Indiana Licensed Social Worker (LSW)

AKA: Indiana LSW License

Social Worker License

by Social Worker License Staff

Updated: February 20th, 2026

Last verified: February 20th, 2026

Verified: Cross-checked with the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (PLA) — Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board, Indiana Code Title 25, Article 23.6 governing social worker licensure, applicable administrative rules (including Rule 6. Continuing Education), and the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB).

How we verify: We review Indiana’s official licensing hub and application instructions, confirm statutory degree and examination requirements in Indiana Code, check administrative rule language for continuing education and renewal standards, verify that the MyLicense portal is active for applications and renewals, and confirm ASWB examination registration guidance before updating this guide.

How to Become a Licensed Social Worker (LSW) in Indiana

In an Indiana county hospital discharge-planning unit, HR may not confirm your start date until your LSW license number is on file. Exam timing and paperwork can also matter if you’re trying to hold onto a caseload slot.

The Indiana LSW often functions as a hiring and credentialing checkpoint. It shows you’ve met the state’s baseline education and testing requirements for practice under this credential, which can shape assigned duties, job-posting language, and whether you can be listed for certain services—while keeping scope tied to what Indiana law and rules allow.

Licensing goes through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (PLA) — Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board, and related profession details are available in the PLA’s Behavioral Health and Human Services rules and resources hub. The sections that follow cover the typical path: education expectations (including CSWE accreditation), the exam requirement, supervision topics where applicable, applying through the state portal, and renewal under Indiana’s continuing education rules.

Educational Requirements for Licensed Social Worker (LSW) in Indiana

In an Indiana school-based mental health program, the LSW education requirement acts as a public-protection checkpoint: it verifies graduate-level social work preparation before practice under the LSW credential.

Required degree level (master’s)

Indiana ties LSW eligibility to an earned master’s degree in social work. State law requires an applicant to furnish satisfactory evidence to the board that the individual “has a master’s degree in social work” from an eligible postsecondary educational institution approved by the board, or from a foreign school with a program of study approved by CSWE’s Foreign Equivalency Determination Service. IC 25-23.6-5-1 (reference copy)

What “approved by the board” means in practice

For most applicants, “approved” is proven through clean transcript documentation: degree awarded, program title clearly indicating social work, and a posted conferral date. When the transcript language is unclear (for example, a specialization listed without “social work,” or a degree still “in progress”), that’s when verification delays tend to happen.

CSWE accreditation and foreign education review

CSWE accreditation is the standard reference point for U.S. social work program quality, and Indiana’s statute language points foreign-educated applicants to CSWE’s Foreign Equivalency Determination pathway. CSWE’s accreditation hub is here: CSWE Accreditation.

Documents that should line up before you apply

  • Official transcript showing a conferred MSW (master’s degree in social work).
  • Name consistency across transcript, ASWB registration, and the Indiana portal profile.
  • Foreign equivalency determination (if applicable) from CSWE’s Foreign Equivalency Determination Service.

Examination Requirements for Licensed Social Worker (LSW) in Indiana

In an Indiana community mental health setting, the exam requirement is the state’s standardized way to confirm baseline competence before granting LSW authorization.

What exam Indiana requires

Indiana law requires applicants to “Pass an examination provided by the board.” IC 25-23.6-5-1 (reference copy)

Indiana’s published LSW application instructions specify the exam the board has adopted for this license: the ASWB Masters Level examination. LSW-by-Exam Application Instructions (PDF)

How to register and test (typical sequence)

  1. Apply through Indiana’s licensing system so your file can be reviewed: MyLicense (Indiana).
  2. Follow board instructions for exam approval (the board reviews completed applications and then notifies applicants regarding exam approval/next steps). LSW Instructions (PDF)
  3. Register with ASWB and select the correct exam level (Masters): ASWB Exam Registration.
  4. Keep identity details identical across ASWB and Indiana (legal name, suffixes, hyphens) so scores attach cleanly to your license record.

Avoid common exam-related delays

  • Choosing the wrong exam level: Indiana’s LSW instructions point to the Masters exam for this license. LSW Instructions (PDF)
  • Name mismatches: a nickname on one system and a legal name on another can slow matching and verification.
  • Skipping the board’s sequence: follow the Indiana instructions for when exam approval happens relative to application review. LSW Instructions (PDF)

Supervision Requirements for Licensed Social Worker (LSW) in Indiana

For the Indiana LSW, supervision is best treated as a scope-and-safety framework rather than a pre-licensure hour-count checklist—because Indiana notes that supervision is not required to obtain the bachelor or master license, while post-licensure supervision of practice is required for those license levels. PLA BHHS Licensing Information

What to do with that in real jobs

  • Clarify supervision expectations in writing: especially in hospital, school, and community mental health settings where documentation and risk decisions can escalate quickly.
  • Separate administrative oversight from practice oversight: if one person manages scheduling/performance and another provides clinical consultation, document both roles clearly.
  • Keep audit-ready records: supervision plans, dates, and general topics (avoid unnecessary client identifiers) so expectations are defensible if reviewed.

If you need state guidance on who can supervise

Use Indiana’s Behavioral Health and Human Services licensing information hub as the starting point for supervisor qualification and supervision questions tied to social work licensure. PLA BHHS Licensing Information

Application Process for Licensed Social Worker (LSW) Licensure in Indiana

If you’re stepping into a hospital-based case management role in Indiana, the online LSW application is where the state confirms your education and exam completion to protect the public.

Where the application is filed

Before starting: prepare a clean upload packet

  • Name files clearly so they match your application record (example format: Lastname_Firstname_DocumentType_Date).
  • Use readable PDFs (scan documents straight rather than photographing them), and keep multi-page items in a single file when possible.
  • Keep third-party items consistent: your name on transcripts, exam records, and your portal profile should match. If your name changed, include documentation explaining the change.

Education and exam items that typically drive verification

  • Education requirement (what gets verified): Indiana law states that an individual applying for a license as a social worker must “furnish satisfactory evidence” of having “a master’s degree in social work” from an approved school or a CSWE foreign equivalency determination.
  • Exam requirement (what gets verified): Indiana law also requires applicants to “Pass an examination provided by the board.” ASWB exam registration details are available here: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.
  • If education is from outside the U.S., align your documentation with CSWE’s foreign equivalency pathway referenced in Indiana’s degree language: https://www.cswe.org/accreditation/.

Portal workflow: how to avoid delays once the application is submitted

  • Enter information exactly as it appears on source documents (school name, degree title, graduation date) so reviewers can verify without follow-up questions.
  • Respond to requests inside the same portal record; when you upload updated versions, use clear filenames to reduce mix-ups between older and newer documents.
  • Track “pending” items that depend on third parties (for example, education or exam reporting) and submit everything else promptly so only those items remain open.
  • Avoid scope assumptions in descriptions: when asked about role or setting, describe duties plainly without implying authority beyond what Indiana law and rules allow for an LSW.

If something does not line up

  • Name mismatch or multiple profiles: fix the portal profile first so uploads attach to the correct record.
  • Unclear degree documentation: upload a complete transcript file rather than partial pages, and make sure it clearly shows the awarded degree.
  • Exam status confusion: use official ASWB reporting pathways tied to the exam process rather than screenshots or informal confirmations.

If something on the portal screens is unclear, use the Behavioral Health & Human Services rules hub for cross-references and board context: https://www.in.gov/pla/professions/behavioral-health-and-human-services/.

Licensure Renewal Requirements for Licensed Social Worker (LSW) in Indiana

Renewal is handled through Indiana’s online licensing system. Keep renewal and continuing education (CE) records organized so the license stays active and verification is painless during audits or employer credentialing checks.

Where renewal happens

  • Renew through MyLicense: https://mylicense.in.gov/eGov/
  • Confirm status after submission: save the receipt/confirmation and re-check the license record once processing completes.

Continuing education (CE): track Category I vs. Category II

Indiana’s CE rules include category limits that affect how CE can be counted toward renewal. The CE rules state that the licensee “(1) shall obtain a minimum of fifty percent (50%) of the required amount of CEUs for renewal from Category I; and (2) may obtain a maximum of fifty percent (50%) of the required amount of CEUs for renewal from Category II.” Rule 6. Continuing Education (PDF)

  • Log CE at completion time: date, title, provider, CEUs/hours, and whether it is Category I or Category II.
  • Save proof next to the log entry: certificates + agendas/learning objectives when available.
  • Use clean filenames (YYYY-MM-DD_CategoryI_Provider_Title.pdf) so renewal packets are easy to assemble.

A practical renewal checklist

  1. Update portal profile details (name/email/address) before you begin.
  2. Reconcile your CE log against Category I/II limits.
  3. Submit renewal through MyLicense and save your confirmation.
  4. Re-check the portal later to confirm “active/renewed” status.

Regional Issues

Telehealth, school mobility, and multi-state employers can create cross-border licensing questions for Indiana LSWs, especially when clients travel.

Cross-border practice: where the client is located matters

Remote sessions may feel “local” when the social worker is in Indiana, but licensing authority is commonly based on the client’s physical location at the time of service. If the client is in another state (even briefly), that state may view the session as practice occurring there and may require separate authorization.

When a multi-state situation comes up, confirm what Indiana recognizes for an LSW and how licensure is handled through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (PLA) — Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board: https://www.in.gov/pla/professions/behavioral-health-and-human-services/behavioral-health-and-human-services-licensing-information/.

Clients who move: continuity of care without overstepping authority

  • Short trips vs. permanent moves: even a weekend out of state can create an out-of-state practice issue if services continue while the client is physically outside Indiana.
  • Records and referrals: smooth continuity often depends on quick record sharing and warm handoffs; keep releases and documentation ready so transitions don’t hinge on providing services where authorization is unclear.
  • School-year mobility: students may move between households in different states; plan ahead for how sessions will be handled during those periods.

Multi-state employers and credentialing checks

Health systems, schools, and contractors that operate across multiple states often use standardized onboarding that includes license verification and renewal tracking. Keeping your license record accurate helps avoid delays when credentialing teams pull data directly from Indiana’s licensing system.

  • Name changes and contact info: differences between HR records and the licensing record can slow verification.
  • Status monitoring: when a role involves clients in different states, internal compliance teams may request proof of active status before scheduling begins.

License verification and portability logistics

If another jurisdiction or employer asks for evidence of Indiana licensure, it’s often fastest to use Indiana’s online licensing system for updates and renewals so the public record stays current: https://mylicense.in.gov/eGov/.

If an out-of-state exam or credential review comes up

Cross-border moves or job changes can also trigger exam-related questions. Indiana’s rule language includes: “An individual who applies for a license as a social worker must meet the following requirements: (4) Pass an examination provided by the board.” ASWB exam registration details are available here: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.

If practice will span borders (tele-services, travel, or relocation), match service delivery to each state’s authorization expectations before sessions occur rather than relying on employer policies or informal reciprocity assumptions.

Additional Considerations

Strong recordkeeping, CE tracking, and portal updates reduce renewal delays and make audits, credentialing, and job transitions easier to manage.

Document control: build a verification trail that survives job changes

Licensure paperwork comes back around at predictable times—renewals, audits, employer credentialing, and cross-state moves—so treating your records like a regulated file set helps avoid last-minute gaps.

  • Keep “source” copies: save final transcripts/degree verification, exam confirmations, and any board correspondence as PDFs in one folder.
  • Version key documents: use consistent filenames (for example, CE_Log_2026-02) so older drafts don’t end up in renewal packets.
  • Track identity changes: if your name changes, keep the full document chain (marriage certificate/court order plus updated IDs) so license verification stays straightforward across systems.

Continuing education: track Category I vs. Category II as you go

Indiana’s continuing education rules use category limits, not just total hours. The CE rule language states that the licensee “shall obtain a minimum of fifty percent (50%) of the required amount of CEUs for renewal from Category I” and “may obtain a maximum of fifty percent (50%) of the required amount of CEUs for renewal from Category II.” Details are in Indiana’s CE rules: https://www.in.gov/pla/files/2008_CE_Rules.pdf.

  • Log by category at completion time: note the provider, date, title, hours/CEUs shown on the certificate, and whether it falls under Category I or II based on the rule definitions.
  • Save proof with the log entry: store each certificate next to the log (or link it) so any later review has one-click support.

Exam and education artifacts: keep what proves eligibility

Indiana’s licensing pathway includes graduate education and an exam requirement; keeping documentation ready can prevent delays if you’re asked for it again after an address change or portal update.

  • Education proof: keep records showing a master’s degree in social work from an approved program (including foreign equivalency documentation when applicable).
  • Exam proof: retain registration/score communications connected to “an examination provided by the board,” along with ASWB registration details when needed: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.

Portal hygiene: keep the public record accurate

Many third parties rely on what appears in Indiana’s licensing system rather than emailed screenshots. Using the state portal for updates helps keep verification clean and consistent across renewals and credential checks: https://mylicense.in.gov/eGov/.

  • Update contact information promptly: missed renewal notices or board communications can create avoidable compliance problems.
  • Confirm status after submissions: after any renewal or update, re-check that the license status reflects what was filed.

Scope and role clarity: match duties to what is clearly authorized

If job duties shift (new program lines, clinical responsibilities, tele-services), match day-to-day tasks to what Indiana authorizes for an LSW instead of relying on internal titles. When a position description includes activities that seem to require different authorization, address it before services begin by reviewing requirements through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (PLA) — Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board materials.

FAQs

These FAQs cover Indiana LSW licensing basics, including degree documentation, exam expectations, supervision questions, portal steps, and renewal CE category rules.

Common questions (with a future-proofing mindset)

1) What degree is required to become an LSW in Indiana?
A master’s degree in social work is required for Indiana LSW licensure.

Keep a clean, retrievable record trail (official transcript, degree conferral date, and program details) because the licensing file depends on verifiable education documentation. If the degree is from outside the U.S., retain the Foreign Equivalency Determination Service outcome referenced by CSWE accreditation resources: https://www.cswe.org/accreditation/.

2) Which exam do I need for Indiana LSW licensure?
Indiana requires that an applicant “Pass an examination provided by the board.”

The specific ASWB exam level is not identified here, so save every exam-related confirmation (registration, authorization, and result notices) as part of a long-term verification file. ASWB exam information and registration live here: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.

3) Is there a supervised experience requirement for the LSW in Indiana?
The supervised experience details are not established in the provided materials for this section.

Before committing to a job plan that assumes certain hours or supervisor credentials, confirm what Indiana expects through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (PLA) — Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board licensing information page. Keep supervision agreements, logs, and supervisor credentials versioned and backed up once requirements are confirmed: https://www.in.gov/pla/professions/behavioral-health-and-human-services/behavioral-health-and-human-services-licensing-information/?AreaStudy=BIZ&Program=GCA&abtestactive=true%2Ctrue.

4) How does the application get submitted and tracked?
Indiana uses an online portal to submit and manage licensure actions.

Use one consistent account identity (same name format and email), then archive submission confirmations and uploaded documents in a single folder so later audits or employer verifications match what was filed. Portal access is here: https://mylicense.in.gov/eGov/.

5) What should be saved to avoid delays if something gets questioned later?
Save anything that proves identity, education, exam completion, and what was submitted through the portal.

A practical set includes: official transcripts/degree proof, exam communications, portal receipts, and any correspondence requesting clarification. Store PDFs with clear filenames (date + document type) so re-submission does not rely on memory or old email threads.

6) What continuing education (CE) rules apply at renewal?
Indiana’s CE rules include category limits requiring at least fifty percent (50%) from Category I and allowing up to fifty percent (50%) from Category II.

Plan CE with a running log that tags each course as Category I or II so the category split can be proven without rework at renewal time. The CE rule language appears in Indiana’s CE rules document: https://www.in.gov/pla/files/2008_CE_Rules.pdf.

7) Can an Indiana LSW practice independently or provide psychotherapy?
This section does not establish independent practice authority or psychotherapy permissions for the Indiana LSW.

When job duties include clinical treatment planning, diagnosis language, or independent service delivery expectations, match tasks to what Indiana clearly authorizes for the credential rather than relying on internal titles. Use the Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board materials to align role descriptions with legal authorization.

8) What if my name changes or I move during the process?
Update contact information promptly so verification records stay consistent across applications, renewals, and third-party checks.

Name mismatches are a common source of delays because transcripts, exam records, and portal profiles must align; keep supporting documents (e.g., name-change paperwork) ready to upload if requested. After any update, re-check that the public-facing license record reflects the change.

9) How should foreign-educated applicants prepare their documentation?
A foreign social work degree must be supported by an approved equivalency determination referenced in Indiana’s education requirement language.

Maintain a single “equivalency packet” (evaluation outcome plus translated transcripts if applicable) so it can be reused for renewals, employer credentialing, or future state applications without re-ordering documents. Pair that packet with a stable digital archive of all submissions made through the state portal.

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