No license required — anywhere in the US. Health coaching is unregulated at both state and federal levels. No state requires a government license to practice as a health coach. Professional credentials are strongly recommended but legally voluntary.
State-by-State Health Coaching Regulation Summary
No state in the US requires a government license to practice health coaching. The table below reflects the regulatory landscape as of April 2026.
| State | License Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| California | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| New York | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| Texas | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| Florida | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| Illinois | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| Pennsylvania | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| Ohio | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| Georgia | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| North Carolina | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
| All Other States | Not Required | No state licensure required for health coaching |
This table reflects state-level regulation. Always stay within scope of practice to avoid practicing medicine without a license. Nutritional guidance laws vary by state and may affect coaching scope.
<\!-- Section 2: Certifications -->What Certifications Exist for Health Coaches?
While no government license is required, several well-regarded professional certifications exist for health coaches. The right credential depends on your career goals, existing background, and the populations you serve.
NBHWC Board Certification
The gold standard. NCCA-accredited. Requires an approved training program (≥75 hours), 50 coaching sessions (25 individual minimum), and passing the NBC-HWC exam. Recognized by major health systems, insurance companies, and employers including Mayo Clinic, VA hospitals, and Cleveland Clinic.
ICF Credential
ACC, PCC, or MCC levels. Strong recognition in the broader coaching community. Requires specific training hours and documented coaching experience. Well-suited for health coaches who emphasize behavioral coaching and motivational methodologies over clinical wellness.
ACE Health Coach
Strong brand recognition. Accepted by many employers and corporate wellness programs. Emphasizes behavior change science, motivational interviewing, and evidence-based wellness coaching. Popular with fitness professionals expanding into health coaching.
NASM Health Coach
Popular in fitness-adjacent health coaching. Integrates exercise science with behavior change and wellness coaching fundamentals. Well-recognized by gyms, fitness centers, and corporate wellness employers. NASM branding carries significant credibility in the fitness-to-wellness pipeline.
IIN Health Coach Training Program
Widely known program. Not NCCA-accredited, but builds broad foundational knowledge across integrative nutrition, lifestyle medicine, and holistic health. A strong starting point for practitioners building a general wellness practice before pursuing NBHWC eligibility.
ICONIC Board Credential
Professional practice standards for holistic health practitioners. Recognizes ethical practice, scope of practice clarity, and continuing education commitment across your full holistic health practice. Complements specialty coaching certifications — ICONIC is not a coaching-specific credential but a professional practice credential for holistic practitioners.
Where ICONIC Board Fits
Health coaching’s lack of regulation is a double-edged sword: you can legally start practicing immediately, but clients have no way to distinguish trained professionals from unqualified providers. Professional credentials solve this.
ICONIC Board credentials tell clients, employers, and referral partners that you operate to recognized professional standards — not just that you completed a course.
Recommended ICONIC tiers for health coaches:
New practitioners with foundational training. Ideal for health coaches who have completed an accredited program and are building their initial practice.
Coaches with established practices and an NBHWC, ICF, ACE, or equivalent credential. Recommended for coaches who have been practicing 2 or more years.
Experienced coaches with advanced training, specializations, or leadership roles. Appropriate for coaches with clinical population experience, advanced credentials, or who supervise other practitioners.
ICONIC Board is particularly valuable for health coaches who: work with clinical populations (cancer, chronic disease, post-op), partner with healthcare systems or integrate into clinical care teams, bill insurance or HSA/FSA clients, want professional recognition that positions them above the crowded uncredentialed market, or plan to build multi-practitioner practices.
A health coach can support behavior change, lifestyle habits, and wellness goals. Diagnosing conditions, prescribing supplements, or interpreting lab results goes beyond health coaching scope and into licensed clinical practice — which requires a state license regardless of your coaching credentials. Scope of practice matters even in an unregulated profession.