NRCME Eligibility for Registered Nurse (RN)

A Registered Nurse (RN) is generally not eligible to become a DOT certified medical examiner on the FMCSA National Registry. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration requires examiners to be licensed in their state to perform physical examinations, and in most states the standard RN scope of practice does not include performing DOT physicals.

Colorado is the notable exception — FMCSA explicitly recognizes RNs in Colorado as eligible. RNs in other states must verify scope of practice with their state board, or pursue an advanced practice credential such as APRN or NP to qualify.

If you are ready to take the next step, start with our NRCME Training. We will guide you through the process of becoming a certified medical examiner with the National registry.

Are you another type of medical examiner? Click here to view full NRCME eligibility requirements.

What FMCSA actually requires

The FMCSA rule is scope of practice, not license title. To be added to the National Registry of Certified Medical Examiners, a healthcare provider must be:

  • Licensed, certified, or registered under applicable state laws, and
  • Authorized under those laws to perform physical examinations


For most providers — MDs, DOs, DCs, NPs, APRNs, PAs — performing physicals is clearly within scope. For Registered Nurses, it usually is not. State nurse practice acts typically reserve independent physical examinations for advanced practice nurses (APRNs/NPs) rather than RNs. That’s why RN eligibility is the exception rather than the rule.

FMCSA verifies scope of practice directly with the state licensing board before issuing certification. If your state hasn’t confirmed that DOT physicals are within RN scope, FMCSA will display this notice when you attempt to register:

FMCSA has not received verification from your state licensing board that the DOT exam is within the scope of practice for your profession. You may proceed with registration, but FMCSA must receive verification from your state licensing board before certifying you.

In practical terms, this means you can take the training and the exam, but you cannot perform DOT physicals or be listed on the public National Registry until your state confirms scope.

States where RNs can become certified medical examiners

As of 2026, the only state where the FMCSA has explicitly confirmed Registered Nurse eligibility is:

If you practice in a state not listed above and believe RN scope has recently expanded in your state, contact the FMCSA Help Desk to request verification:

Email (recommended): FMCTECHSUP@dot.gov
Phone: (617) 494-3003

What if I'm an RN in a state where it's not allowed?

You have three realistic paths:

1. Pursue an Advanced Practice credential (recommended). Becoming an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) — including Nurse Practitioner (NP), Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS), or Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM) — clearly authorizes you to perform physical examinations and makes you NRCME-eligible in all 50 states. APRN/NP programs typically take 2-4 years post-RN, and the credential opens far more than just DOT physical work.

2. Support a DOT examiner as a Medical Examiner Administrative Assistant (MEAA). If your goal is to work in the DOT physical space without becoming the examiner yourself, the MEAA role lets you handle intake, vitals, history-taking, documentation, and follow-up under the examiner’s supervision. Pass My Physical offers dedicated MEAA training for this role. This is a common path for RNs in clinics where the actual NRCME certification is held by an MD, NP, or PA.

3. Relocate or seek licensure in Colorado. If becoming an NRCME is a primary career goal, holding an RN license in Colorado does qualify you. This is a more significant step but it’s a real option.

Why is the scope of practice rule so strict?

FMCSA’s requirement protects two parties: the commercial driver and the public. The DOT physical exam is the primary safety check between a medical condition and a 40,000-pound truck on a public highway. The examiner must be qualified — under state law — to make independent medical determinations about fitness to drive. State nurse practice acts draw the line between RN and APRN scope precisely on this question of independent diagnostic and assessment authority. FMCSA defers to that state-level determination rather than creating a separate federal standard.

How to verify your eligibility directly with FMCSA

The most current eligibility check is always at FMCSA’s official site:

  1. Visit https://nationalregistry.fmcsa.dot.gov/register/medical-examiner
  2. Begin the registration process and enter your license type (RN) and state
  3. The system will display your current eligibility status


If you receive a “pending verification” message, you can email FMCSA Technical Support to request that your state board confirm scope, but the certification cannot be issued until that verification is received.

If you're eligible, here's the path forward

For RNs in Colorado, or for any RN whose state has subsequently been verified by FMCSA, the path is the same as for other eligible providers:

  1. Complete an FMCSA-accredited NRCME training course
  2. Register on the National Registry to get your 10-digit ID
  3. Upload your training certificate
  4. Wait 24 hours, then schedule the $80 NRCME exam at PSI or Prometric
  5. Pass the exam to be added to the public National Registry


Pass My Physical’s accredited NRCME training provides 6 hours of self-paced online instruction, 250 practice questions, unlimited timed practice tests, a downloadable study guide, and a same-day certificate of completion — everything needed to prepare for the NRCME exam, for $189.

FAQ

Q: Can a Registered Nurse perform DOT physicals?

A: In most states, no. The FMCSA requires medical examiners to be authorized under state law to perform physical examinations, and standard RN scope of practice typically does not include independent DOT physicals. Colorado is currently the only state where FMCSA has explicitly verified RN eligibility.

A: Each state defines RN scope of practice independently through its nurse practice act. Colorado’s nursing regulations allow RNs to perform physical examinations broadly enough that FMCSA has verified DOT physicals as within scope. Most other state nurse practice acts reserve independent physical examinations for advanced practice nurses (APRNs/NPs).
A: An Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) — including Nurse Practitioners, Clinical Nurse Specialists, and Certified Nurse Midwives — holds a graduate-level credential and broader scope of practice that includes independent physical examinations in all 50 states. APRNs are eligible for NRCME certification nationally; standard RNs are not (with the Colorado exception).
A: Yes. The training is open enrollment and provides valid CE credit for nurses. However, FMCSA will not issue NRCME certification unless your state board verifies your scope of practice. If your goal is to become an examiner, the more reliable path is to pursue an APRN/NP credential first.

A: An MEAA supports a Certified Medical Examiner by performing intake, taking vitals, recording history, handling documentation, and managing follow-up — under the examiner’s supervision. This role is fully within RN scope of practice and is a common path for RNs in clinics that perform DOT physicals. Pass My Physical offers MEAA training specifically for this role.

A: Visit nationalregistry.fmcsa.dot.gov/register/medical-examiner and begin the registration process. The system will display your current eligibility status based on your state and license type. For questions, contact the FMCSA Help Desk at FMCTECHSUP@dot.gov or (617) 494-3003.

A: Your state nursing board would need to formally notify FMCSA and confirm scope of practice. Once FMCSA receives that verification, RNs in your state would become eligible. This is a rare but possible scenario — Colorado’s recognition came through exactly this process.

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• Fully Accredited NRCME Training
• Over 99% Pass Rate
• Access Online from any Device
• Updated 2026 Content
• Read, Watch, or Listen
• Go at Your Own Pace
• Includes 250 Question Bank