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How to Renew Your ICC Certification: Deadlines, CEUs, and Common Mistakes

Levi MittagFebruary 14, 20267 min read
Disclosure: This post was written by Levi Mittag, founder of Building Code Academy. We provide study materials for the ICC® exams discussed. Building Code Academy is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the International Code Council.

Understanding ICC® Certification Renewal

I've watched hundreds of professionals let their ICC® certifications lapse. Most of the time, it's not because they failed to maintain standards—it's because renewal deadlines snuck up on them. After 26 years in the building industry and holding 19 active ICC certifications myself, I can tell you that renewal is straightforward once you understand the timeline and requirements.

Let me break down exactly what you need to do, when you need to do it, and the common pitfalls that can derail your renewal.

The Core Renewal Requirements

Every ICC certification requires you to earn Continuing Education Units (CEUs) within a three-year renewal cycle. Here's what you're working with:

  • Most certifications: 36 CEUs over three years (12 per year average)
  • Building Official: 42 CEUs over three years (14 per year average)
  • Some specialty certifications: Vary between 24-42 CEUs

The key is that CEUs must be earned during your active certification period. You can't bank them before your certification becomes active, and you can't count them after your certification expires.

Where Professionals Go Wrong

In my experience, most mistakes fall into three categories:

  1. Waiting until month 36: You schedule your renewal classes when you're down to the wire. Then life happens—an inspection schedule fills up, family obligations arise, or the class you want fills before you can register.

  2. Confusing which CEUs count: Not all continuing education counts toward ICC renewal. You need courses specifically approved by ICC. Self-study, in-house training, and conferences often don't qualify unless they're ICC-sanctioned.

  3. Mixing up certification types: Your B1 renewal requirements are different from your B2 or B3 requirements. I've seen inspectors take 36 CEUs for one certification and assume they've covered another. They haven't.

The Renewal Timeline: Work Backwards

Here's how I track renewals for my team:

Three years before expiration: Keep earning CEUs steadily. Don't cram them all in year three.

Two years before expiration: You should have 12-14 CEUs already earned. This is your checkpoint.

One year before expiration: Aim to have 24+ CEUs done. Plan to complete the remaining 12-18 CEUs over the next 12 months.

Six months before expiration: This is your buffer zone. You should be finished or very close to finished.

Three months before expiration: Enroll in your renewal application. This gives you time to correct any issues before the final deadline.

At expiration: Your credentials are renewed and valid for another three years.

Finding and Taking ICC-Approved CEU Courses

Not every course counts. Here are the sources I trust for legitimate, ICC-approved continuing education:

Official ICC Sources

  • ICC annual conferences and local chapter seminars
  • ICC online training catalog (direct from ICC)
  • ICC Building Inspector, Plans Examiner, and Code Official training programs

Approved Provider Networks

  • Your state or local building department (many offer approved courses)
  • University extension programs that partner with ICC
  • Continuing education providers that list ICC approval numbers

The CEU Verification Process

Every approved course should give you a certificate listing:

  • Provider name and ICC approval number
  • Specific CEU amount awarded
  • Course title and completion date
  • Your name and credentials

Keep these documents. You'll need them if ICC ever asks for verification, and you'll use them to fill out your renewal application.

Common Renewal Mistakes I See Every Year

Mistake #1: Taking the Wrong Course

I watched a B3 Plans Examiner take a roofing contractor course and assume the CEUs counted. They don't, unless it specifically relates to plans examination. Read the course description carefully. The title alone doesn't tell you everything.

Mistake #2: Forgetting About State-Specific Requirements

Some states layer their own requirements on top of ICC's. You might need extra CEUs, specific content areas, or proof of local code training. Call your state building board or department to ask. Don't assume your ICC CEUs are enough.

Mistake #3: Leaving Renewal Until the Last Minute

ICC renewal applications can take 2-4 weeks to process. If you apply with 10 days left before expiration and there's a problem, you might not have time to fix it. Your certification will lapse, and you'll need to re-certify from scratch.

Mistake #4: Mixing CEUs Between Certifications

If you hold both B1 and B2, you can't take 36 CEUs and split them—12 for B1 and 24 for B2. Each certification needs its own 36 CEU block. Some courses might count toward multiple certifications, but that's rare. Assume each certification is independent.

Organizing Your Renewal Strategy

Here's how I keep my team on track:

Use a spreadsheet: Track certification name, expiration date, CEUs earned to date, and remaining CEUs needed. Update it quarterly.

Set calendar reminders: Mark your certification expiration dates and set alerts at 18 months, 12 months, and 6 months out.

Batch your courses: Instead of taking one random course each quarter, batch 3-4 courses in the same month. It's more efficient and gets CEUs done faster.

Mix learning methods: Take some in-person courses for networking, some online for flexibility. A combination keeps you engaged and prevents burnout.

The Renewal Application Process

When you're ready to renew, you'll go to the ICC website or contact your regional ICC office. The application typically asks for:

  • Your certification number and name exactly as registered
  • CEU documentation (certificates or transcript)
  • Verification that you're still working in a relevant role (for some certifications)
  • A renewal fee (usually $150-300 per certification)

Pro tip: Use Building Code Academy's certification tracker to keep all your certification details organized in one place. You can log your CEUs as you complete them and never wonder where you stand.

Renewing Early vs. Late

You can renew up to 120 days before your certification expires. If you're on top of your CEUs, renewing early gives you peace of mind. Your three-year clock resets from the day ICC approves your renewal, not from your old expiration date, so renewing early doesn't cost you time.

If you're behind on CEUs, don't panic—but do take action immediately. Call ICC directly. Explain the situation. There are limited options for extensions, but extension requests do exist in specific circumstances.

What Happens If Your Certification Lapses

This is the scenario I work hard to help people avoid. If your certification expires and you don't renew within a grace period, you'll need to re-certify. That means:

  • Taking the full certification exam again
  • Paying exam fees
  • Spending 40-60 hours studying instead of 10-15 hours on CEUs

The difference in cost alone—not to mention time and stress—makes staying current a no-brainer.

Final Thoughts on Renewal

Renewal is one of the easiest parts of your career as a certified building professional. It's predictable, the requirements don't change, and you have three years to prepare. The professionals who struggle are usually those who treat it as an afterthought.

Make renewal part of your annual routine. Block time in your calendar. Get your courses done early. Keep your certifications active. It's that simple.

If you're juggling multiple certifications or struggling to find time for CEUs, our study platform helps you stay organized and find resources without the guesswork.


Disclosure: This post was written by Levi Mittag, founder of Building Code Academy.

ICC®, International Building Code®, International Residential Code®, and related certification names are registered trademarks of the International Code Council, Inc. Building Code Academy is an independent study resource and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the International Code Council.

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