Trainer or assessor qualification cancelled? Here is what your RTO must do now.

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Table of Contents

Introduction

A simple, practical guide for RTO owners, CEOs, managers and directors who need to protect students, staff decisions, certification outcomes and registration risk after a cancelled TAE or trainer and assessor qualification.

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Why would someone read this blog?

  • Know what to do in the first 24 hours.
  • Avoid relying on an invalid credential.
  • Protect student outcomes before certification risk grows.
  • Document decisions before an audit asks for evidence.

The value for RTO leaders

This page is designed for a busy RTO decision-maker. It turns a stressful compliance issue into a clear sequence of actions.

It reduces panic

When a credential is cancelled, people often jump to blame, delay or confusion. This guide gives the management team a calm first response.

It protects students

The focus is not paperwork for its own sake. The focus is whether students were trained and assessed properly, and what must be fixed.

It creates audit evidence

The article shows what to record: credential checks, delivery mapping, validation, reassessment decisions and material change considerations.

If a trainer or assessor qualification has been cancelled, your RTO should immediately stop relying on that qualification as valid evidence. Then check whether the person still meets the current trainer and assessor credential requirements through another valid credential or permitted arrangement.

This is not only a staff file issue. It can affect training delivery, assessment decisions, validation outcomes, credit transfer, RPL, student certification and whether your RTO needs to notify ASQA of a material change.

Immediate management decision

Do not allow a person to continue delivering or assessing where a valid credential is required and the RTO has not confirmed they meet the requirements. Pause the risk first. Investigate properly second.

Why this matters now

ASQA has increased qualification integrity action against critically non-compliant providers. In serious cases, qualifications or statements of attainment may be cancelled where they cannot be relied upon as valid evidence of competency.

In its 10 June 2026 sector alert, ASQA also noted that some TAE qualifications issued by former providers Contract Me Pty Ltd, trading as Learning Options, RTO 88174, and Qualify Now Pty Ltd, trading as NextGen Tech Institute and formerly Australian Learning Academy, RTO 3202, had been subject to regulatory action.

RTOs should continue checking ASQA’s current qualification integrity updates because the list and regulatory position may change.

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For an RTO, the core question is simple: did your organisation rely on a cancelled qualification to make a compliance decision?

Common decisions that may be affected

  • Hiring a trainer or assessor.
  • Allowing a person to make assessment judgements.
  • Using a person for validation activity.
  • Granting credit transfer.
  • Accepting evidence for Recognition of Prior Learning.
  • Issuing a qualification or statement of attainment to students.

A fair but firm approach

A cancelled qualification does not automatically prove the staff member did anything wrong. Many people may have enrolled in good faith. But the RTO still has a duty to protect students and take corrective action where required.

RTO action steps

Use the steps below as a practical incident response pathway. The goal is to restore confidence that every affected training and assessment outcome is valid, supportable and properly documented.

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1. Pause the risk

Stop relying on the cancelled qualification. Reallocate assessment duties until eligibility is confirmed.

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2. Verify credentials

Check qualification code, issuing RTO, issue date, transcript evidence, USI evidence where available and any alternative valid credentials.

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3. Map affected delivery

List all units, cohorts, dates, locations, assessment decisions, validation activity and certificates that may be affected.

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4. Risk-rate the impact

Higher risk includes final assessment judgements, safety/licensing units, weak evidence, TAE delivery and already issued outcomes.

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5. Validate evidence

Use appropriately credentialed people to test whether assessment tools, evidence and decisions can still be relied upon.

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6. Correct the outcome

Arrange reassessment or retraining and reassessment where the RTO cannot support the original decision.

Simple decision flow

Stop relying on it immediately and open a staff credential verification record.

If yes, document why it satisfies the Credential Policy. If no, remove duties that require the credential.

Map units, cohorts, assessment decisions, certification and credit transfer or RPL decisions.

Validate assessment evidence. If unreliable, plan reassessment or retraining and reassessment.

Consider whether the issue affects your ability to comply and whether ASQA notification is required.

Credit transfer and RPL

If credit transfer was granted on the basis of a cancelled qualification, the credit transfer is no longer valid. The student may still be able to provide robust evidence suitable for RPL, but RPL must be treated as an assessment process.

Do not automatically convert cancelled credit transfer into RPL. Map the evidence against the unit requirements, identify any gaps, provide gap training where needed and reassess before issuing final certification.

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What to check

  • Which students received credit transfer based on a cancelled qualification.
  • Whether alternative evidence is available.
  • Whether the RPL assessor is appropriately credentialed.
  • Whether the evidence is valid, sufficient, authentic and current.
  • Whether gap training or reassessment is required.

Should the RTO notify ASQA?

ASQA has advised RTOs to consider whether a trainer or assessor qualification cancellation affects the organisation’s ability to comply with its obligations and whether it requires notification to ASQA as a material change.

This should be a documented senior management decision. Even where the RTO decides notification is not required, keep the reasons on file.

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Consider notification where

  • The RTO no longer has enough appropriately credentialed staff for one or more training products.
  • Delivery or assessment must be paused.
  • Issued student outcomes may be unreliable.
  • A large cohort may require reassessment or retraining.
  • The issue affects regulated, licensed or high-risk training.
  • The matter may affect compliance with the NVR Act or the 2025 Standards for RTOs.

RTO action checklist

This checklist is designed for owners, CEOs, academic managers and compliance managers to use in a management meeting.

✓ Appoint a responsible manager and open an incident file.

✓ Confirm the cancelled qualification details, including issuing RTO and date of issue.

✓ Check whether the staff member has another valid credential that meets current requirements.

✓ Pause duties that rely on the cancelled credential until eligibility is confirmed.

✓ Update the trainer and assessor matrix.

✓ Map affected units, cohorts, assessments, validation activity and certification outcomes.

✓ Review any credit transfer or RPL decisions linked to cancelled qualifications.

✓ Conduct validation using appropriately credentialed people.

✓ Decide whether reassessment or retraining is required.

✓ Communicate with affected staff and students in plain language.

✓ Consider whether ASQA notification is required as a material change.

✓ Record management decisions and keep all supporting evidence.

Common mistakes to avoid

Only checking future delivery

Past assessment decisions, validation activity and already issued outcomes may also need review.

Letting assessment continue

If the only credential relied on has been cancelled, assessment duties should be paused until eligibility is confirmed.

Assuming staff misconduct

Act fairly. The compliance issue is whether the RTO can rely on the credential, not whether blame has been proven.

Weak documentation

In an audit, your decision path matters. Record what you checked, what you found and what you changed.

Frequently asked questions 

Only if the trainer or assessor can meet the current credential requirements through another valid credential or through a permitted role under direction. The cancelled qualification itself should not be relied on.

Not automatically. The RTO should complete a documented risk assessment and validation process. If the RTO cannot rely on the original training or assessment, reassessment or retraining may be required.

The RTO should act fairly and avoid assuming misconduct. However, the RTO still needs to protect students, verify credentials and take corrective action where required.

Credit transfer based on a cancelled qualification is no longer valid. The student may need retraining and reassessment unless they can provide robust evidence suitable for RPL.

The RTO should consider whether the issue affects its ability to comply with its obligations and whether it is a material change. This should be a documented management decision. Seek compliance or legal advice if required.

Need audit-ready resources while you fix the issue?

VET Resources supports RTOs with training and assessment resources, RPL kits, LLND tools, policies, procedures and compliance support.

Official sources to monitor

RTOs should check official pages regularly because qualification integrity action can change over time.

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Disclaimer:
The information presented on the VET Resources blog is for general guidance only. While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee the completeness or timeliness of the information. VET Resources is not responsible for any errors or omissions, or for the results obtained from the use of this information. Always consult a professional for advice tailored to your circumstances.

Ben Thakkar is a Compliance, Training, and Business specialist in the education industry. He has held senior management roles, including General Manager, with leading Registered Training Organisations (RTOs) and Universities. With over 15 years of experience, Ben brings extensive expertise across audits, funding contracts, VET Student Loans, CRICOS, and the Standards for RTOs 2025.

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