BY SUBJECT
Non-science background? You can still enter clinical laboratory science. Here's the full prerequisite picture for every credential pathway — MLS, MLT, PathA — and how to complete it while working.
If you have any non-laboratory bachelor's degree, Route 2 is your fastest path to MLS(ASCP) certification. Complete 16 biology + 16 chemistry credits from a regionally accredited institution, then sit for the MLS(ASCP) BOC exam. No MLS program enrollment required.
ASCP Route 2 Guide →NAACLS-accredited MLS programs (bachelor's level) admit career changers who have completed prerequisite coursework. The program itself is typically 1–2 years and prepares you for MLS(ASCP) certification. More structured than Route 2 but provides the full MLS degree credential.
MLS Prerequisites Hub →PathA is one of healthcare's highest-paid allied health specialties. Career changers can qualify with a non-science bachelor's degree plus the complete PathA prerequisite stack, including Organic Chemistry. Programs are highly competitive but accessible to motivated career changers.
PathA Prerequisites Guide →Some career changers enter as Medical Laboratory Technicians (associate degree) first, then bridge to MLS. This path gets you working in the lab faster but requires fewer prerequisites upfront. The downside: MLT salary is lower and the bridge adds time later.
MLT-to-MLS Bridge Guide →Starting from a non-science background, here is the recommended build order — designed to complete in 12–18 months studying part-time.
General Biology I & II. Start here — it's foundational and the most manageable intro to science prerequisites.
General Chemistry I & II. Overlap with Bio II if you can. Chemistry is the longer build — start early.
Microbiology + Genetics. Complete your 16 biology credits and add direct clinical relevance.
Biochemistry (or Organic Chemistry for PathA). Finish your 16 chemistry credits. You're ready to apply.
Self-paced, regionally accredited, and accepted where it counts. No waitlist. No semester schedule.