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First Aid Certification Changes in BC Explained

What the 2026 Transition Means for You

Summary
If you are an employer, an employee, or a job seeker in British Columbia, you need to understand the recent changes regarding occupational first aid requirements and certifications.

Standard First Aid will now be known as Intermediate First Aid (formerly OFA Level 2)

Emergency First Aid will now be known as Basic First Aid (formerly OFA Level 1)

The course names and certification names are changing. The course content remains the same.

When booking your next first aid course in BC, remember the new terminology: look for Basic if you need an introductory 1-day certificate, and Intermediate if your workplace requires a comprehensive 16-hour/two-day certificate.

Background to the changes

To create a more unified approach across the country, British Columbia has been steadily aligning its workplace first aid standards with national benchmarks. The biggest piece of this evolution involves a complete overhaul of course names and certification titles to align with the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) Standard Z1210.

With the Canadian Red Cross and other major training providers implementing a final wave of updates on June 22, 2026, it is time to clearly break down what has changed, why it matters, and how it impacts your certification.

From OFA Levels to National Standards

For decades, British Columbia operated under its own unique first aid framework managed by WorkSafeBC. Workplaces classified their needs using Occupational First Aid (OFA) levels:

OFA Level 1 (A 1-day course for basic workplace environments)

OFA Level 2 (A 5-day course for intermediate care)

OFA Level 3 (A 10-day advanced course for remote or high-hazard environments)

While this system worked well for BC internally, it created a confusing patchwork of standards for businesses operating across provincial borders. A “Standard First Aid” certificate from Alberta or Ontario didn’t perfectly translate into the WorkSafeBC system without additional jurisprudence modules or specific equivalency reviews.

To solve this, WorkSafeBC updated its Occupational Health and Safety Regulation to adopt national CSA Z1210 Standards. This framework officially phased out the “OFA” terminology in favour of three universally recognized tiers: Basic, Intermediate, and Advanced First Aid.

Beyond the names, this alignment significantly optimized course delivery. For example, under the old system, an OFA Level 2 certification required a gruelling 5 days of training. Under the modernized CSA-aligned system, Intermediate First Aid covers the necessary competencies within a streamlined, 2-day format. Meanwhile, the length of Basic First Aid (1 day) and Advanced First Aid (2 weeks) remains unchanged.

The June 22, 2026 Update: Retiring “Standard” and “Emergency”

While provincial regulations initially adopted the Basic/Intermediate/Advanced naming structure, national training agencies like the Canadian Red Cross maintained dual naming conventions (such as “Standard First Aid” and “Emergency First Aid”) to help transitioning students bridge the gap. However, that transition period is drawing to a close. Effective June 22, 2026, the Canadian Red Cross is introducing revised names nationally to ensure absolute compliance and consistency with CSA Standard Z1210.

Here is exactly how the certifications are changing:

Standard First Aid is transitioning exclusively to Intermediate First Aid.

Emergency First Aid is transitioning exclusively to Basic First Aid.

For any course ending on or after June 22, 2026, the historic terms “Standard” and “Emergency” will be completely removed from the physical and digital certificates issued to students. Your new certificate will solely state Basic First Aid or Intermediate First Aid, alongside your relevant CPR level (e.g., Level A or C) and AED certification.

During this transitional period, training partners are encouraged to list both the current and revised names on their public-facing websites and marketing assets. Seeing “Intermediate/Standard First Aid” or “Basic/Emergency First Aid” on a website helps learners easily identify that they are booking the correct, fully compliant course.

Do You Need to Retake Your Current First Aid Course?

No

If you hold a valid, unexpired certificate issued on or before June 21, 2026, your certification remains perfectly valid. Whether your badge reads Occupational First Aid Level 1, Emergency First Aid, or Standard First Aid, provincial regulators and workplace inspectors recognize these as fully equivalent to the new tiers until their printed expiration date. Because first aid certifications in British Columbia are typically valid for three years, previously issued certificates will remain valid until their expiry date. You will only transition to the new “Basic” or “Intermediate” certification wording when your current ticket expires, and it comes time to take a recertification course.

Old First Aid Certification Name / New CSA-Aligned Certification Name / Course Duration

Emergency First Aid / OFA Level 1 Basic First Aid / 8 hours

Standard First Aid / OFA Level 2 Intermediate First Aid / 16 hours

OFA Level 3 Advanced First Aid / 10 Days

Summary for Employers and Workers

This national shift represents a positive step toward clarifying workplace safety rules across Canada. For employers, it simplifies compliance—especially if you manage teams in multiple provinces. For workers, it means your safety credentials are far more portable and recognizable nationwide.

When booking your next first aid course in BC, remember the new terminology: look for Basic if you need an introductory 1-day certificate, and Intermediate if your workplace requires a comprehensive 16 hour/two-day certificate.

Private group first aid training in Metro Vancouver: Request a quote

Basic First Aid information and registration, Coquitlam

Intermediate First Aid information and registration, Coquitlam

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