New York Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW)

AKA: New York LMSW License

Social Worker License

by Social Worker License Staff

Updated: April 14th, 2026

Last verified: April 14th, 2026

Licensure requirements for social workers in New York were reviewed and verified using official materials from the New York State Education Department Office of the Professions, including social work licensing requirements for the Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW), as well as statutes and regulations published under New York social work laws, rules, and regulations. Information reflects current licensing standards, education requirements, examination expectations, supervised experience, and registration renewal requirements.

How to Become a Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) in New York

In New York, the Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) is a credential many employers expect when hiring social workers in hospitals, community agencies, schools, and other human services settings. It shows that you’ve met the state’s entry-level professional standards for master’s-level social work and have been authorized by New York to practice as an LMSW.

LMSW licensure is overseen by the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work.

Educational Requirements for Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) in New York

To qualify for New York LMSW licensure, you need a master’s degree in social work (MSW) from a program New York recognizes.

Required degree level and field

New York Education Law, Article 154 says an LMSW applicant must have “received an education, including a master’s of social work degree from a program registered by the department, or determined by the department to be the substantial equivalent, in accordance with the commissioner’s regulations.” In other words, NYSED expects an MSW (not another type of master’s degree) and a program that meets New York’s standards.

Program approval: “registered” or “substantially equivalent”

NYSED looks for a program that is registered by the department or accepted as substantially equivalent. Questions come up most often with out-of-state or international education; the deciding factor is whether NYSED will treat the program as substantially equivalent under its rules.

Many MSW programs also point to accreditation by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). CSWE accreditation can signal quality, but LMSW eligibility in New York is based on NYSED’s “registered”/“substantial equivalent” standard.

Education documentation NYSED typically needs

When you apply, you’ll need to document your graduate social work education so the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work can confirm you meet the statutory education requirement. Typically, this means submitting proof that you completed your MSW in the format NYSED requires through its licensing process.

Examination Requirements for Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) in New York

New York requires passing the ASWB Masters exam for LMSW licensure, so plan for registration, scheduling, and score reporting as part of your timeline.

Which exam to take

The required level for the LMSW is the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Masters exam. When you register, select the Masters level and follow ASWB’s steps here: ASWB exam registration.

How exam approval and registration typically fit into the NY process

Licensing runs through the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work. Most candidates end up coordinating two timelines:

  • NYSED licensure application processing (so NYSED can determine eligibility), and
  • ASWB exam scheduling (so a test appointment is available when you’re ready).

If your application needs additional review (for example, education equivalency questions), that can delay when you’re able to move forward with testing. The NYSED LMSW portal is here: NYSED eServices (LMSW).

Exam timing and planning tips

  • Verify the exam level before you pay or schedule. For a New York LMSW, that’s the ASWB Masters exam.
  • Leave room for administrative steps. Even with a solid study plan, eligibility review and scheduling can take time—especially during busy testing periods.
  • Don’t assume additional exams are required. New York’s LMSW statute includes an examination requirement but does not list a separate jurisprudence exam in Article 154’s LMSW requirements section.

For more on how New York connects its licensing rules to the exam requirement, see NYSED’s overview page here: Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) — NYSED OP.

Supervision Requirements for Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) in New York

New York does not require supervised experience to qualify for an LMSW license. State law describes the LMSW “Experience” requirement as: “meet no requirement as to experience.” This appears in New York Education Law, Article 154, within the LMSW licensing requirements section. See: NYSED OP — Education Law, Article 154 (LMSW requirements).

What this means in practice

  • No post-degree hours to document for licensure. Unlike some other credentials, the LMSW application does not depend on logging supervised clinical or practice hours.
  • No supervisor verification forms are part of the LMSW requirement. Since experience is not a licensure condition, NYSED does not require anything to be signed off for LMSW eligibility.
  • Supervision may still be required by an employer or setting. Many workplaces set their own supervision policies, separate from the licensure eligibility rules for the LMSW.

The full set of LMSW laws, rules, and regulations administered by the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work is here: NYSED OP — LMSW laws, rules & regulations.

Application Process for Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) Licensure in New York

The fastest way to move an LMSW application through New York is to treat it like a portal workflow: submit the online application, then make sure any third-party items (especially education verification) are sent in promptly and match your legal name exactly.

Where to apply

LMSW licensure applications are handled by the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work. The primary entry point is NYSED’s eServices portal for LMSW: https://eservices.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-master-social-worker/lmsw.

What to have ready before starting the online application

  • Your identifying information exactly as you want it on your license. Use one consistent version of your name across your application and any school/exam records to avoid mismatches.
  • Education details for your MSW program. New York’s LMSW education requirement is tied to a master’s in social work from a program registered by the department or determined substantially equivalent under the Commissioner’s Regulations. Having your program name, dates attended, and degree award date on hand helps you complete the portal accurately. (Regulatory context: Education Law, Article 154; program standards: 8 NYCRR Part 52.)
  • A plan for the required exam step. State law requires applicants to “pass an examination satisfactory to the board.” For LMSW, that is the ASWB Masters exam. It helps to line up exam registration timing alongside your NYSED submission so neither piece sits idle. ASWB exam info: https://www.aswb.org/exam/. Exam requirement authority: Education Law, Article 154.

How the process typically moves (and where delays happen)

  1. Submit the LMSW application in NYSED eServices. Enter information carefully; small typos can create avoidable follow-up.
  2. Complete third-party steps early. Items that come from outside you (most commonly education verification and exam-related records) often determine how quickly an application can be evaluated. Even when the online form is submitted, NYSED may still be waiting on those external pieces.
  3. Watch for “record matching” issues. The most common avoidable slowdown is a mismatch between names or dates across systems (e.g., a maiden name on school records but a different legal name on the application). If anything differs, use consistent identifiers wherever possible so documents attach cleanly to your file.
  4. Avoid duplicate submissions unless instructed. Re-submitting similar materials under slightly different names/emails can create parallel records that take time to reconcile.

A short checklist of common avoidable problems

  • Name inconsistencies: Make sure your application name aligns with how your school and ASWB records identify you.
  • Degree timing confusion: Enter the degree award date accurately; don’t substitute program end dates if they differ.
  • Assuming supervision paperwork is required: New York does not require experience for LMSW eligibility under Article 154, so missing “supervision hours” documentation should not hold up an LMSW file.
  • Using unofficial sources for requirements: When questions come up mid-application, rely on NYSED OP’s LMSW landing page and laws/rules pages rather than forum checklists. Main NYSED OP LMSW page: https://www.op.nysed.gov/licensed-master-social-worker.

If something in the portal does not look right after submission (for example, a document appears unlinked or a status seems stuck), it usually traces back to record matching—double-check spelling, spacing, hyphens, and date entries before assuming a substantive problem with eligibility.

Licensure Renewal Requirements for Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) in New York

LMSW registration renews on a three-year cycle in New York, and the main task is completing 36 acceptable CE hours and keeping proof organized.

Renewal timing (what “triennial registration” means)

Renewal runs on a triennial registration period, which is a three-year registration cycle. In each triennial registration period, registrants must meet the continuing education requirement set out in the social work regulations. (See 8 NYCRR Part 74, including the continuing education provisions.)

Continuing education (CE) requirement

The rule is clear: at least 36 hours of continuing education acceptable to the department during each triennial registration period. The regulation states: “During each triennial registration period, meaning a registration period of three years’ duration, an applicant for registration shall complete at least 36 hours of continuing education, acceptable to the department.” (8 NYCRR Part 74)

Practically, that looks like:

  • Space the hours across the cycle. Leaving everything to the end can make it harder to find qualifying activities and harder to rebuild your records.
  • Keep proof ready if you’re asked. Save completion certificates and any course details showing what you took and when. Keep them in one place (digital folder + backup) so they’re easy to produce if requested.
  • Update your total as you go. A simple running log (date, provider, title, hours) helps avoid last-minute counting mistakes.

Documentation habits that prevent renewal problems

  • Name consistency: When possible, use the same legal name on CE certificates and in your NYSED record; mismatches can slow verification if questions come up later.
  • Keep records together: File CE documents by registration period so it’s clear which hours apply to which three-year cycle.
  • Retain supporting details: If a certificate doesn’t include much detail, keep the agenda or course description with it so the activity is clear without guesswork.

Online renewal workflow (portal steps)

You renew through NYSED’s online registration renewal system. Build in time to sort out login or record-matching issues before any deadline.

  1. Go to NYSED’s Online Registration Renewal page: https://www.op.nysed.gov/registration-renewal/online-registration-renewal.
  2. Select your profession and follow the prompts to renew your registration.
  3. Provide CE completion information as requested during renewal, and keep your supporting documentation filed in case it’s needed later.
  4. Save your confirmation details after submission (e.g., confirmation screen or email) with your other licensure records.

If you have questions specific to LMSW registration status or requirements, start with NYSED’s LMSW page for official program information: https://www.op.nysed.gov/licensed-master-social-worker.

Regional Issues

New York’s LMSW license is statewide, but job logistics can shift by region—especially near borders and in multi-state telehealth roles.

Border-area jobs and multi-state practice

Roles that serve clients across state lines (common near New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, or Vermont) often prompt HR to confirm whether services will be delivered to clients physically located in New York or in another state. New York’s LMSW is issued by the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work, and it is a New York credential; employers may require additional authorization when the client location or worksite location crosses state boundaries. A straightforward place to check New York-specific licensure status and references is NYSED’s LMSW page: https://www.op.nysed.gov/licensed-master-social-worker.

Telehealth and “where the client is” logistics

Remote roles can still be region-sensitive. Hiring teams often treat the client’s physical location at the time of service as a compliance issue, especially in organizations operating in multiple states. In interviews for telehealth-heavy positions, expect practical questions about which states’ clients will be on the caseload, whether any services are delivered from outside New York, and how licensure will be verified for each jurisdiction.

Education pathways shaped by where you live

If you live far from campus-based programs, the main regional question is whether an MSW program is acceptable to NYSED. New York’s rules recognize a master’s degree in social work from a program registered by the department or determined substantially equivalent (see Article 154), which can matter when weighing in-state vs. out-of-state or distance options: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-master-social-worker-lmsw/laws-rules-regulations/article-154.

Additional Considerations

Once the major milestones are behind you, focus on keeping a clear verification record that lines up with how New York tracks licensure and registration.

Keep a verification trail you can reuse

Employers, credentialing teams, and payers often want quick proof of your status. Keep copies of key confirmations (such as your license/registration details and any official correspondence) in one folder, and date the filenames so you can show what was true at a specific point in time. When someone needs an official reference point, start with New York’s LMSW landing page through the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work: https://www.op.nysed.gov/licensed-master-social-worker.

If plans change mid-process, use the same portal thread

Name changes, address updates, and timing shifts can cause delays when records get split across separate submissions. When possible, keep everything within the same NYSED eServices workflow so there’s one consistent record of what was submitted and when. Access the LMSW eServices portal here: https://eservices.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-master-social-worker/lmsw.

Be conservative about scope questions until they’re answered in New York’s rules

Job postings sometimes describe responsibilities broadly, especially for counseling or therapy-adjacent roles. If duties seem close to regulated practice boundaries, check New York’s social work laws and regulations before taking a role description at face value. The OP “Laws, Rules & Regulations” page is the best starting hub for those citations: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-master-social-worker/laws-rules-regulations.

FAQs

These FAQs cover New York LMSW licensing basics—degree, exam, experience, application, scope questions, timing, renewal, and out-of-state applicants.

What degree do I need to become an LMSW in New York?

You need a master’s degree in social work. New York law describes the education requirement as a master of social work from a program registered by the department (or one the department finds substantially equivalent). See New York Education Law, Article 154.

Which ASWB exam do I take for the New York LMSW?

The required test is the ASWB Masters exam. New York requires applicants to “pass an examination satisfactory to the board,” and the exam level used for LMSW is the ASWB Masters exam.

Do I need supervised hours or post-degree experience for LMSW licensure?

No. New York does not require experience for the LMSW. State law is explicit that, for LMSW licensure, applicants “meet no requirement as to experience.”

How do I apply for an LMSW license in New York?

Submit your application through NYSED’s eServices portal and follow the prompts for LMSW. Keeping everything in one portal submission (rather than spreading documents across multiple attempts) can help prevent delays when names, schools, or exam records need to match exactly: NYSED LMSW eServices.

Can an LMSW practice independently or provide psychotherapy in New York?

Check New York’s laws and regulations to confirm what an LMSW can do in your specific job setting. If a role description includes “therapy” or other regulated services, review the state’s Social Work laws/rules before assuming those duties fall within LMSW authority: NYSED OP Laws, Rules & Regulations (LMSW).

How long does it take to get licensed?

It depends on how quickly your education and exam records match your application details. Delays often come from mismatched names (school transcript vs. application vs. ASWB record) or missing documentation, so keep information consistent and submit everything through one portal workflow.

What do I need to renew my New York LMSW registration?

Renew online through NYSED’s renewal system, and complete continuing education to stay registered. During each three-year registration period, New York requires at least 36 hours of acceptable continuing education under 8 NYCRR Part 74; renew online here: NYSED Online Registration Renewal.

I’m licensed in another state—can I transfer my license to New York?

You still need to meet New York’s LMSW requirements (education plus passing the required examination) before a license is issued. Start with NYSED’s LMSW licensure page for the state’s pathways and instructions: NYSED Office of the Professions — LMSW.

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