How to Choose a First Aid Training Provider for Your Team
The questions to ask, the red flags to watch for, and what a legitimate provider should always be able to offer.
A legitimate first aid training provider will (a) name their certifying agency without hesitation, (b) deliver hands-on practical assessment, not just video, (c) bring real equipment — manikins, AED trainers, BVMs — to on-site sessions, (d) issue verifiable certificates from a WSIB-recognized agency, and (e) provide a written quote with terms before asking for a deposit. Walk away from any provider who can’t tick all five.
Why this decision matters more than it looks
First aid training is one of those vendor decisions that looks simple on the surface — “find someone who teaches CPR, book it” — and turns into a problem only when something goes wrong. A bad provider might issue a certificate that fails an inspection, send an underqualified instructor, deliver content that doesn’t satisfy your industry’s overlay rules, or leave your team genuinely unprepared in an emergency. The downside risk is high; the price difference between a great provider and a sketchy one is usually under $30 per person.
Seven questions to ask any provider
1. Which certifying agency do you work under?
The answer should be one of: Canadian Red Cross, Heart and Stroke Foundation, Lifesaving Society, or St. John Ambulance. A provider who hesitates, gives a vague answer (“we have our own certification”), or names an organization you’ve never heard of is a red flag. The agency name will appear on your team’s certificates.
2. Can your course satisfy [my specific compliance requirement]?
Different rules apply depending on your industry. Be specific:
- Standard office or retail with 6+ workers per shift → Standard First Aid + CPR Level C (Regulation 1101)
- Daycare → Standard First Aid + CPR Level C (CCEYA O. Reg. 137/15)
- Healthcare or dental → BLS, not the general public CPR course
- Construction site → Standard First Aid + CPR plus possibly more depending on Regulation 213/91
A good provider will ask back — “what’s your industry, how many workers per shift, do you have placement or licensing requirements?” — before quoting.
3. Do you come on-site? What’s your minimum group size?
For groups of 4+ workers, on-site is almost always more cost-effective than sending people to a venue. The provider should be willing to come to your office, daycare, or facility, with a stated minimum (typically 4–6 people). If a provider only delivers at their own venue, that’s fine for smaller teams — but it limits your options.
4. What equipment do you bring?
For an in-person practical course, the trainer should bring: adult, child, and infant CPR manikins, AED trainers, BVMs (for BLS), choking simulators, and the assorted bandaging and splinting supplies needed for the scenarios. If a provider shows up with one manikin for ten people, your team won’t get the hands-on time they need.
5. How is the certificate issued and to whom?
The certificate should be issued in the individual student’s name (not the company’s), carry the agency’s name and certificate number, the instructor’s name and instructor number, and an expiry date. Most modern providers issue digital certificates that can be emailed directly to the student and downloaded as a PDF — convenient for staff who need to upload to a licensing portal.
6. What happens if a staff member fails the practical assessment?
It rarely happens, but it does. Ask: can they re-test the same day, or do they need to book a remediation session? Most providers will allow same-day re-tests for minor technique issues; serious gaps require a re-take. Either way, you want to know the policy in advance.
7. Can you provide a written quote with terms?
A real provider has a real quote process — written quote, clear per-person pricing, cancellation policy, what’s included (textbooks, certificates, travel time for on-site), payment terms, and tax. Avoid anyone who insists on verbal quotes only or asks for a deposit before sending paperwork.
Red flags that should make you walk away
If you see these — find another provider
- Cannot or will not name their certifying agency
- Offers 100% online certification “valid for any workplace”
- Prices that look dramatically below market (often a sign of corner-cutting on equipment or assessment)
- No reviews, no testimonials, no Google Business Profile, no past client references
- Won’t show proof of instructor certification on request
- Pressure to commit before you’ve seen a written quote
- Course duration significantly shorter than the agency standard (Standard FA in 4 hours instead of ~14)
- Certificate that doesn’t include an agency name, certificate number, or expiry date
On-site vs send-to-classroom
For most organizations the math is simple:
- 1 to 3 staff: send them to public open classes. Cheapest and easiest.
- 4 to 8 staff: on-site break-even point. Get quotes both ways and compare against productivity loss from staff traveling.
- 9+ staff: on-site is almost always cheaper per person and dramatically easier to schedule.
On-site also lets the trainer customize scenarios to your real risks — chemical splashes for a manufacturing floor, food choking for a daycare, ergonomic injuries for an office, fall hazards for a construction site. That contextual relevance makes the training stick.
Pricing benchmarks for Ontario in 2026
Use these as rough guideposts when comparing quotes:
- Open public CPR Level C: ~$35 per person
- Open public Emergency First Aid + CPR: ~$85 per person
- Open public Standard First Aid + CPR: ~$120 per person
- Open public BLS: ~$55 per person, $49 for renewal
- Private on-site Standard FA group session: $80–$150 per person depending on group size and location
- Private on-site CPR-only group session: $40–$80 per person
A quote dramatically below this range is worth a second look. Below-market pricing often correlates with: fewer manikins per student, instructors paid below scale (who tend to be less experienced), shortened course duration, or both.
What to ask for in writing before booking
Booking checklist
- Written quote with per-person pricing
- Certifying agency named
- Course duration in hours
- What’s included (textbooks, equipment, certificates, travel)
- Minimum and maximum group size
- Cancellation and rescheduling policy
- Payment terms (deposit, balance, invoice timing)
- Date and venue confirmed in writing
Get a quote in 24 hours
Life Safe trains corporate teams across Ontario — Air Canada, RBC, CRA, CAMH, Toronto General, Cirque du Soleil and 1,000+ more. Certified through Heart and Stroke Foundation, Canadian Red Cross, and Lifesaving Society.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the single most important question to ask?
“Which certifying agency do you work under?” If they can’t name a recognized one (Red Cross, Heart and Stroke, Lifesaving Society, St. John Ambulance), keep looking.
Is on-site always better?
For 4+ staff, almost always. For 1–3, public open classes are usually cheaper and easier.
How much should I budget?
$80–$150 per person for on-site Standard FA in 2026. CPR-only is lower; healthcare BLS is somewhere between.
What if a staff member fails?
A good provider will tell you the re-test policy in advance — usually same-day for minor issues, separate session for serious gaps.
