IBBFA Standards · Evaluation Framework

Barre Certification Standards: how to evaluate any barre credential

Not all barre certifications prove the same thing. This is the framework for evaluating any barre credential before you enroll, before you hire, or before you trust a badge. Use it to ask better questions of any program, including ours.

Published by IBBFA, a barre-specific credentialing body since 2008
Short answer

A serious barre certification should test four things: knowledge, teaching ability, safety judgment, and current credential status. The strongest credentials require a written exam, a live practical evaluation that cannot be edited, public registry verification an employer can check, and a maintained Active status that shows the credential is current.

A certificate of completion proves a person finished a course. A professional credential proves they met a standard and can be verified. The difference matters most to the people who hire instructors and to the clients who trust them in a room. The ten standards below are what separate a verifiable professional credential from a certificate of attendance.

The ten standards of a credible barre certification

Any barre certification, including IBBFA, can be measured against these. Use the table to evaluate any program you are considering.

StandardWhat to look forWhy it matters
1Written examA knowledge test with a defined passing threshold, where a candidate can actually fail.If no one can fail, the credential confirms attendance, not competence.
2Practical examAn assessment of actual teaching ability, not just written knowledge.Teaching barre safely is a physical skill that a written test alone cannot measure.
3Live evaluationThe practical is assessed in real time, not through a pre-recorded video submission.A recorded video can be edited and reshot. A live evaluation shows real-time judgment.
4Public registryA public record where an employer can confirm the credential without trusting a PDF.A certificate file can be copied or altered. A registry lets anyone verify independently.
5Active statusA way to show the credential is current, not only that it was once earned.Studios increasingly care whether a credential reflects current professional standing.
6CEC recognitionNamed continuing education providers with exact credit amounts that can be verified.Vague recognition language means little. Named providers and amounts can be confirmed.
7Curriculum hoursA defined number of training hours across stated competency domains.Hours and domains signal depth. A few hours of video is not the same as structured training.
8Scope of practiceClear boundaries on what the credential qualifies an instructor to teach.Responsible credentials are honest about what they do and do not cover.
9Transparent claimsRecognition, awards, and acceptance claims that can be independently checked.A claim you cannot verify is marketing. A claim you can verify is evidence.
10Renewal and accountabilityAn ongoing standard the instructor maintains, not a one-time download.A credential that never expires also never confirms the holder is still current.

Questions to ask before you enroll

If a program cannot answer these clearly, that is useful information. These questions work for any barre certification on the market.

Can I fail?

Is there a real competency assessment with a passing threshold, or does everyone who pays receive the credential?

Is the practical live?

Am I evaluated in real time, or do I submit a recorded video I can prepare, edit, and reshoot?

Can an employer verify it?

Is there a public registry where a studio can confirm my credential and its current status?

Who recognizes it, exactly?

For any award or recognition claim: who granted it, are the criteria published, and were other programs evaluated?

What are the CECs, precisely?

Which named continuing education providers, how many credits each, and where can that be verified?

Does it stay current?

Is there a way to show my credential is active now, or does it only prove I finished once?

The foundation layer beneath every barre method

There is a distinction that explains why these standards matter. Barre has a foundation layer and a method layer.

The method layer is the branded formats: studio programs, franchise styles, signature sequences. Each teaches a particular way of doing barre. The foundation layer is the underlying competence every barre instructor needs regardless of brand: anatomy, biomechanics, cueing, class design, safety, scope of practice, and real-time room management.

Method layer Branded barre formats and signature styles. Each teaches its own technique, music, and sequencing.
Foundation layer The core barre competence that underlies every method. This is what IBBFA defines, tests, and verifies.

A method certificate proves you learned one brand's style. A foundation credential proves you have the underlying competence to teach barre safely in any setting. IBBFA does not compete with the method programs. IBBFA verifies the foundation layer beneath them: the foundation credential every barre method is built on.

How the IBBFA credential meets each standard

We hold ourselves to the same framework. Here is how the Certified Barre Instructor (CBI) credential measures against the ten standards.

1

Written exam

A 60-question written exam drawn from a 300-question bank, with a 70% passing threshold. Candidates can fail.

2

Practical exam

A required practical evaluation of actual teaching, separate from the written exam.

3

Live evaluation

The practical is conducted live with a credentialed Master Instructor. It is not a recorded video submission and cannot be edited. Why live evaluation matters.

4

Public registry

Every credential is verifiable in the public IBBFA registry. Employers can confirm status without a PDF. Verify a credential.

5

Active status

Credentials carry a renewable Active status that reflects current professional standing.

6

CEC recognition

Recognized by 7 continuing education providers with defined credit amounts: ACE, NASM, AFAA, ISSA, CanFitPro, NPCP, and AUSactive. Also endorsed by REPs UK as an Endorsed Qualification.

7

Curriculum hours

A 35-hour curriculum across technique, anatomy, cueing, safety, and class design.

8

Scope of practice

Clearly defined scope, with population-specific specialties handled by separate specialty credentials.

9

Transparent claims

Recognition and CEC claims are tied to named providers and a public registry, so they can be independently verified.

10

Renewal and accountability

Active status is maintained over time, so the credential reflects current standing rather than a one-time completion.

How to verify these claims

A standard we hold others to, we apply to ourselves. Every claim IBBFA makes can be checked against an independent or named source. Here is where to confirm each one.

IBBFA claimWhere to verify it
Operating since 2008Organization history on the IBBFA About page.
7,000+ certified instructorsThe public credential registry at ibbfa.org/verify.
40+ countriesInstructor locations in the public registry.
Written exam, 60 questions, 70% thresholdThe exam standard described on this page and on the CBI credential page.
Live practical evaluationHow the live practical works, on the live practical vs video page.
Public registry verificationSearch any credential directly at ibbfa.org/verify.
Recognized by 7 named CEC providersEach provider lists IBBFA in its own continuing-education directory: ACE, NASM, AFAA, ISSA, CanFitPro, NPCP, and AUSactive.
REPs UK Endorsed QualificationThe Register of Exercise Professionals (UK) endorsement record.

Ready to earn a credential that meets the standard?

The Certified Barre Instructor credential is built around every standard on this page. Enrollment and full program details are on BarreCertification.com.

Or verify an existing IBBFA credential in the public registry.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a barre certification credible?
A credible barre certification tests knowledge, teaching ability, safety judgment, and current credential status. In practice that means a written exam with a passing threshold, a live practical evaluation that cannot be edited, public registry verification an employer can check, named CEC providers with defined credits, and a maintained Active status. A program that has none of these confirms attendance rather than competence.
Can you fail a barre certification?
With a serious credential, yes. If a program cannot fail anyone, the credential proves that a person paid and attended, not that they met a standard. The IBBFA CBI requires passing a 60-question written exam (70% threshold, drawn from a 300-question bank) and a live practical evaluation. Candidates can fail, which is what gives the credential value to employers.
What is a public registry, and why does it matter?
A public registry is a record where anyone, including a studio owner or client, can confirm an instructor's credential and its current status without relying on a document the instructor provides. A certificate file can be copied or edited. A registry entry can be verified independently. IBBFA maintains a public registry at ibbfa.org/verify.
What does Active status mean?
Active status shows that a credential reflects current professional standing, not only that it was earned at some point in the past. A credential that never expires also never confirms the holder is still current. Active status, maintained over time, lets an employer see that the instructor's credential is current today.
Is a lifetime certificate enough?
A lifetime certificate is convenient, but convenience is not the same as current or verifiable. A lifetime certificate proves a person finished a course once. It does not, on its own, show current standing or let an employer verify status independently. Many studios increasingly prefer a credential they can confirm is active now, which is why public registry verification and Active status have become professional expectations.

Last updated: June 2026 · Reviewed quarterly