← All CPR articles CPR FAQ

What's the difference between BLS and Heartsaver?

They both teach CPR, but they are written for different audiences. Picking the right one saves you time and money.

The American Heart Association offers two main CPR tracks. The names sound similar, but the audience, depth, and testing are different.

BLS Provider — for healthcare

BLS (Basic Life Support) is the standard for people who respond to emergencies as part of their job: nurses, EMTs, paramedics, medical and nursing students, dental staff, and many clinic and hospital roles. It moves faster, covers team-based resuscitation, bag-mask ventilation, and high-performance CPR for adults, children, and infants. Expect a written exam and a hands-on skills check.

Heartsaver — for everyone else

Heartsaver CPR/AED is built for the general public and the workplace: teachers, coaches, gym staff, construction crews, office safety officers, parents, and caregivers. It teaches the same lifesaving compressions and AED use, plus optional first aid, but in plainer language and without the clinical team focus. There is no written test pressure — it is competency-based.

Rule of thumb

If your license, job, or school requires a card, you almost certainly need BLS. If you just want to be ready to help — at work or at home — Heartsaver is the right fit.

Still not sure?

Tell us your role and we will point you to the right class. Read what to expect in a Heartsaver class or a BLS Provider class.

Ready to learn it for real

Practice this on a manikin, not a webpage

Hands-on AHA CPR & first-aid classes across South Louisiana — pick your city or book online in about two minutes.

Book a class