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Frequently Asked Questions
No, the NFPA 70E Electrical Safety & Arc Flash train-the-trainer program is a stand-alone trainer course and does not include instructor materials.
However, we do have a complete Arc Flash Package that does include this trainer program and ready-to-use presentations, quizzes, certificate templates, and more for in-house delivery.
You can view the full package here 👉 [NFPA 70E Electrical Safety & Arc Flash Instructor Package]
Yes. We offer substantial team discounts when purchasing multiple train-the-the trainer program registrations. You can view the discount tiers at the top of this page.
Team discounts are applied automatically when adding trainer registrations to the shopping cart. This means that you can get an exact quote for by simply adding the number of trainer registrations that you need to your shopping cart.
Arc flash trainers are most effective when they are internal personnel with direct knowledge of the workplace, equipment, and electrical work being performed. For this reason, employers commonly designate managers, supervisors, safety professionals, or experienced electrical workers to step into the trainer role.
These individuals already understand site-specific hazards, procedures, and expectations, which makes them well suited to deliver meaningful training and oversee practical demonstrations. An arc flash train-the-trainer program helps prepare internal personnel to formalize this role by building instructional knowledge, clarifying trainer responsibilities, and supporting consistent, compliant training aligned with NFPA 70E and OSHA expectations.
While there is no specific expiration date mandated for arc flash train-the-trainer certifications, NFPA 70E Section 110.2(D)(3) requires that workers be retrained in arc flash safety at least every three years. For this reason, it’s considered an industry best practice to recertify arc flash trainers on the same three-year retraining cycle.
Companies follow this approach to ensure they’re delivering the most up-to-date training to their workers and to maintain a defensible safety program aligned with NFPA 70E and OSHA expectations in the event of an incident or audit. [View Arc Flash Training Requirements]
Yes. The Arc Flash Train-the-Trainer program is designed in alignment with OSHA and NFPA 70E standards. These standards place responsibility on employers to ensure that trainers are knowledgeable and that arc flash training is delivered effectively.
The arc flash trainer program supports that responsibility by preparing internal trainers to deliver compliant instruction and oversee training activities aligned with NFPA 70E, while employers remain responsible for workplace-specific training, practical demonstrations, and overall compliance.
Whether you’re enrolling yourself, a single internal trainer, or multiple trainers, the sign-up and enrollment process is straightforward. Simply add the desired number of trainer program registrations to your cart and complete the secure checkout process.
After checkout, you’ll have immediate access to the trainer registrations through your account. From the group training dashboard, you can enroll trainers using several available options. The most common method is email enrollment, where you submit each trainer’s name and email address through a simple enrollment form. Each trainer then receives an email with login credentials and instructions to get started.
There are no formal prerequisites to complete the Arc Flash Train-the-Trainer, and completing our worker-level arc flash course is not required. The trainer program integrates electrical safety and arc flash fundamentals directly into the curriculum, ensuring trainers are aligned with the same NFPA 70E content they will be delivering to workers.
This program is intended for internal personnel who are designated by the employer to deliver electrical safety and arc flash training. Electrical supervisors, safety managers, maintenance leads, and experienced electricians are commonly selected as arc flash trainers because they already understand the workplace, equipment, and electrical hazards involved.
The course is structured to help employers formalize and standardize training delivered by their internal experts, rather than relying on outside trainers who lack site-specific knowledge.
Yes. Train-the-Trainer certifications are transferable between employers as they reflect completion of a standardized training program aligned with applicable regulatory and consensus standards.
That said, effective safety and compliance training must always be grounded in the specific hazards, equipment, and procedures of the workplace where it’s delivered. While the trainer certification demonstrates completion of a comprehensive program, employers are still responsible for ensuring their designated trainers understand site-specific conditions and can apply the training appropriately within their organization.














