Continuing Education Courses Online: 2026 Guide to Accepted CEU Providers

Continuing education courses online 2026

Continuing education courses online are the most common way licensed professionals meet renewal hours in 2026, but only the ones from a nationally recognized CEU provider actually count toward a board renewal. Nurses, teachers, CPAs, and real estate agents each answer to a different body, and continuing education courses online that satisfy an RN in Texas will not transfer to a California teaching license. Accredited continuing education courses online from the ANCC, NBCC, IACET, and state-approved vendors like Ed2Go and RelatedEd run between $25 and $199 per course, and most professional boards allow 50 to 80 percent of renewal hours through asynchronous online delivery.

Continuing education is not optional for most licensed professions. Nurses, teachers, CPAs, social workers, engineers, real estate agents, and dozens of other occupations have mandatory continuing-education-unit (CEU) requirements tied to license renewal. Online delivery has taken over this market over the past decade, and by 2026 the majority of CEU courses in the United States are taken online. This guide explains how continuing education courses online actually work, which providers are accepted by which licensing boards, how to verify a course counts before paying for it, and what realistic pricing looks like across the main professional categories.

Quick answer

Continuing education courses online count toward license renewal when they come from a state-approved or board-approved provider. Pricing ranges from $10 to $60 per CEU hour, depending on the profession. Verified providers include CE Broker (healthcare), IACET-accredited providers (general), NASBA (CPAs), ANCC (nursing), and state DOE-approved platforms (teachers). Always verify acceptance with the specific licensing board before enrolling — an accredited course is not the same as a board-accepted course.

Continuing Education Courses Online: what you need to know in 2026

Continuing education courses online are the most common way licensed professionals meet renewal hours in 2026, but only the ones from a nationally recognized CEU provider actually count toward a board renewal. Nurses, teachers, CPAs, and real estate agents each answer to a different body, and continuing education courses online that satisfy an RN in.

Continuing Education Courses Online: what you need to know in 2026

Continuing education courses online are the most common way licensed professionals meet renewal hours in 2026, but only the ones from a nationally recognized CEU provider actually count toward a board renewal. Nurses, teachers, CPAs, and real estate agents each answer to a different body, and continuing education courses online that satisfy an RN in Texas will not transfer to.

What continuing education courses are

Continuing education (CE) refers to post-licensure or post-degree education that keeps professionals current in their field. Unlike initial licensure programs, CE courses do not lead to a degree — they lead to a certificate of completion that counts toward a fixed number of renewal hours. A registered nurse in California, for instance, must complete 30 contact hours every two years to renew the license. A CPA must complete 40 CPE hours annually in most states. A licensed real estate agent typically needs 12 to 30 hours per renewal cycle depending on the state. [1]

Historically, CE was delivered through in-person seminars and conferences. Over the past decade, online delivery has become dominant because it is cheaper, asynchronous, and faster to document. State licensing boards have adjusted rules to accept online CE in almost all cases, though some professions (surgical technicians, live-patient clinical hours for some medical specialties) still require in-person components.

CEUs, CPEs, CMEs, PDHs: the terminology

Different professions use different names for continuing education credits, and the distinction matters because each term implies a different accrediting body.

TermProfessionTypical accreditor
CEU (Continuing Education Unit)Most professions, genericIACET
Contact hourNursingANCC, state boards
CPE (Continuing Professional Education)CPAs, accountantsNASBA
CME (Continuing Medical Education)PhysiciansACCME
PDH (Professional Development Hour)EngineersNCEES, state PE boards
Clock hourTeachersState DOE

A course that is valid for engineer PDHs is not automatically valid for CPA CPEs. Professionals pursuing CE across multiple licenses (common for lawyer-CPAs, engineer-project-managers) need to check each separately. [2]

How to verify a course is accepted

There are three checks to run before paying for any online CE course:

First, confirm the provider’s accreditation. The strongest signals are IACET accreditation (generic), ANCC for nursing, NASBA for CPAs, ACCME for physicians, and state-DOE approval for teachers. A provider should list its accreditor by name with a verification number on the course page.

Second, confirm board acceptance for the specific state. Some state boards only accept courses from a pre-approved list. Florida nursing uses CE Broker. Texas CPAs require NASBA-approved sponsors. California real estate requires DRE-approved courses. The board’s website always lists the verification process.

Third, check the topic requirement. Many professions mandate specific topic hours — pharmacology, ethics, cultural competency, state-specific law. A generic CE course may be accredited but still not count toward a topic-specific requirement.

By profession: nursing, teaching, CPA, real estate

Nursing. The American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) accredits the largest share of online nursing CE providers. State requirements range from 20 hours (Alabama) to 45 hours (California, over two years). Top providers include Nurse.com, Elsevier Clinical Key, Medscape, and ANA Enterprise. Costs range from $10 to $25 per contact hour, with annual subscriptions ($60–$150) offering the best value for nurses who complete more than 20 hours. [3]

Teaching. Teachers must earn clock hours approved by their state department of education. Approved providers include Teachers Pay Teachers CEU, PD University, Virtual Education Software (VESi), and graduate-credit programs at universities such as American College of Education. Pricing is typically $50 to $150 per 3-clock-hour course.

CPAs. The National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) maintains a National Registry of CPE Sponsors, and most state boards require that CPE come from a registered sponsor. Top providers include Becker, Surgent, Gleim, and CPA Academy (free). Pricing on Becker or Surgent typically runs $300 to $600 for 40-hour annual packages.

Real estate. State real estate commissions maintain pre-approved CE provider lists. The McKissock Learning, CE Shop, and Kaplan dominate the online market. Pricing is usually $30 to $150 for a full renewal package, including the mandatory state-specific courses. [4]

Pricing and bundle packages

ProfessionPer-hour cost (typical)Annual bundle (typical)
Nursing (RN)$10–$25$60–$150 (unlimited)
Teaching$17–$50 per clock hour$200–$500 for 30 hours
CPA$10–$25 per CPE hour$300–$600 (40 hours)
Real estate$5–$12 per hour$80–$200 (30-hour renewal)
Engineering (PE)$20–$60 per PDH$200–$500 for 30 PDHs
Physician (CME)$25–$80 per CME credit$500–$2,000+

Per-hour pricing is almost always more expensive than a bundle. Professionals who reliably complete 15+ hours per year benefit from subscriptions. Those who only need one or two hours can pay per course.

Free and low-cost CEU options

Free CEUs exist in every major profession but are scattered and require digging. CDC TRAIN (cdc.gov/train) offers free public-health-oriented CEUs for nurses, physicians, and public-health workers. Medscape offers a significant volume of free CME. CPA Academy (cpaacademy.org) is a popular free CPE provider, though availability fluctuates. Free PDH courses for engineers can sometimes be found through IEEE membership or through professional societies.

Employer-sponsored CE is another frequently overlooked option. Hospitals, school districts, and large firms often pay for or provide CE packages as part of benefits. Checking with HR before buying individual courses can save hundreds of dollars per year. [5]

Keeping records for audits

Most state boards audit a random percentage of licensees at renewal — typically 2 to 10 percent. Audited professionals must produce certificates of completion showing dates, hours, topics, and provider accreditation numbers. A best practice is to save every certificate as a PDF in a dedicated folder organized by year. Some states (Florida through CE Broker, for example) automatically track the required hours, but the licensee is still responsible for ensuring the data is correct.

Red flags when selecting providers

Providers that should be avoided: those that do not list an accrediting body by name, those that offer unusually high hour counts for low fees (a 30-hour course for $20 is almost never board-accepted), those that use terms like “self-declared CEUs” or “honor-system credit,” and those that sell certificates without requiring any completion of material. State boards regularly publish lists of rejected providers — checking the board’s website for warnings takes one minute and can prevent a rejected renewal.

Frequently asked questions

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Sources

  1. National Council of State Boards of Nursing. CE Requirements by State. ncsbn.org
  2. International Association for Continuing Education and Training. IACET Accreditation Standard. iacet.org
  3. American Nurses Credentialing Center. Accreditation of CE Providers. nursingworld.org/ancc
  4. National Association of State Boards of Accountancy. National Registry of CPE Sponsors. nasbaregistry.org
  5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC TRAIN Learning Portal. cdc.gov/train
  6. Association of Real Estate License Law Officials. Real Estate CE Requirements. arello.org
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