TNCC Certification 2026 — Trauma Nursing Core Course Requirements and Renewal
Get ready for your TNCC Certification 2026 certification. Practice questions with step-by-step answer explanations and instant scoring.

What Is TNCC Certification?
The TNCC (Trauma Nursing Core Course) is a two-day continuing education course and certification program developed by the Emergency Nurses Association (ENA). It is designed for registered nurses who care for trauma patients in emergency departments, trauma centers, intensive care units, and pre-hospital/flight settings. TNCC provides nurses with a standardized, systematic approach to trauma patient assessment and initial stabilization based on the current evidence-based Trauma Nursing Process.
The Trauma Nursing Process taught in TNCC:
- Primary survey (ABCDE): Airway with simultaneous cervical spine protection, Breathing and ventilation, Circulation with hemorrhage control, Disability (neurological assessment), Exposure and environmental control
- Adjuncts to primary survey: Monitoring, laboratory specimens, diagnostic imaging
- Secondary survey: Head-to-toe assessment to identify all injuries not immediately life-threatening
- Reevaluation and post-resuscitation care
TNCC is the nursing equivalent of ATLS (Advanced Trauma Life Support, which is the physician-focused trauma certification). Together, TNCC-certified nurses and ATLS-certified physicians form the core of trauma resuscitation teams at designated trauma centers.
The TNCC trauma nursing course is offered at hundreds of hospitals and ENA-approved facilities nationwide, with course dates available throughout the year.
TNCC Course Format
The standard TNCC course is a two-day, in-person educational program:
Day 1 — Lectures and skill stations (provider manual content):
- Trauma overview, mechanism of injury, biomechanics
- Initial assessment: primary and secondary survey technique
- Airway and ventilation management
- Shock recognition and hemorrhage control (including wound packing and tourniquet use)
- Traumatic brain injury and spinal cord trauma
- Thoracic and abdominal trauma
- Musculoskeletal and surface trauma
- Special populations: pediatric, geriatric, obstetric trauma
Day 2 — Psychomotor skill stations and written exam:
- Hands-on practice stations covering the Trauma Nursing Process in simulated patient scenarios
- Formal psychomotor evaluation: candidates demonstrate the complete trauma assessment on a simulated patient or standardized manikin
- 50-question written examination covering all course content
9th Edition: The current TNCC curriculum is the 9th Edition — introduced in 2026. Key updates from previous editions include enhanced focus on hemorrhage control (tourniquet and wound packing), updated spinal motion restriction guidance, and integration of high-quality CPR principles for traumatic cardiac arrest. All current TNCC courses use the 9th Edition provider manual.

Who Needs TNCC Certification?
TNCC certification is required or strongly preferred for nurses in these settings:
- Level I and Level II Trauma Centers: Many trauma centers require or strongly encourage TNCC for emergency department nurses, trauma ICU nurses, and trauma program nurses within a specified timeframe of hire
- Emergency Department nurses: Even at facilities without trauma center designation, EDs that receive trauma patients increasingly prefer or require TNCC for RN staff
- Flight nurses: Almost universally required for flight nursing (air medical transport) positions — along with CCRN, PHRN, or CFRN
- Trauma program coordinators and trauma nurse liaisons
- Military nurses: TNCC is often required for military nurses deployed to combat or expeditionary settings
TNCC is appropriate for nurses who are new to trauma care and for experienced trauma nurses seeking certification renewal or systematic skills update. There is no experience requirement to attend a TNCC course — many nurses complete TNCC early in their emergency nursing career.
TNCC Certification Cost and Renewal
Cost: TNCC course fees vary by region and hosting facility. Most courses cost between $350 and $600 for the two-day program, which typically includes the provider manual. ENA members may receive a discount. Many hospitals and health systems cover the TNCC course fee for emergency nurses and trauma nurses as a continuing education benefit.
Validity: TNCC certification is valid for 4 years from the date of successful completion. Unlike some certifications that offer a CEU-based renewal option, TNCC renewal requires retaking the full course — there is no exam-only renewal pathway. This ensures all TNCC providers remain current with the evolving 9th Edition curriculum and skill standards.
How to renew TNCC:
- Locate an upcoming TNCC course at your hospital, regional ENA chapter, or the ENA national course finder
- Complete the pre-course online learning modules before the course start date
- Attend the two-day course and pass the written exam (70%) and psychomotor evaluation
- Receive your updated TNCC provider card valid for 4 years
