California Physical Therapist License Renewal — CE Requirements and Deadlines

Editorial Note: This page covers renewal of a California physical therapist license, governed by the Physical Therapy Board of California (PTBC). Data on this page is based on PTBC sources and California regulations reviewed in May 2026. This page is editorially reviewed by an ARDMS-credentialed sonographer as part of AlliedLicenseGuide.com’s allied health licensing database. View the primary source at PTBC.
Who this guide is for:
  • California-licensed physical therapists approaching their biennial birth-month renewal deadline
  • Travel PTs holding a California PT license who need to plan around their expiration date
  • PTs whose California license has lapsed and need to understand reactivation requirements

California PT License Renewal — At a Glance

Renewal Cycle Every 2 years (biennial)
Renewal Fee $300 standard renewal — per 16 CCR § 1399.50(d)
Late/Delinquency Fee $150 delinquency fee added to renewal — total $450 if renewed after expiration
License Expiration Last day of your birth month, every 2 years — check your license for your specific expiration date
Grace Period None — practicing on an expired license is immediately illegal and subject to professional discipline
CE Hours Required 30 hours standard renewal; 15 hours for first-time renewal if paid on or before expiration date (new licensees in first 13–24 months)
Mandatory CE Topics 4 hours hands-on BLS (AHA BLS for Healthcare Providers comparable); 2 hours Ethics/Laws/Regulations (or CAL-JAM passage counts as 2 hours per CCR 1399.93)
Approved CE Sources PTBC-approved continuing competence providers
Online CE No cap on online hours — 100% of non-BLS hours may be completed online through PTBC-approved providers; BLS must include hands-on component
Renewal Method Online via BreEZe (preferred) or mail
5-Year Delinquent Rule License cancelled after 5 years delinquent — must reapply for new license; no renewal pathway — per PTBC renewal page / 16 CCR § 1399.98
PT Compact Not applicable — California is not a PT Compact member state

California PT licenses expire on the last day of your birth month on a biennial cycle. Every California PT has a different expiration date — unlike states with a fixed December 31 or January 31 deadline. See the At-a-Glance table above for current fees, CE requirements, and deadline details.

California’s renewal CE structure requires two mandatory components beyond general CE hours: 4 hours of hands-on BLS training and 2 hours of Ethics/Laws/Regulations (which can be satisfied by passing the CAL-JAM). There is no grace period after expiration. California is not a PT Compact member, so compact renewal implications do not apply.

CE Requirements for California PT License Renewal

Standard renewal (second renewal and beyond):

30 contact hours of continuing competence, including:

  • 4 hours — hands-on BLS: A mandatory state licensing requirement per PTBC. Must be comparable to the American Heart Association BLS for Healthcare Providers course. Any qualifying BLS course is credited at 4 hours regardless of actual course duration. The hands-on component is required — online-only BLS courses do not satisfy this requirement.
  • 2 hours — Ethics, Laws, and Regulations: Must be California-specific content, or satisfied by passing the CAL-JAM. Per CCR 1399.93, CAL-JAM passage counts as 2 hours of Ethics/Laws/Regulations CE credit — confirmed in the PTBC CAL-JAM announcement and the 2025 Sunset Review Report. If you pass the CAL-JAM, it satisfies this component; you do not need to complete a separate Ethics/Laws course.
  • 24 remaining hours: Any PTBC-approved continuing competence content. Up to 100% of these hours may be completed online through approved providers.

First-time renewal (new licensees only):

If you are in your first 13–24 months of California licensure and renewing for the first time, the CE requirement is reduced to 15 hours — provided renewal payment is submitted on or before your expiration date:

  • 4 hours hands-on BLS
  • 2 hours Ethics/Laws/Regulations (or CAL-JAM)
  • 9 hours other approved CE

If your first renewal payment is submitted after your expiration date, the full 30-hour requirement applies.

Additional CE rules:

  • PTBC-approved providers required: CE must be completed through PTBC-approved continuing competence providers. Verify provider approval before completing any course.
  • No online cap (except BLS): 100% of non-BLS hours may be completed online through PTBC-approved providers. BLS must include a hands-on component.
  • Alternative CE categories: Publishing a journal article (up to 16 hours) and attending a PTBC board meeting (up to 8 hours) have specific guidelines and caps. Consult current PTBC CE rules at ptbc.ca.gov/licensees/continuing_competency/.
  • Audit compliance: California conducts strict CE documentation audits. Retain all CE certificates throughout your renewal cycle.

How to Renew Your California PT License

Renewal is available online through BreEZe or by mail.

  1. Complete your CE hours before your renewal deadline — including 4 hours hands-on BLS and 2 hours Ethics/Laws/Regulations (or pass CAL-JAM)
  2. Log in to your BreEZe account
  3. Complete all mandatory disclosure questions regarding criminal convictions and professional disciplinary actions — incomplete disclosure results in an incomplete renewal and the license will lapse
  4. Attest to your CE completion
  5. Pay the $300 renewal fee by credit card online (or by check/money order/cashier’s check if renewing by mail)
  6. Submit before the last day of your birth month
Important: There is no grace period. A license is considered expired immediately after the expiration date. Practicing on an expired license is subject to professional discipline. If your license becomes delinquent, a $150 delinquency fee applies in addition to the $300 renewal fee. A license delinquent for 5 or more years is automatically cancelled — reapplication for a new license is required.

Delinquent and Cancelled Licenses

License Status Action Required Total Cost
Active — renewed on time Standard renewal $300
Delinquent — renewed after expiration Renewal + delinquency fee $450 ($300 + $150)
Delinquent 5+ years Licence cancelled — apply for new license Full new application fees

Per the PTBC license renewal page and 16 CCR § 1399.98, a license delinquent for more than 5 years is automatically cancelled. A delinquent license may be renewed anytime within 5 years by paying all applicable renewal fees and one delinquency fee prior to automatic cancellation. After cancellation, a new license application is required. Contact PTBC:

PT Compact and California

California is not a member of the PT Compact. There are no compact renewal implications for California PT licensees — PT Compact privileges are not available for practice in California and cannot be issued from a California license. California PTs who want to practice in compact member states must obtain full individual licensure in each of those states.

Practical Notes for California PT License Renewal

From the field: These notes reflect practical considerations beyond the official requirements — things that affect your renewal timeline and planning as a working PT.
  • Your expiration date is personal — based on your birth month. Every California PT has a different deadline. Check your license and calendar it proactively.
  • The BLS requirement is a state licensing requirement — not just an employer policy. 4 hours of hands-on BLS is mandatory for PTBC renewal. An online-only BLS certificate does not satisfy this requirement. Hands-on BLS courses fill up — plan ahead.
  • CAL-JAM satisfies the Ethics/Laws CE requirement. If you pass the CAL-JAM at renewal, it counts as your 2-hour Ethics/Laws/Regulations CE obligation per CCR 1399.93. You do not need to complete both. Many California PTs use CAL-JAM to satisfy this component efficiently.
  • First renewal is only 15 hours — but only if you renew on time. New licensees in their first renewal cycle (13–24 months of licensure) need only 15 hours if payment is submitted on or before the expiration date. Late first renewal triggers the full 30-hour requirement.
  • 100% of non-BLS hours can be online. California does not cap online CE hours beyond the BLS hands-on requirement. This provides flexibility for how you complete your hours — as long as providers are PTBC-approved.
  • Mandatory disclosure questions must be answered completely. California requires disclosure of criminal convictions and professional disciplinary actions on every renewal form. Submitting payment without completing these declarations results in an incomplete renewal and your license will lapse.
  • The 5-year cancellation rule is confirmed in regulation. Per PTBC renewal page and 16 CCR § 1399.98, a license delinquent for 5 or more years is automatically cancelled. Contact PTBC before that threshold if your license has been inactive for several years.
  • Travel PTs: California assignments require a full California license. No compact workarounds exist. If you hold a California license, renew it on time — letting it lapse adds significant recovery time and cost to your next California assignment.

Related Pages

Frequently Asked Questions

When does my California PT license expire?

California PT licenses expire on the last day of your birth month on a biennial cycle. Every California PT has a different expiration date — it is not a fixed calendar date. Check your license for your specific deadline. Source: PTBC — License Renewal

What is the renewal fee for a California PT license?

The standard renewal fee is $300 per 16 CCR § 1399.50(d). If renewed after the expiration date, a $150 delinquency fee is added for a total of $450. Payment is by credit card online through BreEZe, or by check/money order/cashier’s check by mail. Source: PTBC — License Renewal

How many CE hours are required to renew a California PT license?

Standard renewal requires 30 contact hours including 4 hours hands-on BLS and 2 hours Ethics/Laws/Regulations. New licensees renewing for the first time (on or before expiration) need only 15 hours — 4 hours BLS + 2 hours Ethics/Laws + 9 other hours. Source: PTBC — Continuing Competency

Is the BLS requirement really a state requirement?

Yes. 4 hours of hands-on BLS is a mandatory PTBC state licensing renewal requirement — not just an employer policy. Any BLS course comparable to the AHA BLS for Healthcare Providers course qualifies and is credited at 4 hours regardless of actual course duration. Online-only BLS does not satisfy this requirement. Source: PTBC — Continuing Competency

Does passing the CAL-JAM satisfy my Ethics/Laws CE requirement?

Yes. Per CCR 1399.93, passing the CAL-JAM counts as 2 hours of Ethics/Laws/Regulations CE credit toward your renewal requirement. This is confirmed in the PTBC CAL-JAM announcement and the 2025 Sunset Review Report. You do not need to complete a separate Ethics/Laws CE course if you pass the CAL-JAM. Source: PTBC — CAL-JAM

What happens if my California PT license becomes delinquent?

A $150 delinquency fee is added to the $300 renewal fee for a total of $450. A delinquent license may be renewed anytime within 5 years by paying all applicable fees. After 5 years in delinquent status, the license is automatically cancelled and cannot be renewed — a new license application is required. Source: PTBC — License Renewal Details

Can California PT licensees obtain PT Compact privileges?

No. California is not a PT Compact member state. PT Compact privileges are not available for practice in California and cannot be issued from a California license. To practice in other states, California PTs must obtain full individual licensure in each state. Source: PT Compact — Participating States

Disclaimer: The information on this page is provided for general informational purposes only and is based on Physical Therapy Board of California sources and California regulations reviewed in May 2026. Renewal requirements, fees, and CE requirements are subject to change. Always verify current renewal requirements directly with the PTBC before submitting a renewal application. This page does not constitute legal or professional licensing advice. Verify at PTBC →
Change Log: 2026-05-26 — Page created. Data based on PTBC sources and California Code of Regulations reviewed May 2026. CE requirements verified against PTBC Continuing Competency page and 2025 Sunset Review Report. This page is reviewed periodically for regulatory updates.

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