Restoration Continuing Education: Managing IICRC CECs Without Burning Production Days

Restoration technician earning IICRC continuing education credits at an online training session

IICRC certifications do not expire on a fixed date — they renew through continuing education credits (CECs). The system is more flexible than a hard renewal date, but it puts the burden on the company to track CECs across the team, plan annual learning, and ensure no certification lapses. Done well, the CEC system also doubles as a structured ongoing development program. Done poorly, it produces lapsed certifications that surface during a TPA audit or an insurance dispute.

This guide is part of our broader restoration training and certification master guide.

The CEC Framework

An IICRC CEC stands for “continuing education credit,” and one CEC equals one hour of online or in-person class education. The CEC requirements vary by certification level:

  • Technicians (WRT, ASD, AMRT, FSRT, etc.) — 14 CECs every four years
  • Master-level certifications (MTC, MSR, MWR) — 14 CECs every two years
  • Certified Inspectors — 14 CECs every two years

The technician requirement of 14 CECs over four years works out to about 3.5 hours of continuing education per year — manageable when planned, painful when ignored until the renewal window closes.

What Counts as a CEC

CECs can be earned several ways: attending another IICRC course, completing approved IICRC continuing education courses online or in person, attending IICRC-approved events and conferences, or registering at the IICRC booth during applicable trade shows (which awards two CEC hours for the visit).

The flexibility means companies can fit CEC accumulation into existing development activities rather than treating it as a separate annual burden. A team trip to a regional restoration conference can produce CECs for everyone who attends.

Tracking CECs Across the Team

The single biggest source of CEC compliance failures is poor tracking. Each technician is individually responsible for submitting their CEC documentation to IICRC, but the company benefits from maintaining a central tracker that shows: certifications held by each technician, current CEC balance for each certification, renewal deadline, and CECs scheduled or planned for the cycle.

A simple spreadsheet works for small teams. Larger teams should consider integrating CEC tracking into the HR or training management system. The cost of building this tracking is trivial compared to the cost of a lapsed certification surfacing during an audit.

How to Submit CECs

Documentation of completed continuing education must be submitted to IICRC for credit to apply. The standard submission method is email to IICRC’s renewal team with the Certificate of Completion attached. The technician is responsible for the submission, but the company should remind technicians to submit promptly rather than batching at the end of the cycle.

A Yearly CEC Plan

The most workable approach is a yearly CEC plan rather than a four-year plan. For a typical technician with WRT, ASD, and AMRT, a year’s CEC plan might look like:

  • Q1 — one online IICRC course (4-6 CECs), one trade show visit (2 CECs)
  • Q2 — manufacturer-led product training (often free, often CEC-eligible)
  • Q3 — regional restoration conference attendance (multiple CECs)
  • Q4 — review CEC balance, schedule any catch-up needed

This rhythm produces 8-12 CECs per year per technician, which exceeds the technician requirement and provides comfortable margin for renewal cycles.

Combining CECs with Team Development

The smartest restoration owners use CEC requirements as the framing for ongoing team development. Instead of treating continuing education as a compliance task, they structure it as a quarterly team learning rhythm: lunch-and-learns on specific topics, manufacturer demos at the warehouse, mini-courses on emerging techniques, and conference attendance for select team members who then teach the rest of the team.

This approach turns the CEC requirement into a competitive advantage rather than a checkbox.

What Happens If a Certification Lapses

If a certification lapses due to insufficient CECs, the technician must re-test to restore the credential. The cost of re-testing (course tuition plus exam fee) almost always exceeds what the CECs would have cost, and the lapsed period creates exposure if any work was performed under the assumption that the certification was current.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many IICRC CECs does a technician need?

IICRC technicians need 14 continuing education credits every four years to maintain their certifications. That works out to approximately 3.5 CECs per year. Master-level certifications and Certified Inspectors require 14 CECs every two years, which is double the annual rate.

What counts as one IICRC CEC?

One CEC equals one hour of online or in-person class education from an IICRC-approved source. CECs can be earned through additional IICRC courses, approved continuing education programs, IICRC-approved events, and IICRC booth visits at applicable trade shows (which award two CECs).

Who submits CEC documentation to IICRC?

The individual technician is responsible for submitting their Certificate of Completion to IICRC’s renewal team. The standard submission method is email to renewals@iicrcnet.org. Companies should remind technicians to submit promptly rather than waiting until the end of the renewal cycle.

What happens if my IICRC certification lapses?

A lapsed certification requires re-testing to restore. The re-test typically requires retaking the course (or at least the exam) and paying the exam fee. The lapsed period also creates exposure for any work performed under the assumption that the certification was current. Maintaining CECs is significantly cheaper than re-testing.

How can I track CECs for my whole team?

For small teams, a simple spreadsheet showing each technician’s certifications, current CEC balance, and renewal deadline is sufficient. Larger teams benefit from integrating CEC tracking into a training management system. The investment in tracking is trivial compared to the cost of a lapsed certification surfacing during an audit.


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