate the effectiveness of patient education.

Telehealth

This domain reflects the significant expansion of telehealth in ambulatory care. Expect questions on telephone triage protocols, video visit management, documentation requirements, and the regulatory and privacy considerations specific to telehealth delivery.

How to Prepare for the AMB-BC Exam

There are several reliable resources for AMB-BC preparation:

AAACN Official Resources

AAACN publishes the Core Curriculum for Ambulatory Care Nursing, which is the primary content resource for the exam. The Core Curriculum is expensive but comprehensive — it's written specifically to align with the exam content outline. AAACN also offers an online practice exam, which is worth purchasing to familiarize yourself with question style and your weak areas.

Study the Exam Content Outline

Download the official AMB-BC exam content outline from the AAACN website. This document tells you exactly which topics are tested and the weighting of each domain. Build your study plan around it, spending proportionally more time on the Clinical Practice domain since it represents the most questions.

Leverage Your Clinical Experience

Unlike exams that test purely factual recall, the AMB-BC presents clinical scenarios. Your actual practice experience is study material. When you encounter an unfamiliar scenario, connect it to patient situations you've managed — that contextual anchoring helps answer scenario-based questions accurately.

Focus on Care Coordination

Many nurses preparing for the AMB-BC are strong on direct clinical knowledge but less practiced on the care coordination and transition management content. Review care transition frameworks (like the Care Transitions Intervention model), chronic care model elements, and the nurse's role in interdisciplinary care teams. This domain is often where candidates lose points unexpectedly.

AMB-BC Certification Cost

Current fees for the AMB-BC exam:

  • AAACN member: $295
  • Non-member: $395

AAACN membership typically runs $105-115/year for regular members. If you're planning to sit for the exam, the membership fee pays for itself in the discounted exam price. Membership also provides access to the Journal of Ambulatory Care Nursing and other continuing education resources you'll need for renewal.

Maintaining Your AMB-BC Certification

The AMB-BC credential is valid for 3 years. Renewal requires completing one of two pathways:

  1. Re-examination: Retake and pass the AMB-BC exam within the 3-year cycle
  2. Continuing education renewal: Earn 45 contact hours of relevant CNE over the 3-year period and pay the renewal fee ($100 for AAACN members, $150 for non-members)

The continuing education renewal pathway is by far the most common. Most active ambulatory care nurses accumulate 45 CNE hours through their ongoing professional development without significant additional effort.

For additional context on ambulatory care nursing roles and how certification fits into career advancement, the ambulatory care nursing career guide covers the specialty's scope, practice settings, and how it differs from inpatient nursing. For broader ambulatory care context including pharmacist and other roles, see the ambulatory care overview.

What is Ambulatory Care Nursing Certification? - Ambulatory Care Test certification study resource

AMB-BC Certification Quick Facts

  • Credential: AMB-BC (Ambulatory Care Nursing, Board Certified)
  • Certifying body: AAACN (American Academy of Ambulatory Care Nursing)
  • Exam questions: 130 (115 scored)
  • Time limit: 2 hours 45 minutes
  • Testing center: Prometric
  • Exam cost: $295 (member) / $395 (non-member)
  • Renewal: Every 3 years (45 CNE hours or re-exam)
  • Eligibility: Active RN license + 2,000 hours ambulatory care experience

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.