
The RNC-LRN (Registered Nurse Certified in Low Risk Neonatal Nursing) is a core certification offered by the National Certification Corporation (NCC) for nurses caring for newborns in Level II nurseries, special care units, and step-down settings. The exam contains 175 multiple-choice questions (150 scored, 25 pretest), runs 3 hours, and costs $325. To qualify, you need an active RN license, 2 years of specialty experience, and at least 2,000 hours of low-risk neonatal care. As of 2024, there are 3,229 active RNC-LRN certificants in the United States and Canada — making it one of NCC's smaller but steadily growing credentials.

The NCC RNC Certification in Low Risk Neonatal Intensive Care Nursing from National Certification Corporation evaluates applied neonatal nursing knowledge, clinical assessment, and care planning within low risk neonatal intensive care settings. It is typically pursued by licensed registered nurses providing low risk neonatal intensive care nursing across Level II units, chronic care units, special care units, step-down units, hospitals, ambulatory settings, and home environments.
