CNA Classes in Stillwater, OK

Stillwater, OK has 1 state-approved CNA training program in our directory. Every program below meets Oklahoma's 75 hours minimum (Long Term Care Aide) training requirement and prepares you for the D&SDT-Headmaster (primary), with Prometric and Health Certification Project also approved by OSDH competency exam. Oklahoma is one of the few states that allows three competing OSDH-approved testing vendors (Headmaster, Prometric, and HCP), giving Long Term Care Aide candidates flexibility in choosing where and how they test.

Last updated June 2026 · 1 program listed

Programs in Stillwater

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State Required Hours

75 hours minimum (Long Term Care Aide)

Exam Vendor

D&SDT-Headmaster (primary), with Prometric and Health Certification Project also approved by OSDH

Compare CNA Programs in Stillwater

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 Stillwater?

Beyond tuition, plan for the state exam fee (Set by each approved Oklahoma test site rather than a single statewide fee; Prometric administers a written option at $25 written + $25 oral + $30 clinical, while D&SDT-Headmaster sites and OSU-OKC publish site-specific testing fees through their training programs (typically $110-$135 combined)), the application/registry fee (No separate OSDH initial application fee for Long Term Care Aides; registry placement is automatic after the testing vendor reports passing results), a background check, and uniforms or supplies. All in, total CNA training cost in Oklahoma typically falls around $300-$900 including tuition (often free at CareerTech), exam fees, fingerprinting, and required uniforms/supplies.

How to Become a CNA in Stillwater, OK

  1. 1

    Confirm Oklahoma eligibility

    Candidates must be at least 16 years old, able to read and write in English, and pass an OSBI criminal background check plus a Nurse Aide Registry abuse and neglect screening. The Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) maintains the disqualifying offenses list at oklahoma.gov/health.

  2. 2

    Enroll in an OSDH-approved Long Term Care Aide program

    Choose a program approved by OSDH Long Term Care Service. Many Oklahomans use the state's CareerTech technology centers, community colleges, vocational programs, and nursing-home employer programs. The curriculum is set at a minimum of 75 hours, including 16 clinical hours and skills topics that must be taught before any direct resident contact.

  3. 3

    Complete the 16 hours of mandated pre-clinical training

    Before you can touch a resident, Oklahoma requires you to complete 16 hours of instruction in communication, infection control, safety and emergency procedures (including Heimlich), promoting resident independence, and resident rights. This rule comes from OAC 310:677 and is unique to Oklahoma's curriculum sequencing.

  4. 4

    Choose your OSDH-approved testing vendor

    Unlike most states, Oklahoma lets you select among three approved competency-exam vendors: D&SDT-Headmaster (the most common, via hdmaster.com), Prometric, and the Health Certification Project. Each vendor delivers a written/oral knowledge exam plus a 5-skill hands-on demonstration. Headmaster's combined fee is approximately $110.

  5. 5

    Pass the written and skills competency evaluation

    Schedule both portions through your chosen vendor's portal. You must pass both within two years of finishing training and within three attempts. Most candidates take the written portion online or at a regional Headmaster test site and the skills portion at a Headmaster Regional Test Site (RTS) in person.

  6. 6

    Get listed on the Oklahoma Nurse Aide Registry

    Once results are reported, OSDH adds your name to the Oklahoma Nurse Aide Registry (NAR) and you can begin working as a Certified Nurse Aide in any licensed long-term care setting. The public can verify your status at phin.state.ok.us/narswbsearch.

  7. 7

    Renew every 24 months with documented work

    Oklahoma certification lasts two years. To renew, you must provide proof of at least eight hours of paid nursing or nursing-related work during the prior 24 months. Renewal applications are submitted directly to the OSDH Nurse Aide Registry by mail or via the registry portal.

Becoming a CNA in Oklahoma

Oklahoma's nurse aide pathway is administered by the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) Long Term Care Service and the certification credential is formally called Long Term Care Aide (LTCA). OSDH sets the curriculum under OAC 310:677, approves training providers, maintains the Oklahoma Nurse Aide Registry, and accepts test results from three competing OSDH-approved testing vendors: D&SDT-Headmaster, Prometric, and the Health Certification Project (HCP).

Frequently Asked Questions: CNA Training in Stillwater

How many CNA training programs are available in Stillwater, OK?

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Our directory lists 1 state-approved Certified Nurse Aide training program in Stillwater, OK. All programs must meet Oklahoma's minimum of 75 hours minimum (Long Term Care Aide) and prepare graduates to sit for the D&SDT-Headmaster (primary), with Prometric and Health Certification Project also approved by OSDH competency exam.

How do I become a CNA in Stillwater, OK?

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To work as a CNA in Stillwater, you must meet a Oklahoma-approved training program of at least 75 hours minimum (Long Term Care Aide), pass the D&SDT-Headmaster (primary), with Prometric and Health Certification Project also approved by OSDH competency exam (Two-part competency evaluation: a written (or oral) knowledge test and a hands-on skills demonstration with five randomly selected skills, administered by an OSDH-approved testing vendor), and clear a OSBI criminal background check and Nurse Aide Registry abuse/neglect screening required before unsupervised resident contact. Most candidates complete the full process in 4-8 weeks (most 75-hour programs run 4-6 weeks plus 1-2 weeks for the exam and registry posting).

Are there free CNA classes in Stillwater?

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No Stillwater program on our directory currently advertises free tuition, but many Oklahoma 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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