North Dakota Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)
AKA: North Dakota LCSW License
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The Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) is North Dakota’s clinical social work license for professionals who want to diagnose, treat, counsel, and provide psychotherapy within the social work scope allowed by state law. It is the license that matters for applicants whose long-term goal includes advanced clinical roles, psychotherapy-focused practice, clinical supervision, or private practice authority.
The North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners (NDBSWE) regulates LCSW licensure. In general, the path requires a qualifying graduate social work degree, a Board-filed supervision plan, supervised post-master’s clinical experience, successful completion of the Board-approved exam, and a complete application with supporting documentation. This is a more documentation-heavy and timeline-sensitive process than the LMSW route.
North Dakota requires LCSW applicants to hold a master’s or doctorate in social work from a social work program approved by the Board. For most applicants, the clearest route is a CSWE-accredited MSW or DSW program.
The LCSW is tied to graduate social work education. A counseling, psychology, or related behavioral health degree is not the same as a graduate degree in social work for this pathway.
North Dakota law uses the phrase social work program approved by the board. In practice, applicants commonly rely on CSWE accreditation to show the degree meets standard social work education expectations.
North Dakota requires applicants to pass the Board-approved examination for the license sought. The Board certifies eligibility, sets passing standards, and requires proof of successful completion from the exam administrator.
North Dakota’s rules say the examination must be approved by the Board. Because the LCSW is the clinical license, applicants should follow the Board’s current instructions rather than assume the exam process on their own.
For current exam instructions, start with the North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners website and the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB).
North Dakota’s LCSW path is distinct from the LMSW route because it requires a formal supervision plan and supervised post-master’s clinical experience.
Before beginning the process of working toward licensed clinical social work status, the applicant must submit a plan for supervision to the Board. The plan must include the proposed supervisor’s name and a copy of the supervisor’s license. If the supervisor changes, the applicant must submit a new plan to the Board.
The applicant must maintain a record of supervision hours, including dates, time, and content of supervisory sessions, in case the Board requests verification. The clinical supervisor must also evaluate and document minimum competencies in areas such as theory base, differential diagnosis, treatment planning, professional relationship development, risk assessment, and ethical practice.
This is the section that makes the North Dakota LCSW truly different from the lower license levels. If your supervision plan is not approved early, or if your supervision records are weak, that can create major delays when you are ready to apply.
North Dakota’s clinical application process is documentation-heavy. The smoothest applications are the ones where supervision records, employment verification, exam results, transcript, references, and background-check materials all arrive in a coordinated way.
Start with the North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners website for current forms and application instructions.
Applicants must complete both a nationwide criminal history record check and a child abuse and neglect background inquiry. The applicant is responsible for the related costs.
The Board has an application-status page here: Application Status.
North Dakota defines clinical social work as including everything within baccalaureate and master’s social work practice, plus advanced clinical knowledge and skills in assessment, treatment planning, intervention, evaluation, diagnosis, counseling, and psychotherapy.
The practice of clinical social work in North Dakota may include diagnosis and treatment of mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders, conditions, and addictions. Treatment methods include individual, marital, couple, family, and group counseling and psychotherapy. The practice may also include clinical supervision.
North Dakota reserves the private practice of social work to the licensed clinical social worker level. If your goal is independent private practice, the LCSW is the license that matters.
North Dakota renews social work licenses on a two-year cycle tied to odd-numbered years.
North Dakota requires 30 approved continuing education contact hours during each two-year licensing period. No more than 10 hours may come from independent learning without live interaction, and at least 2 hours must concern social work ethics.
For current renewal and CE information, use the North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners website.
In North Dakota, clinical social work often intersects with rural practice, long travel distances, and multi-role behavioral health work. Those realities can affect how you structure supervision, document clinical employment, and plan for future private practice.
Because North Dakota communities can be spread out, clinical supervision planning matters early. If you work in a rural or multi-site setting, it is especially important to keep your supervision schedule and records organized from the beginning.
Many North Dakota LCSWs work in hospitals, community mental health, regional systems, integrated care settings, and public or nonprofit agencies. The LCSW matters in those settings not only for therapy roles, but also for diagnosis, higher-responsibility clinical functions, and supervision.
North Dakota law treats social work delivered into the state through electronic means as social work practice in North Dakota. If your work includes telehealth or clients across state lines, make sure you understand where licensure is required.
North Dakota specifically requires the supervision plan to be submitted before beginning the process of working toward LCSW status. That makes supervision planning an actual licensure step, not just a paperwork detail.
North Dakota’s clinical application specifically calls for verification of supervised practice and verification of social work employment. If your experience spans more than one employer or supervisor, organize those records while you are accruing hours instead of trying to rebuild them at the end.
North Dakota allows master’s social work practice to include practices reserved to licensed clinical social workers only under the supervision of an LCSW. The LCSW is what unlocks the full clinical scope and private practice authority.
You need a master’s or doctorate in social work from a social work program approved by the Board.
You need 3,000 hours of supervised clinical social work experience during the four-year post-master’s degree period.
You need at least 150 hours of face-to-face clinical supervision, and no more than 50 of those hours may be group supervision.
Yes. North Dakota requires LCSW applicants to submit a supervision plan to the Board before beginning the process of working toward licensed clinical social work status.
Yes. North Dakota’s clinical social work scope includes diagnosis and treatment of mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders, conditions, and addictions, including counseling and psychotherapy.
Yes. North Dakota reserves the private practice of social work to the licensed clinical social worker level.
All North Dakota social work licenses expire on December 31 of odd-numbered years.
Most North Dakota social workers need 30 approved CE hours every two years, including at least 2 hours in ethics, with no more than 10 hours from independent learning.