The Respiratory Therapy Prerequisite Checklist- A printable planning resource for advisors and prospective respiratory care students. Respiratory therapy is one of the fastest-growing allied health careers in the country, and the students who reach a clinical program on schedule almost always have one thing in common: they planned their prerequisites early. Before anyone sets foot in a Commission on Accreditation for Respiratory Care (CoARC) program, they must clear a stack of foundational science and general-education courses—and the exact list, the minimum grades, and how recently the coursework was completed all matter.

This guide pulls those requirements together into a single advisor-friendly checklist, explains the credentialing path behind them, and flags an important 2027 examination change that every prospective student should understand before they apply. A printable checklist is included on the last page.

Why respiratory therapy is worth the planning

Respiratory therapists evaluate and treat patients with breathing and cardiopulmonary disorders—from asthma and COPD to patients on mechanical ventilation in the ICU. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the field is projected to grow 12% from 2024 to 2034, much faster than the average for all occupations, with roughly 8,800 openings each year and a 2024 median wage of about $80,450. The typical entry point is an associate degree, and respiratory therapists are licensed in every state except Alaska.

Because demand is strong and entry-level seats are competitive, the prerequisite stage is where many applicants either accelerate or stall. Clearing it efficiently—online and self-paced where possible—keeps a candidate on track for the next admissions cycle. See the full BLS Occupational Outlook for respiratory therapists.

The path: accreditation, credential, license

Prerequisites exist to prepare students for a regulated pathway. Understanding that pathway helps advisors explain why each course is required:

  • Accredited program (CoARC). Students must graduate from a program accredited by CoARC. An associate degree is the minimum; many programs now offer or require a bachelor’s. Find a CoARC-accredited program.
  • National credential (NBRC). Graduates sit for examinations from the National Board for Respiratory Care to earn the Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT) and Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credentials.
  • State license. Almost every state requires an NBRC credential—increasingly the RRT—before granting a license to practice.
  • Professional home (AARC). The American Association for Respiratory Care is the field’s professional society and a useful resource for students exploring the career.
⚠  Important: the 2027 examination changeBeginning January 1, 2027, the NBRC replaces the current TMC plus Clinical Simulation Examination sequence with a single Respiratory Therapy (RT) Examination: a lower cut score earns the CRT, a higher cut score earns the RRT. The older “CRT-to-Registry” admission route is being eliminated on December 31, 2026. The practical takeaway for applicants is unchanged and even more important—plan to graduate from a CoARC-accredited program, which means clearing prerequisites first.

The core prerequisite checklist

Requirements vary by program, but the courses below appear on the overwhelming majority of CoARC program prerequisite lists. Use this as a master planning grid, then confirm the specifics with each target program’s admissions page. Most programs require a grade of C or better in each course and a prerequisite GPA in the 2.5–3.0 range.

CourseWhy it matters / notesTypical status
Anatomy & Physiology IWith lab. Foundation for cardiopulmonary anatomy.Required
Anatomy & Physiology IIWith lab. Respiratory, cardiovascular & renal systems.Required
MicrobiologyOften with lab. Infection control & pathogens.Required
General/Intro ChemistryWith lab. Gas laws, acid-base balance.Required
College Algebra (or higher)Math foundation for dosing & calculations.Required
English CompositionWritten communication; often two courses.Required
Speech / CommunicationVerbal communication for patient care.Common
General PsychologySome programs accept developmental/lifespan.Common
Medical TerminologyFrequently required or strongly preferred.Common
StatisticsRequired by many bachelor’s-entry programs.Program-specific
PhysicsRequired by select bachelor’s-entry programs.Program-specific
CPR / BLS certificationHealthcare-provider level, before enrollment.Program-specific

How requirements shift by degree level

Associate-entry programs tend to keep the list focused on the core sciences plus English and math. Bachelor’s-entry programs frequently add statistics, physics, a second composition or technical-writing course, and broader general-education credits—often 60 credits of general education and prerequisites before clinical coursework begins. Because some states and employers increasingly prefer the RRT and bachelor’s preparation, mapping the longer list early gives students the option to step up without backtracking.

Grades, recency, and transferability

  • Minimum grade. Most programs require C or better in every prerequisite; competitive applicants aim higher.
  • GPA. A prerequisite or cumulative GPA of 2.5–3.0 is common, with science GPA weighted heavily.
  • Recency. Many programs expect science prerequisites (especially A&P) to be completed within the last 5–7 years.
  • Transferability. Coursework should come from a regionally accredited institution to transfer cleanly into a CoARC program.

Completing prerequisites efficiently

The biggest schedule risk is waiting for a fall or spring section of a single missing course. Self-paced, online, accredited prerequisites let students close gaps on their own timeline and start (or finish) outside the traditional semester calendar. PrereqCourses.com offers individual, transferable courses built for exactly this purpose. The links below point to the most common respiratory therapy prerequisites:

For the complete vertical, see the Respiratory Therapy prerequisites hub, or browse all allied health prerequisite courses.

Quick answers for advising sessions

Do prerequisites need a lab?

Yes for the sciences—A&P I and II, chemistry, and usually microbiology should include a lab component to transfer into a clinical program.

Associate or bachelor’s first?

Either can lead to licensure, but bachelor’s-entry programs add statistics, physics, and more general education. Map the longer list if a student may pursue the BS.

How long does the prerequisite stage take?

Full-time students often clear the core in two to three terms; self-paced online courses can compress that timeline considerably.

Does the 2027 exam change affect prerequisites?

Not the course list itself—but it reinforces that graduating from a CoARC-accredited program (which requires the prerequisites) is the only reliable route to the RRT.

PRINTABLE CHECKLIST

Respiratory Therapy Prerequisite Tracker

Student name: _____________________________________   Target program: _____________________________

☐   Anatomy & Physiology I (with lab)

☐   Anatomy & Physiology II (with lab)

☐   Microbiology (with lab)

☐   General / Introductory Chemistry (with lab)

☐   College Algebra or higher

☐   English Composition

☐   Speech / Communication

☐   General Psychology (or developmental/lifespan)

☐   Medical Terminology

☐   Statistics (bachelor’s-entry programs)

☐   Physics (select bachelor’s-entry programs)

☐   CPR / BLS for Healthcare Providers

Verify before applying:

☐   Grade of C or better in every prerequisite

☐   Prerequisite/science GPA meets program minimum (2.5–3.0)

☐   Science courses completed within program recency window (often 5–7 yrs)

☐   Coursework from a regionally accredited institution

☐   Confirmed target program is CoARC-accredited

Need to close a gap on your own schedule? Explore self-paced, transferable prerequisite courses at 

PrereqCourses.com