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EMS / Paramedic · NC

Can a EMT transfer a license to North Carolina as a military spouse?

Data as of May 2026|Source: Recognition of EMS Personnel Licensure Interstate CompAct (REPLICA) commission + DOJ Servicemembers Initiative
Published by the Honest MOS Editorial DeskVerified against DoD/.gov sourcesUpdated May 2026Editorial standards
✓ Yes — compact transfer

Yes. North Carolina is a member of the Recognition of EMS Personnel Licensure Interstate CompAct (REPLICA), so a EMT holding a multistate/compact license can practice in NC without re-applying. REPLICA covers cross-state response privileges, not full license portability for routine employment. Spouses moving permanently may need state license + VAEIA portability.

Your state EMS licensing office in North Carolina

North Carolina Office of Emergency Medical Services (NCOEMS), Credentialing Section
oems.nc.gov/credentialing
North Carolina military-spouse provision

We checked North Carolina's emt licensing rules and couldn't find a military-spouse provision written specifically for emts. That's usually not an oversight on our end: in most of these states the military-spouse licensing law runs through a separate division that doesn't cover this board, so it never reaches the North Carolina Office of Emergency Medical Services (NCOEMS), Credentialing Section. It does not leave you stuck — here's the path that still works.

  1. Start with the North Carolina Office of Emergency Medical Services (NCOEMS), Credentialing Section's compact/out-of-state route — North Carolina is a compact member (above), so a valid out-of-state license should transfer without re-testing.
  2. Invoke VAEIA 2022 / 50 U.S.C. § 4025a in writing, attaching your sponsor's PCS orders. It legally forces North Carolina to recognize your valid out-of-state emt license on a military move — no separate state rule required.
  3. If they can't finalize a permanent license within 30 days, ask for a temporary license — the statute requires the board to issue one so you can keep working.
  4. Keep your receipts: DoD reimburses up to $1,000 per PCS for relicensing, and MyCAA covers up to $4,000 toward portable credentials.

Call the North Carolina Office of Emergency Medical Services (NCOEMS), Credentialing Section to confirm the current military-spouse timeline before you move — and if you find an official NC provision we missed, tell us and we'll source it.

About the Recognition of EMS Personnel Licensure Interstate CompAct (REPLICA)

For EMTs, AEMTs, and Paramedics. Provides "day privilege" recognition between member states for EMS personnel responding to incidents that cross state lines or transferring patients.

Official compact site ↗

All EMS / Paramedic member states

29 jurisdictions. Tap any to check that destination for this profession.

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All compacts for North CarolinaEMS / Paramedic portability — all states →License portability checker →MyCAA: $4,000 for relicensing →
Published by the Honest MOS Editorial DeskVerified against DoD/.gov sourcesUpdated May 2026Editorial standards