*We do receive a small commission on some of these course links! Also, some may grant discounts. Thank you for the love and support guys!* NASM Certified Personal Training Course: nationalacademyofsportsmedicine.sjv.io/c/2369241/1829035/21810 ACE Certified Personal Training Course: acefitness.referralrock.com/l/JEFFPAYNE64/ ISSA Certified Personal Training Course: issa.sjv.io/c/2369241/872380/12162 NSCA Certified Personal Training Course: www.nsca.com/ Brookbush Institute Certified Personal Training Course: brookbushinstitute.com/certifications/certified-personal-trainer NCSF Certified Personal Training Course: nationalcouncilonstrength.sjv.io/c/2369241/909605/12472 Here's the Pocketprep link. It's worth it!: pocketprep.sjv.io/c/2369241/1637839/18999
Absolute legend. The amount of work that went into simply digging into all of these certifications is quite the accomplishment. Summarizing it all into one video is just the cherry on top. Fantastic work, I’ll definitely be sharing this when people ask about the best certifications!
This is truly a high-quality channel. You should have 1 million subscribers. I’ve seen many channels full of crap that have half to 1 million subscribers. People should really seek to better themselves and learn critical thinking skills so they can understand what is quality and what is garbage.
Thank you for this video! I narrowed my choices down to ACE & NASM. My short term goal is to become a CPT for my own knowledge but I could like to work with clients as a long term goal. I’d rather gain more knowledge on weightlifting than cardio which sounds like the NASM course would be better for that but they’re a lot more expensive than ACE.
Both courses are pretty solid! NASM is slightly better and more preferred in the US, but ACE is respectable as well. I guess it depends on how much the price difference matters to you.
NASM is the most recognized and ACE is full of a lot of non-real world information. Your probably never going to follow their protocols anyway so get the more popular one.
Very nice video. 🙌🏻 I would add... When having a "head to head" comparison of companies (not specific products/certifications) is important to mention who is for profit, and who is non-for-profit. Also, the second most important thing is scientific journals and actual advancement of profession where only ACSM & NSCA have pretty much the monopoly, that all other companies use for their text books. NASM and ISSA, last few years ACE as well, are heavy on marketing and buy 1 get 2 promotions, which i believe is not good on the long run for the profession. Also, their reputation outside North America varies, and its not that great as they have representatives/affiliates who are not delivering their materials in great way. At the same time, it very hard and long way to become affiliate with ACSM and NSCA, which speaks volumes. Cheers!
There’s some good points here! Thanks for sharing! The way I judge these courses is by how useful they would be to the average person who is looking to get into personal training. I like the NSCA and most everything they put out. That’s why they were featured a lot in this video. That said, their course isn’t good. In fact, I’d say it’s almost non existent. ACSM is the same way except I think a lot of their information isn’t practical for the average trainer. A bad course and information that isn’t practical isn’t a winning formula in my eyes. Basically, in my opinion what really matters is how beneficial the course/program/cert will be to the average person. I care about for profit, how respected the org. is, etc, but not as much as I care about how useful the course is to the recipient.
Hi, I just came across your channel and this video title was an attention grabber. 10 years ago I was very interested in physical fitness and bought the ACE personal trainer program after doing a lot of research on different certifications. Once I started with the program, I learned about NASM, but for some reason at the time preferred ACE. it’s good to see that I made some good choices in personal trainer programs, but I agree with you on some of the content from what I remember. I’m looking into this because I never received my certification from stopping and moving other things. Thank you for the great content. Is very informative extremely accurate and I can tell that you put a lot of work into this. After watching your video, I am very interested in once again, trying to achieve a personal trainer certification. The gyms that are near me have a lot of ACE and NASM as well ISSA certified personal trainers. Looking forward to watching more of your great videos and subscribing. Thank you very much!!!
This is and interesting well put together video. The one thing I notice from following your channel and a couple other channels about certification and degrees in this space that no one touched on the fact that their is no apprenticeship program for any personal trainer and group fitness instructors. It all trail by fire learning. This industry turn over rate can be lowered significantly if that was added and mandate across the country. this will also force certification companies to step their games up to meet the demands of the workplace.
Thanks for the support Chris! I agree that the lack of hands on experience is a problem. It should be a part of the certification process. I’ve always said that trainers should view that first of year of experience working in a gym as an apprenticeship or paid internship. Having talked to some of the people at NASM, ACE, etc, recently it’s my understanding they currently have no way of monitoring trainers working at various job sites. Also, what gyms would trainer perform their internships at? Which ones would count towards that and which ones wouldn’t? There would be a ton of work that would be involved on the education organizations part and the gyms part as well. I hope that at least one major company does figure all of that out though! I agree that it would help a lot!
You can use many ISSA courses to apply to a bachelors or associate degree. ISSA is associated with Lionel University. It is a fantastic accredited college focusing on fitness and health.
Thank you. I am currently taking a Kinesiology class. This information is helpful. I am considering becoming certified. Your information is in depth and gives great insight. I will share your sight with my classmates.
I downloaded all your forms, thank u so much you are amazing for this! i enrolled in a fitness training course here in the PHILIPPINES and my first class will be july 6.
Thankyou for your information. Glad I watched this before I enrol into ant programs. From your opinion which is the best in Asia. I live in Singapore, so NCSF is popular. But there's also AFA, Australian Fitness Association.
Can you recommend which cert would be best for me. I’m currently a massage thertherapist and I’m looking to implement strengthening exercises for rehabilitation purposes. I have the issa corrective exercise cert but I’d like to add things such as kettlebells to the arsenal.
I’d still base it more off of where you’re located than anything else. If you’re in the US NASM is probably gonna be your top pick for a basic certification
HI !!! Where would we learn how to give nutrition consults and how do we know what foods/plans to suggest to clients?? NASM? I live in FL. I think I am allowed to give consults but just not call myself a nutritionist. Your videos are awesome! I really don't want to be a trainer but I love offering nutritional advice and I figured I could get experience by becoming a trainer?
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it! In 2020 they actually made doing nutritional coaching legal in Florida so you should be good to go far as I can tell. This article tells the story: holisticcouncil.org/nutrition-laws/florida/ As far as how to handle to nutrition goes I’d look into precision nutrition and their recommendations. They do a good job with all of that.
Hi Jeff amazing content! With the help from your videos I was able to pass the NASM CPT so thank youuu!! Do you offer like a phone consultation if I would like some guidance on starting my online business? I know you have many videos with advice but I’m just wondering if this is something you would provide as well. Thank you!
Did you see ACE offers open book exams now? Is there a major difference in obtaining the Cert the proctored route vs. open book? (besides self-reward) Thanks for all your videos! Always helpful
Ya I figured they would be offering that soon. I talked about it when NASM started offering the same thing last year. Just like with the NASM certification the open book ACE exam and certification isn’t NCCA accredited. If you only pass the open book version it could hurt your chances of getting a job. It really just depends on what your employer is looking for. Here’s the video on NASM doing the same thing that breaks down more details. ruclips.net/video/9-O19bcGI3A/видео.html
If you can help me to know if i will take nasm to start my career and i am in 44 years old it is suitable? Will I be assigned to the gym? Knowing that I am passionate about anatomy, kinesiology, postural deviations and their correction, and developing nutritional programs. I have learned a lot about herbs and their benefits as a nutritional supplement, and I have a constant desire to learn.
You can definitely still start at 44! The trainer in my studio who does the most training is almost 60. It sounds like you definitely have the passion for it and that’s what matters most!
There are only a handful certifications that are credentialed through USREP which is the highest status for personal training certificates as well as the NCCA. ACE, ACSM, NSCA. If you're getting any other cert, you're getting ripped off. Do your research!
If you’re in the US in the NCCA accreditation that employers care about. In addition to the ones you mentioned NASM and the NCSF also have that accreditation
The reason I came to youtube was to learn more about NASM, because I am planning on taking their CPT and certified nutrition Coach, the bundle is a little over $1000. Please can you explain a little more about what makes giving nutrition advise illegal? Can I give nutrition plan and set up online fitness and weightloss coaching with these courses mentioned above?
The nutrition certification doesn’t give you any extra abilities to do anything legally. It definitely could be worth it though. Here’s a review of the NASM nutrition certification if you’re curious: ruclips.net/video/rNFeTqcq5vU/видео.htmlsi=EawaarbaUqetQ7_6
hey buddy great vid!, if i wanted to start part time organizing and leading group classes in a gym, do these cert help me in organizing a workout plan for the day to give out to the class or do i just make my own workout plans for my class from experience?
They don't. group classes are not that hard to run. Simple start. 4 stations, one push, one pull, one elevation, one core. 1:30 min per station. rotate 3 times, rest. Repeat with 4 new balanced exercise. 45 min done.
Hi I'm more in to the martial art so and I would like to incorporate weight with the martial art as well lie example you do your jab and cross the we do a compound movement like squat for folks who just want to workout, sweat and feel that they can move ,not so much for competition or so. So I was thinking of going g for the Issa certification, so what would be your best advice of what certification I should go for?
Thanks for the support! I’d still go by what I said in the video. It all depends on your location, study habits, test taking ability, etc. I would only recommend ISSA over other certifications if it’s preferred where you live, or you feel like you need/want a non-proctored exam. I think NASM and ACE are better overall programs.
It’s not NCCA accredited. It never will be because it’s open book or non proctored. The NCCPT exam within the ISSA package is NCCA accredited but it’s not as respected I would say if you’re in an area where you could need an NCCA accredited cert, don’t get ISSA. Get a different one
It’ll happen at some point in the next 3-4 months! I’ll be honest though their content is almost the exact same. I won’t be changing too much in the new edition because they haven’t changed much.
You said not much over 500, NASM quoted me 824 and ACE is at 694 with the test right now. Is that considered close to 500? has the price gone up since this video?
Ya they have recently raised their prices. When they run a sale, which is fairly often, the price goes down a bit and it’s closer to the $600-700 range. Other certification companies do offer cheaper alternatives as well.
Hi sir im watching your videos from long time and i love it. And i have finally decided to get into personal training i have a question Is bachelor's degree necessary to work in big gyms anywhere in the world? In india the salerys of a personal trainer is very less and u have no respect so im thinking of moving outside where bachelor's isn't necessary help would be appreciated ❤❤
Thank you for the support! You certainly don’t need a bachelors degree here in the US! A simple certification from any of the major companies I mentioned in this video is enough to get you started
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation what about Dubai or Canada I have a friend who lives in Dubai and he said u need any form of degree to work in big gym's
I like NASM, but wished I knew that the additional certifications like Nutrition and Corrective Exercise weren't really worth the money months ago when I bought it. I def got sold a bundle and wasn't told until after the fact that I was getting ripped off. I was given a big discount, but still spent more than I probably needed. Should have asked more questions but oh well, I'm kind of the "learn from experience" type of guy lol
Probably could've gotten by without it but you'll use it eventually. At the end of the day, NASM is a for profit business, not an institution for higher learning so treat them as such. It's one of the reasons why I usually say, if you have your own gym, don't bother with the CEUs. It's only helpful when you first start and f your employer requires it.
I am a certified yoga therapist specializing in back pain management and currently looking to expand my qualifications by pursuing a Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) program. My goal is to enhance my skill set and secure better job opportunities, ideally with a high-paying salary. However, I am unsure which CPT program would be the best fit for my career goals. I would greatly appreciate your guidance on selecting a program that is well-recognized, offers excellent career prospects, and aligns well with my expertise in back pain therapy. Thank you in advance for your assistance.
Thank You For your in-depth review of these Courses. I’m 66 and have been Training for most of my Life, I’m getting ready to retire and would love to stay active and “Give back” what I have learned in my 50 years of training. I was going with The course that is popular Abroad, but now I think you Changed My Mine. I am now a Subscriber, I live on Long Island and also Live In Northern Fla, at My Age I am a bit concerned if any would Hire me LOL, I am in Great Shape and most people think I’m a lot younger than I look. In your Experience how do us Seniors Do in Qualifying for Jobs? Does Ny and Florida Recognize NASM? I’m ready to pull the Trigger and Start my Course. Any input would be Helpful. Thanks again for your Hard Work putting this together. Much appreciated.
Hello, I have some experience in fitness as my own but don't have any academic background, I wanna go to this industry as personal Trainer and I live in Canada. would course is best for me to start?
I hear you! In Canada NASM and ACE tend to be solid choices. I’d consider either one of those if you’re serious about getting into the field. Your personal experience with working out will definitely still help you.
Good question! It seems like Australia handles certification similarly to the UK. They have different levels that you need to complete. Most of what I’ve learned about certification there comes from here: www.seek.com.au/career-advice/role/personal-trainer
Honestly, there’s no difference as far as I’m aware. At least that’s the case in North America anyways. It could be different in some other parts of the world. In the US and Canada you’re pretty much always referred to as a certified personal trainer
Ya they must have recently increased their prices a bit. When they run their bigger sales I’m sure it will be around $600 give or take. They usually run those a few times a year, Black Friday, cyber Monday, new years etc. The Memorial Day one right now isn’t anything special. $899 still isn’t a bad price, but I definitely understand that it’s not cheap.
Their bundles typically aren’t worth it. They do run sales pretty often that bring the price a bit lower. They have recently increased their prices though.
I am a yoga trainer and have certification in Ayurveda and panchakarma massage therapy certification. which personal certification you suggest me to do?
I would still base your decision based on your location primarily. If you’re in the US I’d lean towards NASM, if you’re in another country it’s very possible that a different one could be better
It’s a little confusing but they’re 100% not NCCA accredited. The course they offer alongside their ISSA CPT course, the NCCPT one is NCCA accredited. They explain that on their site but they definitely don’t want to highlight that issue.
Thanks for your video. I unpaused it and got the rest of the explanation. I'm about to leave issa, and have signed up with nasm, so thanks so much for your time and effort to help us.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation ISSA owns the NCCPT, so it doesn't matter, in the end you will have NCCA accreditation if you take the exam. But certainly outside of America, this aspect doesn't really matter anyway, everything from that top is good, what matters is the information you assimilated and how you develop after that.
If its more expensive than NASM and your goal is to teach general population, just go NASM. Its the most popular one and you're not going to follow the protocol anyway.
Good question! They all teach you the basics. I think the general misconception with these courses is that they teach you anything more than the basics. They all just give you the baseline information to get started. If you’re in North America NASM is probably your best bet, but it depends on your situation. Here’s the NASM links if you’re interested: Affiliate Link: nationalacademyofsportsmedicine.sjv.io/c/2369241/1829035/21810 Non-affiliate link: www.nasm.org/become-a-personal-trainer
It’s the best certification if you want to work with athletes. It’s required for most athlete training jobs in the US. Other than that, it’s really not too much more useful than any other cert though
That is often true. If I had done a “best certification for working in healthcare/hospital locations” ACSM would have won that one. I don’t think they offer a practical program for anyone else though.
Asia is definitely interesting! In India ACE is probably the safest bet for the money. In other countries it’s tougher to say. You’d probably have to look up each individual country and their laws/requirements.
Honestly, I’m not too sure about the Middle East! I did some research but couldn’t find anything too conclusive! If anyone knows, make sure to let us know!
Dude is SUPER knowledgeable if you're looking to go the PT route. He's a little over the top so if you're training general population you won't use his stuff as often as you'd like or think
I'm circling back to PT after being interested back in the 80s and doing a few decades of healthcare data and holy crap things have gone COMPLETELY off the rails. I absolutely wouldn't want anyone who respected any of these certifications to give me advice about my body. It's nonsense and now I know why so many PTs can only crawl like they have a ball gag in their mouth. They aren't just bad, they're actively harmful IMO.
Lol! They’re definitely not as good as they should be, but I don’t think they’re as bad as you’re making them out to be. Let’s hope they make them more practical going forward.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation I think I SHOULD be salty and more people need to! I'm 53 and spent a year going "full baby monkey" (The opposite of those Natural Flow guys...just using the same processes apes use 24/7 and ignoring EVERYONE else.) and suddenly I can breakdance out of bed and am painfree. I feel like I thought that wouldn't work because OBVIOUSLY we need to listen to an expert who's been certified and knows how bodies work. So I never thought to try this. I think that was a decades long mistake on my side. Now I feel like I finally have a foundation that makes sense. Shouldn't that be the MINIMUM of what I get out of PT? How do we make a cert that's better than nothing? Because ignoring them is how I got fit.
That guy is definitely one of the ones I was talking about. Here’s the formula they use in videos: trash NASM, tell you to buy their stuff instead, give one piece of useful information, repeat the process again.
@@Emily__yuri Ya they have recently raised their prices. When they run a sale, which is fairly often, the price goes down a bit and it’s closer to the $600-700 range. Other certification companies do offer cheaper alternatives as well.
*We do receive a small commission on some of these course links! Also, some may grant discounts. Thank you for the love and support guys!*
NASM Certified Personal Training Course: nationalacademyofsportsmedicine.sjv.io/c/2369241/1829035/21810
ACE Certified Personal Training Course: acefitness.referralrock.com/l/JEFFPAYNE64/
ISSA Certified Personal Training Course: issa.sjv.io/c/2369241/872380/12162
NSCA Certified Personal Training Course: www.nsca.com/
Brookbush Institute Certified Personal Training Course: brookbushinstitute.com/certifications/certified-personal-trainer
NCSF Certified Personal Training Course: nationalcouncilonstrength.sjv.io/c/2369241/909605/12472
Here's the Pocketprep link. It's worth it!: pocketprep.sjv.io/c/2369241/1637839/18999
Absolute legend. The amount of work that went into simply digging into all of these certifications is quite the accomplishment. Summarizing it all into one video is just the cherry on top. Fantastic work, I’ll definitely be sharing this when people ask about the best certifications!
Thanks man! I really appreciate that!
Dead serious this guy is a blessing for future cpts
This video put alot in prospective for me.. There is so much more to becoming a PT than passing a Certification Course..
You’re right! It definitely is a lot more than just passing a certification exam!
Passed my NASP cert, and I wanted to thank you for your videos. They were a huge help and really got me prepped for the exam.
That’s awesome! Congrats on passing and welcome to the field!
Nasm*
This is truly a high-quality channel. You should have 1 million subscribers. I’ve seen many channels full of crap that have half to 1 million subscribers.
People should really seek to better themselves and learn critical thinking skills so they can understand what is quality and what is garbage.
Thank you so much! I really appreciate that!
Just passed my ACE exam and your right not alot of cueing exercises mostly information regarding TTM and cardio information
Congrats on passing!
Thank you for this video! I narrowed my choices down to ACE & NASM. My short term goal is to become a CPT for my own knowledge but I could like to work with clients as a long term goal. I’d rather gain more knowledge on weightlifting than cardio which sounds like the NASM course would be better for that but they’re a lot more expensive than ACE.
im in the same situation thinking of going with ace just cause its cheaper
Both courses are pretty solid! NASM is slightly better and more preferred in the US, but ACE is respectable as well. I guess it depends on how much the price difference matters to you.
NASM is the most recognized and ACE is full of a lot of non-real world information. Your probably never going to follow their protocols anyway so get the more popular one.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducationwhat about Issa, is it much worse than nasm ?
I have NASM for $50 a month. Not bad (for me, not judging your budget)
Very nice video. 🙌🏻
I would add...
When having a "head to head" comparison of companies (not specific products/certifications) is important to mention who is for profit, and who is non-for-profit. Also, the second most important thing is scientific journals and actual advancement of profession where only ACSM & NSCA have pretty much the monopoly, that all other companies use for their text books.
NASM and ISSA, last few years ACE as well, are heavy on marketing and buy 1 get 2 promotions, which i believe is not good on the long run for the profession.
Also, their reputation outside North America varies, and its not that great as they have representatives/affiliates who are not delivering their materials in great way. At the same time, it very hard and long way to become affiliate with ACSM and NSCA, which speaks volumes.
Cheers!
There’s some good points here! Thanks for sharing! The way I judge these courses is by how useful they would be to the average person who is looking to get into personal training.
I like the NSCA and most everything they put out. That’s why they were featured a lot in this video. That said, their course isn’t good. In fact, I’d say it’s almost non existent. ACSM is the same way except I think a lot of their information isn’t practical for the average trainer. A bad course and information that isn’t practical isn’t a winning formula in my eyes.
Basically, in my opinion what really matters is how beneficial the course/program/cert will be to the average person. I care about for profit, how respected the org. is, etc, but not as much as I care about how useful the course is to the recipient.
Hi, I just came across your channel and this video title was an attention grabber. 10 years ago I was very interested in physical fitness and bought the ACE personal trainer program after doing a lot of research on different certifications. Once I started with the program, I learned about NASM, but for some reason at the time preferred ACE. it’s good to see that I made some good choices in personal trainer programs, but I agree with you on some of the content from what I remember. I’m looking into this because I never received my certification from stopping and moving other things. Thank you for the great content. Is very informative extremely accurate and I can tell that you put a lot of work into this.
After watching your video, I am very interested in once again, trying to achieve a personal trainer certification. The gyms that are near me have a lot of ACE and NASM as well ISSA certified personal trainers. Looking forward to watching more of your great videos and subscribing. Thank you very much!!!
Thanks for the support and thoughtful message! Both ACE and NASM are pretty solid so you chose well!
Are you currently working as a trainer?
Is NASM expensive certification???
Which one should i choose? NASM or ISSA??
I am in the middle of NASM training right now. It is a bit of a slog, but I am trying to learn as much as I can about the musculoskeletal system.
I’m considering purchasing this certification, what do you think of it so far?
It’s a bit of a slog. Unfortunately, all of these courses are. Keep studying and get through it! It’ll be worth it!
I am also in the middle of this training course. It is a bit of a slog, however, I am also learning a much as I can. 👍
Please keep making these very helpful videos! And Thank you for helping me pass my CPT exam!
Congrats on passing! Not going anywhere!
This is and interesting well put together video. The one thing I notice from following your channel and a couple other channels about certification and degrees in this space that no one touched on the fact that their is no apprenticeship program for any personal trainer and group fitness instructors. It all trail by fire learning. This industry turn over rate can be lowered significantly if that was added and mandate across the country. this will also force certification companies to step their games up to meet the demands of the workplace.
Thanks for the support Chris! I agree that the lack of hands on experience is a problem. It should be a part of the certification process. I’ve always said that trainers should view that first of year of experience working in a gym as an apprenticeship or paid internship.
Having talked to some of the people at NASM, ACE, etc, recently it’s my understanding they currently have no way of monitoring trainers working at various job sites. Also, what gyms would trainer perform their internships at? Which ones would count towards that and which ones wouldn’t? There would be a ton of work that would be involved on the education organizations part and the gyms part as well.
I hope that at least one major company does figure all of that out though! I agree that it would help a lot!
That's the problem. Ive hired certified and uncertified trainers, the skill level is usually negligible and they require the same amount of nurturing
You can use many ISSA courses to apply to a bachelors or associate degree. ISSA is associated with Lionel University. It is a fantastic accredited college focusing on fitness and health.
ISSA is pretty good! I’m not hating on them. I’m just trying to present things as honestly as possible
Thank you. I am currently taking a Kinesiology class. This information is helpful. I am considering becoming certified. Your information is in depth and gives great insight. I will share your sight with my classmates.
Glad you find it helpful!
I downloaded all your forms, thank u so much you are amazing for this! i enrolled in a fitness training course here in the PHILIPPINES and my first class will be july 6.
Congrats on getting started!
Thankyou for your information. Glad I watched this before I enrol into ant programs. From your opinion which is the best in Asia. I live in Singapore, so NCSF is popular. But there's also AFA, Australian Fitness Association.
Either is a good choice! NASM is an easier to follow course but the NCSF is also solid. I’d ask employers in your area what they prefer!
Can you recommend which cert would be best for me. I’m currently a massage thertherapist and I’m looking to implement strengthening exercises for rehabilitation purposes. I have the issa corrective exercise cert but I’d like to add things such as kettlebells to the arsenal.
I’d still base it more off of where you’re located than anything else. If you’re in the US NASM is probably gonna be your top pick for a basic certification
Thank you a ton , this was super helpful .
You’re welcome!
HI !!! Where would we learn how to give nutrition consults and how do we know what foods/plans to suggest to clients?? NASM? I live in FL. I think I am allowed to give consults but just not call myself a nutritionist. Your videos are awesome! I really don't want to be a trainer but I love offering nutritional advice and I figured I could get experience by becoming a trainer?
I am a cert health coach but do not have clients
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it!
In 2020 they actually made doing nutritional coaching legal in Florida so you should be good to go far as I can tell.
This article tells the story: holisticcouncil.org/nutrition-laws/florida/
As far as how to handle to nutrition goes I’d look into precision nutrition and their recommendations. They do a good job with all of that.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation Thank you!!!! :)
Muito obrigado pelas informações! Os vídeos estão ajudando muito, grande abraço!
Thank you! I appreciate that!
Thanks for the information appreciate you
You’re very welcome! Thanks for the support!
Thank you! Awesome work
You’re very welcome!
Hi Jeff amazing content! With the help from your videos I was able to pass the NASM CPT so thank youuu!! Do you offer like a phone consultation if I would like some guidance on starting my online business? I know you have many videos with advice but I’m just wondering if this is something you would provide as well. Thank you!
Glad you find the content helpful! At this time, I do not offer any consulting services.
Did you see ACE offers open book exams now? Is there a major difference in obtaining the Cert the proctored route vs. open book? (besides self-reward) Thanks for all your videos! Always helpful
Ya I figured they would be offering that soon. I talked about it when NASM started offering the same thing last year.
Just like with the NASM certification the open book ACE exam and certification isn’t NCCA accredited. If you only pass the open book version it could hurt your chances of getting a job. It really just depends on what your employer is looking for.
Here’s the video on NASM doing the same thing that breaks down more details.
ruclips.net/video/9-O19bcGI3A/видео.html
Thanks! I'm watching this from Korea.
Thanks for watching! I appreciate the support!
If you can help me to know if i will take nasm to start my career and i am in 44 years old it is suitable? Will I be assigned to the gym?
Knowing that I am passionate about anatomy, kinesiology, postural deviations and their correction, and developing nutritional programs. I have learned a lot about herbs and their benefits as a nutritional supplement, and I have a constant desire to learn.
You can definitely still start at 44! The trainer in my studio who does the most training is almost 60. It sounds like you definitely have the passion for it and that’s what matters most!
Do you have any thoughts about Mike Boyle's CFSC?
Thanks for all this information!!
I like Mike Boyle quite a bit actually. I’ve heard him speak at a few events. I’ll likely cover his certification at some point in 2025
There are only a handful certifications that are credentialed through USREP which is the highest status for personal training certificates as well as the NCCA. ACE, ACSM, NSCA. If you're getting any other cert, you're getting ripped off. Do your research!
If you’re in the US in the NCCA accreditation that employers care about. In addition to the ones you mentioned NASM and the NCSF also have that accreditation
The reason I came to youtube was to learn more about NASM, because I am planning on taking their CPT and certified nutrition Coach, the bundle is a little over $1000. Please can you explain a little more about what makes giving nutrition advise illegal? Can I give nutrition plan and set up online fitness and weightloss coaching with these courses mentioned above?
The nutrition certification doesn’t give you any extra abilities to do anything legally. It definitely could be worth it though.
Here’s a review of the NASM nutrition certification if you’re curious: ruclips.net/video/rNFeTqcq5vU/видео.htmlsi=EawaarbaUqetQ7_6
Really surprised at the lack of coverage of acsm which regularly seems to be head to head with nasm as the global heavyweight certs..?
It’s recently been covered on this channel. Here’s the video:
ruclips.net/video/EVIuOlhywKw/видео.html
I just don’t think it’s worthy of any rewards.
hey buddy great vid!, if i wanted to start part time organizing and leading group classes in a gym, do these cert help me in organizing a workout plan for the day to give out to the class or do i just make my own workout plans for my class from experience?
They don't. group classes are not that hard to run. Simple start. 4 stations, one push, one pull, one elevation, one core. 1:30 min per station. rotate 3 times, rest. Repeat with 4 new balanced exercise. 45 min done.
I agree with Jon on this one
Hi I'm more in to the martial art so and I would like to incorporate weight with the martial art as well lie example you do your jab and cross the we do a compound movement like squat for folks who just want to workout, sweat and feel that they can move ,not so much for competition or so. So I was thinking of going g for the Issa certification, so what would be your best advice of what certification I should go for?
Thanks for the support! I’d still go by what I said in the video. It all depends on your location, study habits, test taking ability, etc.
I would only recommend ISSA over other certifications if it’s preferred where you live, or you feel like you need/want a non-proctored exam. I think NASM and ACE are better overall programs.
ISSA is NCCA accreditated now. Is it still a good choice? Currently for this month it is highly discounted.
It’s not NCCA accredited. It never will be because it’s open book or non proctored. The NCCPT exam within the ISSA package is NCCA accredited but it’s not as respected
I would say if you’re in an area where you could need an NCCA accredited cert, don’t get ISSA. Get a different one
Plz upload an updated study guide for NASM🙏🏽
It’ll happen at some point in the next 3-4 months! I’ll be honest though their content is almost the exact same. I won’t be changing too much in the new edition because they haven’t changed much.
You said not much over 500, NASM quoted me 824 and ACE is at 694 with the test right now. Is that considered close to 500? has the price gone up since this video?
Ya they have recently raised their prices. When they run a sale, which is fairly often, the price goes down a bit and it’s closer to the $600-700 range.
Other certification companies do offer cheaper alternatives as well.
it’s not much over 500 for just the test
I am ACE cpt certified. Currently working on PES NASM. I like ACE OPT model more though.
Hi sir im watching your videos from long time and i love it. And i have finally decided to get into personal training i have a question Is bachelor's degree necessary to work in big gyms anywhere in the world? In india the salerys of a personal trainer is very less and u have no respect so im thinking of moving outside where bachelor's isn't necessary help would be appreciated ❤❤
Thank you for the support! You certainly don’t need a bachelors degree here in the US! A simple certification from any of the major companies I mentioned in this video is enough to get you started
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation what about Dubai or Canada I have a friend who lives in Dubai and he said u need any form of degree to work in big gym's
I like NASM, but wished I knew that the additional certifications like Nutrition and Corrective Exercise weren't really worth the money months ago when I bought it. I def got sold a bundle and wasn't told until after the fact that I was getting ripped off. I was given a big discount, but still spent more than I probably needed. Should have asked more questions but oh well, I'm kind of the "learn from experience" type of guy lol
Live and learn, right? Honestly though, they’re good for CECs and having some extra knowledge in those subjects.
Probably could've gotten by without it but you'll use it eventually. At the end of the day, NASM is a for profit business, not an institution for higher learning so treat them as such. It's one of the reasons why I usually say, if you have your own gym, don't bother with the CEUs. It's only helpful when you first start and f your employer requires it.
I am a certified yoga therapist specializing in back pain management and currently looking to expand my qualifications by pursuing a Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) program. My goal is to enhance my skill set and secure better job opportunities, ideally with a high-paying salary.
However, I am unsure which CPT program would be the best fit for my career goals. I would greatly appreciate your guidance on selecting a program that is well-recognized, offers excellent career prospects, and aligns well with my expertise in back pain therapy.
Thank you in advance for your assistance.
Good question! Any of the certifications should work for your goals. I’d choose based on your location and study habits.
The video I didn't know I needed. It made me change my choice....
I’m glad you found it helpful!
Thank You For your in-depth review of these Courses. I’m 66 and have been Training for most of my Life, I’m getting ready to retire and would love to stay active and “Give back” what I have learned in my 50 years of training. I was going with The course that is popular Abroad, but now I think you Changed My Mine. I am now a Subscriber, I live on Long Island and also Live In Northern Fla, at My Age I am a bit concerned if any would Hire me LOL, I am in Great Shape and most people think I’m a lot younger than I look. In your Experience how do us Seniors Do in Qualifying for Jobs? Does Ny and Florida Recognize NASM? I’m ready to pull the Trigger and Start my Course. Any input would be Helpful. Thanks again for your Hard Work putting this together. Much appreciated.
Hello, I have some experience in fitness as my own but don't have any academic background, I wanna go to this industry as personal Trainer and I live in Canada. would course is best for me to start?
I hear you! In Canada NASM and ACE tend to be solid choices. I’d consider either one of those if you’re serious about getting into the field.
Your personal experience with working out will definitely still help you.
What about Australia which course is more certified there ?
Good question! It seems like Australia handles certification similarly to the UK. They have different levels that you need to complete.
Most of what I’ve learned about certification there comes from here: www.seek.com.au/career-advice/role/personal-trainer
Just curious - what's your take on Bayesian Bodybuilding Course..?
Honestly, I haven’t heard of it! I’ll have to look into it!
Can you please share your take on the Clean Health Physique Coaching Academy?
I’ve been keeping my eyes on some of their courses! Stay tuned!
If you're already certified, you don't need it. Why do you think you need it and what is your goal?
What about la escuela de culturismo Natural CPT from spain. Is it good?
I haven’t heard of that one! I’ll have to check it out!
Hi guys. I'm buying the NASM CPT course but there isn't anything in cart after I pressed buy. anyone meets same issue?
I’ve never heard of that happening. Is it better now?
Have you looked into the Poliquin Group certification?
No, I haven’t tbh. I’ve heard of poliquin though. It might be one to look into at some point
What is the diffetence between Certified Personal Training and Diploma in personal Training
Honestly, there’s no difference as far as I’m aware. At least that’s the case in North America anyways. It could be different in some other parts of the world.
In the US and Canada you’re pretty much always referred to as a certified personal trainer
Do you see any benefit in taking NASM and ISSA if you do plan to move abroad to Europe.
It definitely could be worth it! If you’re planning on settling in area, I’d check to see what certs they prefer in that specific location!
Can I ask you if you know about ACTION certification? It’s pretty cheap and is NCCA accredited. Do you know if it’s any good ?
I bought that. It has very good video classes you can use for life. But the text is not thorough.
I’m planning on looking into that one at some point!
How do you get NASM for not much more than $500? It looks like the lowest price right now is $899.
Ya they must have recently increased their prices a bit. When they run their bigger sales I’m sure it will be around $600 give or take. They usually run those a few times a year, Black Friday, cyber Monday, new years etc.
The Memorial Day one right now isn’t anything special. $899 still isn’t a bad price, but I definitely understand that it’s not cheap.
Yes, I was told the same by the NASM sales person who followed up on my online inquiry.
Hey bro , im beginner . I want to start my career in bodybuilding as a athlet and also personal trainer , shall i go for nsam now ? Im from India .
NASM and ACE are both good choices! I’d go with one of those! Good luck man!
NASM is being for $900 right now. Have anybody paid less than that? Should I consider a bundle with nutrition coaching? Thanks!
Their bundles typically aren’t worth it. They do run sales pretty often that bring the price a bit lower. They have recently increased their prices though.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducationthank you!
I am a yoga trainer and have certification in Ayurveda and panchakarma massage therapy certification. which personal certification you suggest me to do?
I would still base your decision based on your location primarily. If you’re in the US I’d lean towards NASM, if you’re in another country it’s very possible that a different one could be better
I have been receiving lately lots of info about Body Desing University, any thoughts about them? Thank you!
I’ve never heard of them! It’s something I’ll have to look into!
Hey can u tell me which would be the best course to do if i want to get a job in usa from india?
Nasm
Ya probably NASM
What are your thoughts on the NESTA pt certification?
I’ve heard mixed things about it over the years. I may cover it at some point on the channel. We shall see! Thanks for the support!
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation no problem. Thank you for the GREAT content!
The ISSA says on their website that they are NCCA accredited. Are you sure they're not?
It’s a little confusing but they’re 100% not NCCA accredited. The course they offer alongside their ISSA CPT course, the NCCPT one is NCCA accredited.
They explain that on their site but they definitely don’t want to highlight that issue.
Thanks for your video. I unpaused it and got the rest of the explanation. I'm about to leave issa, and have signed up with nasm, so thanks so much for your time and effort to help us.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation ISSA owns the NCCPT, so it doesn't matter, in the end you will have NCCA accreditation if you take the exam. But certainly outside of America, this aspect doesn't really matter anyway, everything from that top is good, what matters is the information you assimilated and how you develop after that.
Whether they are or not, you're not going to get turned away by gyms because its generally recognized. NASM is better, but ISSA might be cheaper.
May I know why on earth no one mentions IFBB certs????!!!
In the US they’re not really sought after. I’ve been a trainer for over a decade and I never hear about them.
What are your thoughts on them?
What about IFBB personal trainer? Course diploma.
I’ll probably cover that one at some point! I wouldn’t include it in this video because this one is about training general population clients
If its more expensive than NASM and your goal is to teach general population, just go NASM. Its the most popular one and you're not going to follow the protocol anyway.
Jeff, why arent your new videos coming more often??
One coming very soon!
which one is the best if I am from Hungary?😅
Good question! I’m not too sure! Probably ACE or NASM. If there’s any chance you’d eventually come the to US, NASM is likely the best.
Are there any pre-requisite for nasm cpt?
You need to have a high school diploma or GED. And a CPR/AED/First aid certification.
Wait so who do I go to to learn the basics? In North America.
Good question! They all teach you the basics. I think the general misconception with these courses is that they teach you anything more than the basics. They all just give you the baseline information to get started.
If you’re in North America NASM is probably your best bet, but it depends on your situation.
Here’s the NASM links if you’re interested:
Affiliate Link: nationalacademyofsportsmedicine.sjv.io/c/2369241/1829035/21810
Non-affiliate link: www.nasm.org/become-a-personal-trainer
Go NASM. It will get you started, but the truth is after that an apprenticeship would be best.
@@GymOwnerJonwhat do you mean by apprenticeship? How can we do that??
Does anyone have experience with the CSCS certification?
It’s the best certification if you want to work with athletes. It’s required for most athlete training jobs in the US. Other than that, it’s really not too much more useful than any other cert though
lmao that McGregor cut was priceless hahaha
Haha thanks
Looking into.nasm any discount codes u can share?
Unfortunately, I don’t have any currently
You never talked about ACSM at all?
Here’s my review of the ACSM course:
ruclips.net/video/EVIuOlhywKw/видео.html
Long story short, I didn’t think it was worthy of any awards.
How about CSEP?
I haven’t heard of that one. I’ll have to check it out!
it seems to me that the healthcare industry prefers ACSM.
That is often true. If I had done a “best certification for working in healthcare/hospital locations” ACSM would have won that one.
I don’t think they offer a practical program for anyone else though.
You more than likely won't be working in the healthcare industry, the main question is what is your goal?
How about in Asia?
Asia is definitely interesting! In India ACE is probably the safest bet for the money. In other countries it’s tougher to say. You’d probably have to look up each individual country and their laws/requirements.
What about middle east?
Honestly, I’m not too sure about the Middle East! I did some research but couldn’t find anything too conclusive! If anyone knows, make sure to let us know!
What about Kazakhstan?
Honestly, I don’t know too much about Kazakhstan. If anyone watching has any insights let me know!
Sir i started ACE i hope its good over all?
ACE is pretty solid! Good choice!
ACE CPT ???
so i think im taking ACE then
ACE is solid! In the US NASM is definitely worth it as well!
Which course is most likely to get you a job?
That’s the real question
Like I mentioned in the video, that depends on where you live. NASM is probably the best choice in the US. It varies country to country though
Brookbush CPT?
Seems more advanced content wise than the others
Yes it is, I agree.
Dude is SUPER knowledgeable if you're looking to go the PT route. He's a little over the top so if you're training general population you won't use his stuff as often as you'd like or think
I'm circling back to PT after being interested back in the 80s and doing a few decades of healthcare data and holy crap things have gone COMPLETELY off the rails.
I absolutely wouldn't want anyone who respected any of these certifications to give me advice about my body. It's nonsense and now I know why so many PTs can only crawl like they have a ball gag in their mouth. They aren't just bad, they're actively harmful IMO.
Lol! They’re definitely not as good as they should be, but I don’t think they’re as bad as you’re making them out to be.
Let’s hope they make them more practical going forward.
@@SortaHealthyTrainerEducation I think I SHOULD be salty and more people need to! I'm 53 and spent a year going "full baby monkey" (The opposite of those Natural Flow guys...just using the same processes apes use 24/7 and ignoring EVERYONE else.) and suddenly I can breakdance out of bed and am painfree.
I feel like I thought that wouldn't work because OBVIOUSLY we need to listen to an expert who's been certified and knows how bodies work. So I never thought to try this. I think that was a decades long mistake on my side.
Now I feel like I finally have a foundation that makes sense. Shouldn't that be the MINIMUM of what I get out of PT? How do we make a cert that's better than nothing? Because ignoring them is how I got fit.
I guess all continents need certified trainers except one 😢
Iol well I don’t know about Antarctica
@showupfitness 14:40
I guess that’s you 😂
That guy is definitely one of the ones I was talking about.
Here’s the formula they use in videos: trash NASM, tell you to buy their stuff instead, give one piece of useful information, repeat the process again.
Good video
Thank you! I appreciate that!
Nasm is hard
It’s pretty tough for most! That’s true!
Where are you finding them for $500?? Issa and ace I’m seeing over $900 for basics cpt
@@Emily__yuri Ya they have recently raised their prices. When they run a sale, which is fairly often, the price goes down a bit and it’s closer to the $600-700 range.
Other certification companies do offer cheaper alternatives as well.
💯💯💯
🎉🎉
So they all suck?
lol ya kinda
Nasm🏋🏼♂️🏋🏻♀️🏋🏻🏋🏼♂️
It’s a good choice!