ICF is creating a new quality standard for mentor coaching education programs. Here is what has been announced, what it means for coaches choosing training, and what we are still waiting to learn.
On April 13, 2026, ICF announced the Advanced Accreditation in Mentor Coaching alongside the launch of the Mentor Coach Qualification (MCQ). Here is what we know so far.
The Advanced Accreditation in Mentor Coaching is a new, voluntary accreditation for education programs - not for individual coaches. It recognizes training programs that meet ICF's standards for teaching mentor coaching competencies.
This is separate from existing ICF program accreditation (Level 1, Level 2, Level 3) and separate from CCE approval. It applies specifically to programs that train people to become mentor coaches.
Programs that earn this accreditation create what ICF calls a "direct pathway" for individuals pursuing the Mentor Coach Qualification. In practical terms, if you complete a program with Advanced Accreditation in Mentor Coaching, your education hours should align directly with MCQ requirements.
For coaches choosing where to train, this accreditation will function as a quality signal - a way to distinguish programs that have been reviewed against ICF's mentor coaching standards from those that have not.
ICF cited growing demand for formal mentor coaching education combined with inconsistent standards across the profession. From their April 2026 announcement:
In a recent survey of mentor coach practitioners, 57% of respondents said mentor coaches should complete formal education to hold or maintain mentor coach status. ICF - Introducing Advanced Accreditations, April 2026
The accreditation aims to address three issues ICF identified: limited or inconsistent training opportunities, widely varying rigor across programs, and no recognized designation to signal program quality.
ICF has confirmed that CCE-approved programs for mentor coaching will continue to be reviewed, and that individuals can still count CCE program hours toward the MCQ. The Advanced Accreditation is an additional, optional layer - not a replacement for CCE.
However, ICF notes that programs with the Advanced Accreditation gain specific advantages: tighter alignment with ICF standards, greater marketplace differentiation, and a more direct pathway for learners.
ICF has shared a broad timeline but has not published specific requirements, fees, or application criteria. We are tracking this closely.
Published alongside the MCQ launch. ICF confirmed the accreditation is voluntary, separate from CCE, and designed for mentor coaching education programs.
ICF's Accreditation Transition Toolkit states applications will be available in "mid-2026." Specific requirements have not been published yet.
ICF has stated that "specific requirements are coming soon" but has not published them. We expect details to include curriculum standards, assessment alignment criteria, and application fees.
If you are considering mentor coaching education - whether to pursue the MCQ, to strengthen your mentor coaching practice, or to meet credential renewal requirements - the Advanced Accreditation introduces a new way to evaluate programs.
Programs with this accreditation have been reviewed against ICF's mentor coaching competency framework. When it becomes available, look for it as one quality indicator alongside instructor credentials, program structure, and peer outcomes.
Completing a program with the Advanced Accreditation creates a direct pathway to the MCQ. Your education hours will be aligned with ICF requirements by design, rather than needing to be evaluated case by case.
The accreditation is voluntary. Existing CCE-approved programs remain valid for MCQ hours. Providers can choose to pursue the Advanced Accreditation for additional differentiation and to offer learners a more streamlined pathway.
ICF has not yet published the specific requirements, fees, or application process for the Advanced Accreditation. We are monitoring this closely and will share updates as they become available.
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No. ICF has confirmed the Advanced Accreditation is voluntary and is not required to maintain current accreditation status. CCE-approved programs for mentor coaching will continue to be reviewed, and learners can still count those hours toward the MCQ.
No. They are separate but related. The MCQ is a qualification for individual coaches who provide mentor coaching. The Advanced Accreditation is for education programs that train people to become mentor coaches. A program with the Advanced Accreditation creates a direct pathway for its learners to pursue the MCQ.
ICF's Accreditation Transition Toolkit states that applications will be available in "mid-2026." The ICF blog announcement from April 2026 says "the coming months." No specific date has been published. Sign up above and we will notify you when applications open.
ICF has not published specific requirements yet. Their announcement states that "specific requirements are coming soon." Based on what ICF has shared so far, we expect the requirements to include alignment with the ICF Mentor Coaching Competencies, curriculum standards, and assessment or evaluation alignment. We will update this page when requirements are published.
We are actively monitoring the Advanced Accreditation and evaluating it for our Mentor Coaching Foundations program. Our curriculum is already built around the ICF Mentor Coaching Competencies and MCQ requirements. Until ICF publishes the specific accreditation criteria, we cannot confirm our application status, but this is a priority for us.
While the Advanced Accreditation process develops, Tandem Coaching already offers mentor coaching education built around the ICF Mentor Coaching Competencies and aligned with MCQ requirements.