PHR Recertification — CE Requirements & How to Stay Certified
PHR recertification requires 60 CE credits every 3 years. Learn approved activities, how to log credits, and strategies to meet requirements without scrambling.
PHR recertification is one of those things HR professionals know they need to handle — and then promptly ignore until year two of a three-year cycle. By then, the credit-earning scramble is real. This guide covers exactly how PHR recertification works, what counts as qualifying credit, and how to build a maintenance habit that makes recertification straightforward rather than stressful.
Your PHR (Professional in Human Resources) certification from HRCI is valid for three years. To maintain it, you must earn 60 recertification credits (also called CE credits or PDCs depending on context) within that three-year window, then submit an application and pay a recertification fee. Alternatively, you can retake the PHR exam — but the CE path is generally more accessible and doesn't require exam preparation on top of your regular workload.
How the PHR Recertification Cycle Works
Your three-year recertification period begins the day after your PHR certification is awarded. HRCI sends reminder emails as your expiration date approaches, but it's your responsibility to track your credits and submit your recertification application before your certification expires.
You need 60 recertification credits total, with a specific requirement embedded in those 60: at least one of your credits must come from a qualifying business credit activity (content not specifically related to HR — things like business strategy, finance, technology, or project management). This business credit requirement reflects HRCI's belief that HR professionals need broader business acumen, not just HR-specific expertise.
Beyond that business credit minimum, the remaining 59 credits can come from any mix of qualifying activities in the categories below. There's no requirement that credits be split between content areas, so you can stack HR-specific credits heavily if that aligns with your professional development.
What Counts as a PHR Recertification Credit?
HRCI's recertification activities fall into several categories, each with specific credit values and documentation requirements:
HR-related programs and activities. This is the broadest category and includes: attending HR conferences and seminars, completing online courses from HRCI-recognized providers, completing HRCI's own eLearning programs, attending SHRM chapter events and programs (SHRM credits transfer to HRCI at a 1:1 ratio within specific limits), webinars from approved providers, and HR-focused podcasts and reading programs that carry pre-approved credit.
Instruction and speaking. If you teach HR content — as a college instructor, corporate trainer, or conference speaker — you can earn recertification credits for that work. The credit value depends on the activity type: for the first time you teach a specific course or deliver a specific presentation, you earn credits. Repeating the same content in subsequent years typically earns fewer or no credits.
HR-related research and publishing. Writing articles, white papers, or other HR-related content for publication earns recertification credit. Books and journal articles carry more credit than blog posts. HRCI requires documentation — publication records, acceptance letters, or similar evidence.
Leadership in HR organizations. Serving on HR-related boards, committees, or professional organization leadership (SHRM chapters, HRCI volunteer roles, etc.) qualifies for credit. The credit value depends on the level of involvement and time commitment.
Academic coursework. College courses relevant to HR or business taken for credit earn recertification points. A 3-credit-hour undergraduate course in labor law or organizational behavior, for example, would count. Graduate-level courses may earn more credits per course.
Workplace projects and programs. Some HR work projects qualify for recertification credit — specifically, projects where you're designing and implementing a new HR program, system, or policy that goes beyond your routine job duties. HRCI reviews these on a case-by-case basis, and documentation requirements are more stringent.
SHRM Credits and PHR: What Transfers
If you also hold SHRM-CP or SHRM-SCP credentials, you likely have SHRM PDCs (Professional Development Credits) that you're tracking for your SHRM recertification. The good news: SHRM PDCs can transfer to HRCI recertification at a 1:1 ratio, up to 40 of your 60 required credits.
That means if you've been earning SHRM credits consistently, you may already have a significant head start on PHR recertification. Log into HRCI's portal and check whether you can apply your SHRM credits. You'll need to submit documentation (typically a SHRM activity transcript or certificate), but the process is straightforward.
This transfer provision makes maintaining both credentials simultaneously much more manageable — one professional development activity can count toward both recertification requirements, effectively doubling its credit value for your maintenance needs.
How to Log PHR Recertification Credits
HRCI provides an online portal at hrci.org where you log your recertification credits as you earn them. Don't wait until your expiration year to start logging — the portal makes it easy to add credits as you complete activities, and keeping your log current prevents the documentation scramble that trips people up at recertification time.
For each activity you log, you'll need: the activity name and description, the provider or organization, the date(s) completed, the number of credits claimed, and some form of documentation (certificate of completion, transcript, letter from the organization, publication record). Retain original documentation even after you've logged the activity — HRCI conducts random audits of recertification applications, and you'll need to produce documentation if audited.
Pre-approved activities (those with HRCI program IDs or SHRM activity numbers) are easier to log because the credit value and approval status are already established. Activities you're claiming in categories like workplace projects or self-study require a bit more description and supporting evidence.
Building a Recertification Strategy That Works
The worst strategy is doing nothing for two years and then panic-completing credit activities in year three. The best strategy is treating PHR recertification as a professional development budget you spend intentionally over three years.
At the start of each recertification cycle, estimate how you'll earn your 60 credits. If your employer sends you to SHRM's annual conference, that's likely 10–15 credits in one trip. If you complete a few HRCI eLearning courses per year, those add up quickly. A 3-hour webinar from an approved provider typically earns 3 credits.
Map out a realistic path to 60 credits that leverages activities you'd be doing for professional development anyway. Most HR professionals who stay engaged with their field earn recertification credits naturally — the key is documenting them in real time rather than trying to reconstruct activities after the fact.
Pay attention to your recertification deadline. HRCI allows you to submit your recertification application up to six months before your expiration date. That means you don't have to wait until the last moment — if you hit 60 credits a few months early, submit early and close out the cycle.
The Recertification Application Process
When you're ready to apply, log in to HRCI's portal and navigate to your credential's recertification section. You'll review your logged credits, confirm you've met the 60-credit requirement (with at least one business credit), pay the recertification fee (currently $100 for HRCI members, $150 for non-members — verify current fees on HRCI's website), and submit.
HRCI reviews applications and issues your new certification date within a few weeks. Your certification is renewed from your previous expiration date, not from your submission date — so submitting early doesn't shorten your next cycle. You can also set up automatic reminders in HRCI's portal to ensure you don't miss your expiration date.
If you let your PHR expire, HRCI offers a grace period (typically three to six months) during which you can reinstate by completing the credits and paying a reinstatement fee. After the grace period, you'd need to reapply and retake the exam. Don't let it lapse — the reinstatement process is more cumbersome and more expensive than staying current.
Is Recertifying the PHR Worth It?
Yes — for most HR professionals, maintaining the PHR is worth the effort. Certified professionals consistently earn more than non-certified peers at comparable experience levels, and many employers specifically list PHR as a preferred or required qualification for senior HR individual contributor and management roles.
The recertification requirement also creates a professional development structure that keeps you current. HR law changes, compliance requirements evolve, and HR technology shifts quickly. Earning 60 credits over three years isn't a burden — it's a framework that ensures you're staying engaged with the profession rather than running on credentials you earned years ago.
Treat your PHR maintenance as part of your professional identity, not as a bureaucratic obligation, and the credits take care of themselves through normal professional engagement. Conference attendance, webinars, professional reading programs, and committee involvement all count — these are activities that make you a better HR professional regardless of recertification requirements.
Stay Certified, Stay Current
PHR recertification isn't complicated — it just requires intentional tracking over a three-year window. The professionals who struggle with it are those who treat it as an afterthought and then scramble to complete credits in year three. The ones who handle it smoothly are those who log activities as they go, leverage existing professional development opportunities, and submit their application a few months early.
If you have SHRM credentials, check your credit transfer eligibility now — you may already have a head start. If you don't have SHRM credentials, plan your credit-earning around the HR development activities that are most relevant to your role and career trajectory.
Keep your certification active. The PHR represents a real investment in your professional credibility — maintaining it is straightforward when you treat it as a routine part of being an engaged HR professional rather than a one-time exam outcome you have to protect.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames 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.
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