New York Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)

AKA: New York LCSW 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 Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in New York

In New York, many employers prefer the LCSW for roles that include clinical assessment and psychotherapy, especially in hospitals, community mental health settings, integrated care, and private agencies. Put simply, the LCSW is New York’s clinical social work license for professionals who diagnose and treat mental, emotional, and behavioral conditions using psychotherapy and other clinical methods.

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

NYSED’s laws, rules, and regulations page for LCSW lays out the controlling requirements for education, experience, and exam rules. To see how New York defines licensed clinical social work practice (including psychotherapy), review Education Law §7701 on NYSED’s site: Article 154 — §7701.

Educational Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in New York

New York keeps the education requirement clear: you need a master’s degree (or equivalent) in social work that meets the state’s program and coursework standards. Sorting this out early can help avoid delays when NYSED reviews transcripts and confirms your program.

Required degree level and field

To satisfy New York’s professional education requirement for LCSW licensure, you must provide satisfactory evidence of a master’s degree, or its equivalent, in social work. In other words, the qualifying degree is a graduate social work degree—not a related counseling or psychology program.

What kinds of MSW programs New York accepts

New York allows more than one route for an MSW to count as an “acceptable program.” Under the state’s rules, the master’s (or equivalent) in social work must come from one of the following pathways, and you still need to show the required coursework was completed as part of that education:

  • A New York State-registered program leading to LCSW licensure (registered by the department under section 52.30), or an equivalent social work program—plus proof you completed the required coursework.
  • A program accredited by an acceptable accrediting agency—plus proof you completed the required coursework.
  • An international (non-U.S.) social work program that NYSED finds substantially equivalent—plus proof you completed the required coursework.

The distinction matters because having “MSW” on a diploma isn’t always enough; NYSED looks for both an acceptable program type and the specific educational content described in the regulations.

Accreditation: how CSWE fits in

An MSW from a program accredited by an acceptable accrediting agency can meet New York’s education standard, as long as the required coursework is documented too. Many applicants rely on CSWE-accredited programs; CSWE accreditation information is here: Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) Accreditation.

Education documentation to plan for (to avoid application slowdowns)

NYSED bases its education review on documentation, so it helps to gather what you’ll need before you apply. Be ready to provide clear proof of:

  • The degree awarded: your master’s degree (or equivalent) in social work.
  • The program basis: whether your program was NYS-registered as leading to LCSW licensure, accredited by an acceptable accrediting agency, or found substantially equivalent if completed outside the U.S.
  • The required coursework: documentation (usually transcripts and/or school verification materials) showing completion of coursework required under New York’s rules.

If you’re unsure whether a particular program fits New York’s definitions, rely on the language in NYSED’s LCSW laws/rules/regulations materials administered through the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work.

Examination Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in New York

New York requires an exam that evaluates clinical-level competence for LCSW practice. The New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work sets this requirement in its LCSW regulations: each candidate must pass an exam offered by an organization NYSED finds has satisfactory administrative and psychometric procedures, and that NYSED determines adequately measures knowledge for clinical social work practice as defined in state law. See the LCSW laws, rules, and regulations (Part 74).

Which exam to take

NYSED’s rules call for a clinical-level licensing exam, but the regulation page does not name a specific ASWB exam level. In practice, candidates typically register for the ASWB exam required by NYSED through ASWB’s exam program page: https://www.aswb.org/exam/. Scheduling and identity matching happen there, so enter the same legal name and identifying information you plan to use on your NYSED application to prevent delays.

Registration and timing (how to avoid rework)

  • Register through ASWB: ASWB handles exam registration and test scheduling through its exam system. Plan ahead if you need a particular testing window or location.
  • Align your records before you sit: Differences in names across school records, ASWB registration, and NYSED application materials can slow processing. If anything has changed (e.g., last name), update documentation early so your exam record matches your licensure file.
  • Accommodations: New York’s regulations allow testing accommodations as part of the examination process, consistent with the state’s rules on accommodations referenced in Part 74.

For the broader licensure pathway and how NYSED tracks requirements (including examination), use NYSED’s LCSW overview page: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker.

Supervision Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in New York

Yes—supervised clinical experience is a licensure requirement for an LCSW in New York. New York requires three years of full-time supervised clinical social work experience (or part-time equivalent) focused on diagnosis, psychotherapy, and assessment-based treatment plans, completed within a defined time window. NYSED’s regulations (Part 74) spell out the requirement here: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker-lcsw/laws-rules-regulations/part-74.

What the supervised experience must include (as New York defines it)

  • Length: Three years full-time supervised experience (or part-time equivalent), completed over a period that cannot exceed six years.
  • Client contact hours: Full-time experience must include at least 2,000 client contact hours over a continuous period of at least 36 months (and not more than six years).
  • Clinical content area: The experience must be in diagnosis, psychotherapy, and assessment-based treatment plans.

Practically speaking, the experience counted toward licensure needs to be clearly clinical (not only generalist social work) and documented as supervised clinical social work experience in the specific areas New York lists.

NYSED also summarizes the experience requirement on its LCSW license requirements page: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker/license-requirements.

Application Process for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) Licensure in New York

To keep an LCSW application moving in New York, approach it like a file you’re building: submit the online application early, then make sure every third-party verification (education, exam, and supervised experience) is sent in and matches your legal name.

Where to apply

LCSW licensure goes through the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work. Submit the application in NYSED’s online portal: https://eservices.nysed.gov/professions/before/073.

What to have ready before submitting

How the pieces typically come together

  1. Start with the NYSED online application so you have an active file.
  2. Arrange third-party documentation so it arrives quickly and consistently (education verification, exam results, and supervised experience documentation).
  3. Keep tabs on what’s missing and follow up promptly with schools/employers/supervisors if anything is delayed.

Most common avoidable delays (and how to prevent them)

  • Name mismatches across documents. If a transcript, exam record, or supervision documentation uses a different name than your NYSED application (maiden name, hyphenation, middle initial differences), matching can take longer. Use one consistent legal name everywhere when possible.
  • Experience documentation that doesn’t clearly read as “clinical” under New York’s definition. New York’s rules focus on supervised clinical social work experience in diagnosis, psychotherapy, and assessment-based treatment plans (Part 74). When supervisors describe work only in broad terms (“counseling,” “case management”), NYSED may need follow-up clarification.
  • Date gaps or overlapping timelines in supervision records. Maintain a clean timeline of employment dates and supervision periods so the experience can be evaluated without back-and-forth.
  • Delaying exam registration until after you apply. The exam runs as a separate process; starting early helps avoid having your application sit while testing logistics are worked out.
  • Relying on unofficial summaries instead of verifiable records. When documentation depends on personal logs without clear supervisor/employer verification, it often leads to requests for additional proof.

NYSED’s main LCSW landing page is a solid place to confirm you’re on the right pathway and looking at the right requirements for this license type: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker.

Licensure Renewal Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in New York

To keep an LCSW registration active in New York, renew on time and complete the required continuing education within the correct registration period.

Renewal timing (registration periods)

New York uses a triennial registration period for LCSWs, so CE is tracked across a 36-month cycle. Because the rules tie CE to “each triennial registration period,” it’s easiest to follow your own registration window rather than the calendar year. (See the laws/rules page for LCSW requirements under Part 74.)

Continuing education (CE) requirements

During each triennial registration period, a licensee subject to the requirement must complete 36 hours of acceptable formal continuing education. For registration periods beginning on or after April 1, 2023, three hours of the 36 must cover issues related to maintaining appropriate professional boundaries between licensees and patients, and those three hours must come from a provider approved by NYSED. Part 74 of NYSED’s rules sets these requirements for LCSWs.

A couple of practical habits help:

  • Schedule the boundaries content early, since it’s a specific topic requirement within the total hours.
  • File CE records by registration period, so you’re ready if you’re audited or asked to attest to completion.

Documentation to keep (in case of audit or questions)

Even if you renew online, keep records that clearly show:

  • The course title and date(s)
  • The number of hours earned
  • The provider information, including confirmation that the provider is NYSED-approved when required (especially for the boundaries hours)

Online renewal workflow (portal steps)

NYSED offers an online renewal option. The process generally includes confirming identity details, answering renewal questions/attestations, and submitting the renewal. Start here: https://www.op.nysed.gov/registration-renewal/online-registration-renewal.

If your name, address, or contact information has changed since initial licensure, update it during renewal so OP notices and your registration status stay in sync.

Avoiding lapses (and what typically causes them)

  • Pushing CE to the end of the cycle. Coming up short at the last minute—especially on the required boundaries topic—can delay renewal.
  • Misplacing CE documentation. Store certificates and completion confirmations together by registration period.
  • Email/address changes not updated with OP. Missed renewal notices are a common, avoidable issue.

NYSED’s LCSW laws, rules, and regulations (Part 74) is the best place to read the CE language exactly as written.

Regional Issues

In New York, location can shape access to qualifying supervised roles, cross-border work expectations, and day-to-day telehealth logistics.

Supervision access and multi-site employers

Large health systems, community mental health agencies, and university-affiliated clinics (common in NYC/Long Island and other metro areas) often have established supervision structures. In smaller cities or more remote areas, supervision may be split across locations or tied to specific programs. If your work spans multiple sites, keep documentation organized by employer and role so you can clearly show the work matches New York’s required clinical activities (diagnosis, psychotherapy, and assessment-based treatment plans) as described in NYSED’s rules.

Cross-border practice and telehealth logistics

Downstate sits close to New Jersey and Connecticut, and many clinicians live in one state while working in another. Because licensure is state-based, plan ahead if a job involves clients outside New York or services delivered across state lines. Telehealth can make this more common (and easier to miss), especially when clients travel or temporarily relocate. If questions come up about what is permitted for an LCSW practicing in New York, start with the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions LCSW page: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker.

Planning around hiring patterns

Demand varies widely by region and setting. Hospitals and large outpatient networks may hire into roles with specialized documentation standards and team-based care, while smaller agencies may expect broader coverage across services. Either way, confirm early that the role includes the kind of clinical work New York counts toward LCSW experience so documentation of supervised practice doesn’t become a last-minute problem.

Additional Considerations

In New York, the details that slow people down are usually job duties and documentation language, not the basic licensing steps.

Role/title clarity (especially in clinical settings)

Titles like “therapist,” “clinician,” or “counselor” can mean very different things from one agency to another. What matters is whether the actual work fits New York’s definition of clinical social work practice (and the experience categories NYSED evaluates). If a job description is broad or unclear, confirm up front—before you commit—that the duties include clinical functions consistent with LCSW practice under state law. Use the statutory definition of licensed clinical social work in Education Law Article 154, §7701 to ground that discussion: https://www.op.nysed.gov/title8/education-law/article-154/7701.

Clinical documentation language

New York’s rules rely on specific clinical terms (for example, diagnosis, psychotherapy, and assessment-based treatment plans). In practice, your agency’s documentation should show those elements in a way that clearly reflects the role being performed. If your employer uses different terminology (common in integrated care or program-based services), align internal labels and templates with New York’s clinical language so your experience review doesn’t turn into a terminology debate later.

When the regulations are the right reference point

When you’re trying to figure out whether something “counts” or how NYSED reads a requirement, go straight to the controlling rules instead of guessing. NYSED maintains a dedicated Laws, Rules & Regulations page for LCSW licensure through the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work: https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker-lcsw/laws-rules-regulations.

FAQs

These FAQs cover the most common New York LCSW licensing questions—degree, exam, supervised experience, application steps, and renewal—so planning stays straightforward.

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

You need a master’s degree in social work (or an equivalent program the department accepts). New York recognizes registered NY programs, acceptable accredited programs, and certain substantially equivalent international programs under its rules in Part 74 (https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker-lcsw/laws-rules-regulations/part-74).

Which ASWB exam do I take for New York LCSW?

You must pass an examination the department determines adequately tests proficiency at the clinical level; New York uses an exam offered by an organization with satisfactory administrative and psychometric procedures (see Part 74). Typically, that means registering through ASWB once you’re eligible and following the state’s instructions for authorization (https://www.aswb.org/exam/).

How much supervised experience is required for LCSW licensure in New York?

Three years of full-time supervised clinical social work experience (or part-time equivalent) is required, completed within a window that cannot exceed six years. Part 74 also describes full-time experience as including at least 2,000 client contact hours over a continuous period of at least 36 months (https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/licensed-clinical-social-worker-lcsw/laws-rules-regulations/part-74).

Can I count therapy and diagnosis work from my job toward the LCSW?

Yes—if it qualifies as supervised clinical social work experience in diagnosis, psychotherapy, and assessment-based treatment plans, and it’s documented that way. Confirm your job description and supervision records clearly reflect those clinical functions so the experience review doesn’t get stuck on terminology later.

Where do I apply for LCSW licensure in New York?

Submit your application through the New York State Education Department (NYSED) — Office of the Professions (OP) / State Board for Social Work online services portal. The portal also helps maintain a clear verification trail for submissions and follow-up (https://eservices.nysed.gov/professions/before/073).

Do I need a jurisprudence (law) exam in New York?

No. New York does not list a separate jurisprudence exam requirement for LCSW licensure.

What are the continuing education requirements to renew an LCSW in New York?

LCSWs must complete 36 hours of acceptable formal continuing education during each triennial registration period, including (for registration periods beginning on or after April 1, 2023) three hours on maintaining appropriate professional boundaries between licensees and patients (Part 74). Renew through NYSED’s online registration renewal system (https://www.op.nysed.gov/registration-renewal/online-registration-renewal).

Is New York part of the social work licensure compact?

No. New York is not a member of the social work licensure compact.

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