CNA Classes in Long Island City, NY

Long Island City, NY has 1 state-approved CNA training program in our directory. Published tuition ranges from $965, averaging about $965. Every program below meets New York's 100 hours minimum training requirement and prepares you for the Prometric competency exam. New York requires 100 hours of training (25 above the federal minimum) and recertification requires paid work at a New York Article 28-licensed facility specifically — not just any healthcare setting

Last updated June 2026 · 1 program listed

Programs in Long Island City

1

Tuition Range

$965

State Required Hours

100 hours minimum

Exam Vendor

Prometric

Lowest tuition

LaGuardia Community College

$965 · 150 hours

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Compare CNA Programs in Long Island City

All 1 program side by side. Tuition and duration are as published by each school; call to confirm current cohort dates.

How Much Does CNA Training Cost in Long Island City?

Tuition at Long Island City programs runs $965 (about $965 on average). Beyond tuition, plan for the state exam fee (Approximately $115 total (varies; check Prometric's current NY fee schedule)), the application/registry fee (Included in the Prometric application packet (APPCNANY)), a background check, and uniforms or supplies. All in, total CNA training cost in New York typically falls around $0 (employer-sponsored) to $1,500 (community college or private program).

How to Become a CNA in Long Island City, NY

  1. 1

    Confirm you meet basic prerequisites

    Most NYSDOH-approved nursing-home nurse aide training programs require students to be at least 17 (some require 18), able to read, write, and speak English, and able to pass a Criminal History Record Check (CHRC). A high school diploma or GED is preferred by many programs and required by some, though not by NYSDOH regulation.

  2. 2

    Find a NYSDOH-approved Nursing Home Nurse Aide Training Program

    Locate a 100-hour state-approved program. NYSDOH publishes a list of approved programs run by nursing homes, BOCES centers, community colleges, and private schools across the state. The program must include the required 70 hours of classroom/skills and 30 hours of clinical experience inside a NY-licensed nursing home.

  3. 3

    Complete the 100-hour training program

    Finish all classroom theory, skills laboratory practice, and clinical experience. Some students complete the program in as little as 4 weeks full-time; part-time programs may run 8–12 weeks. You must complete the program within a defined time window before testing.

  4. 4

    Submit the Prometric APPCNANY application and schedule your exam

    Your training program or you submit the New York Nurse Aide Application (APPCNANY) to Prometric at prometric.com/nurseaide. Schedule both the written (or oral) knowledge test and the skills evaluation at a Prometric-approved New York test center. You have up to two years from training completion to test.

  5. 5

    Pass both portions of the Nursing Home Nurse Aide Competency Examination

    The written exam is multiple-choice (or oral by request for English-language-learner accommodations). The skills exam asks you to perform a hands-on set of nurse aide skills. Passing both adds you to the New York State Nurse Aide Registry. Prometric candidate services: 1-800-805-9128.

  6. 6

    Verify your listing on the NYS Nurse Aide Registry

    After you pass, your information is added to the Prometric-hosted New York State Nurse Aide Registry at registry.prometric.com/public, updated daily. You can verify your active status by searching by name or certification number. You are now authorized to work as a CNA in any New York-licensed nursing home.

Becoming a CNA in New York

Becoming a CNA in New York means committing to 100 hours of state-approved training — 25 hours above the federal minimum. Most full-time programs run 4 to 8 weeks; part-time evening and weekend programs may run 8 to 12 weeks. The 100 hours split into a minimum of 70 hours of classroom and skills-lab instruction plus at least 30 hours of supervised clinical training inside a New York-licensed nursing home. Approved programs are run by nursing homes themselves, BOCES centers (especially in the suburbs and upstate), CUNY and SUNY community colleges, and private career schools across the five boroughs of New York City, Long Island, the Hudson Valley, the Capital Region, and the rest of the state.

Frequently Asked Questions: CNA Training in Long Island City

How many CNA training programs are available in Long Island City, NY?

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Our directory lists 1 state-approved Certified Nurse Aide training program in Long Island City, NY. All programs must meet New York's minimum of 100 hours minimum and prepare graduates to sit for the Prometric competency exam.

How much does CNA training cost in Long Island City?

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Published tuition for CNA programs in Long Island City ranges from $965. LaGuardia Community College lists the lowest tuition at $965. Total out-of-pocket cost also includes the state exam fee (Approximately $115 total (varies; check Prometric's current NY fee schedule)), background check, and uniforms.

How do I become a CNA in Long Island City, NY?

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To work as a CNA in Long Island City, you must meet a New York-approved training program of at least 100 hours minimum, pass the Prometric competency exam (Two-part Nursing Home Nurse Aide Competency Examination: a written (or oral) knowledge test and a hands-on skills evaluation at a Prometric test center), and clear a Criminal History Record Check (CHRC) fingerprinting required for all nurse aides working in NYSDOH-licensed facilities. Most candidates complete the full process in 6–12 weeks (training is typically 4–8 weeks, then 2–4 weeks for exam and registry listing).

Are there free CNA classes in Long Island City?

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No Long Island City program on our directory currently advertises free tuition, but many New York nursing facilities pay for CNA training in exchange for a work commitment after certification. Ask local long-term care employers about employer-sponsored training programs, and check the American Red Cross and Job Corps for additional pathways.

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