Nebraska Certified Master Social Worker (CMSW)
AKA: Nebraska CMSW License
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A Certified Master Social Worker (CMSW) license in Nebraska is a state credential for social workers with a graduate social work degree who want recognition for advanced practice with appropriate oversight. Many MSW graduates pursue it for roles in agencies, hospitals, schools, and community programs where employers expect licensure. The credential also comes with firm boundaries: Nebraska’s licensing information states that CSWs cannot practice privately, independently, or autonomously and cannot provide mental health services (including psychotherapy).
The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice) oversees licensing. In broad terms, the process includes earning a qualifying master’s (or doctorate) in social work, completing the required supervised experience, submitting an application, and passing the examination approved by the board. Nebraska law outlines these core requirements in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-2128.
Nebraska law requires a master’s degree in social work (or a doctorate) from an approved educational program to qualify for the Certified Master Social Worker credential. See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-2128 (“Has a doctorate or a master’s degree in social work from an approved educational program.”).
The statute uses the phrase “approved educational program” without naming a single accreditor. In practice, many applicants choose programs accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE), the standard accreditor for U.S. social work programs. CSWE accreditation information is available here: CSWE accreditation.
When applying through the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice), gather education records that clearly show you meet the legal standard:
If you need clarification on how Nebraska applies “approved educational program” to a particular school or transcript format, start with the DHHS licensing area that oversees mental health and social work practice: Nebraska DHHS — Mental Health and Social Work Practice.
Nebraska law says a person qualifies for the CMSW credential by “completes an application and satisfactorily passes an examination approved by the board.” That requirement appears in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-2128 and is handled through the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice).
The state requires an exam the Board approves, and most candidates satisfy this through the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) exam program. The statute itself does not list a specific ASWB exam level, so follow the Board’s approval/authorization process for the ASWB exam used for CMSW.
ASWB exam information and registration are handled through ASWB: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.
For licensing context and official program oversight, see Nebraska DHHS — Mental Health and Social Work Practice: https://dhhs.ne.gov/licensure/Pages/Mental-Health-and-Social-Work-Practice.aspx.
Nebraska requires supervised experience to qualify for the CMSW credential. State law requires a minimum of 3,000 hours of social work experience (in addition to the master’s or doctorate degree) completed under supervision as defined in Nebraska law. See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-2128: https://nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=38-2128.
These supervised hours are part of CMSW eligibility, not optional professional development. They must be completed in a setting where supervision is available and documented.
The statute links the required experience to supervision “as defined in section 38-2127” and calls for supervision by a certified master social worker. The supervision definition appears in the Mental Health Practice Act materials referenced by Nebraska DHHS: https://dhhs.ne.gov/licensure/Documents/MentalHealthPracticeAct.pdf.
For licensing oversight and related practice boundaries administered by the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice), see: https://dhhs.ne.gov/licensure/Pages/Mental-Health-and-Social-Work-Practice.aspx.
Applying for Nebraska CMSW licensure means filing with DHHS and submitting clear proof of your degree, exam, and supervised experience.
Nebraska DHHS — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing handles CMSW applications. Begin on the Mental Health and Social Work Practice page: https://dhhs.ne.gov/licensure/Pages/Mental-Health-and-Social-Work-Practice.aspx.
Nebraska law connects CMSW eligibility to three essentials: an approved graduate social work degree, supervised experience, and an exam. The statute describes this as: “Has a doctorate or a master’s degree in social work from an approved educational program,” “has had a minimum of at least three thousand hours of experience… under the supervision… of a certified master social worker,” and “completes an application and satisfactorily passes an examination approved by the board.” See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-2128: https://nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=38-2128.
Nebraska DHHS states that CSWs cannot practice privately, independently, or autonomously and cannot provide mental health services. This matters during any gap between finishing requirements and receiving your credential. See the DHHS licensing page: https://dhhs.ne.gov/licensure/Pages/Mental-Health-and-Social-Work-Practice.aspx.
CMSW renewal in Nebraska centers on timing your continuing education, keeping documentation, and completing the DHHS renewal steps before your credential goes inactive.
In the 24 months prior to the renewal date, active license and certificate holders must complete at least 32 hours of acceptable continuing education related to mental health practice, including at least 4 hours in ethics. These requirements are set out in 172 Neb. Admin. Code ch. 94.
Nebraska ties CE to the renewal date, but the CE provision itself doesn’t spell out cycle details. Use the renewal date shown in the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) licensing system as your anchor, then plan CE by working backward 24 months. Oversight sits with the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice).
Even if you renew online, your CE paperwork is what supports your renewal if questions come up later. Keep one folder (digital or paper) that includes:
Nebraska DHHS manages mental health and social work practice credentials through its licensing program pages. Portal screens can change, but renewals typically look like this:
Do not practice during any period when a credential is inactive. Nebraska DHHS also states that CSWs cannot practice privately, independently, or autonomously and cannot provide mental health services; renewing on time helps avoid accidental scope or status issues if an employer assumes uninterrupted active standing.
Key authority: CE requirements (32 total / 4 ethics within 24 months prior to renewal) are established in 172 Neb. Admin. Code ch. 94 (effective 07/12/2021).
Where you live and work in Nebraska can shape supervision access, cross-border service logistics, and how employers structure CMSW-appropriate roles.
CMSW-track roles show up across schools, hospitals, community agencies, and multi-county programs. In rural parts of the state, lining up a supervisor who meets Nebraska’s definition of supervision can take longer. Ask early in interviews who will provide supervision, whether it will be on-site or remote, and how it will be documented under 172 Neb. Admin. Code ch. 94.
If an employer serves clients near Iowa, South Dakota, Kansas, Colorado, or Wyoming—or operates across state lines—confirm where services are considered to occur (especially for remote services) and which credential the employer expects you to hold for each location. Nebraska DHHS regulates mental health and social work practice credentials through its licensing program, and scope limits shape day-to-day job design (for example, roles labeled “therapy” may not fit this credential). See the DHHS practice overview here: Mental Health and Social Work Practice (Nebraska DHHS).
Nebraska notes adoption of the social work compact on its DHHS licensing page. This may matter if you expect to relocate or serve clients connected to other states through large health systems or regional employers. Plan job moves around what Nebraska recognizes today, and confirm compact-based mobility with DHHS as implementation details evolve.
Beyond the core licensing steps, a few practical details—especially scope limits, documentation habits, and compact planning—can shape which Nebraska roles fit.
Nebraska’s CMSW pathway includes a substantial supervised experience component under Nebraska’s supervision definition. To keep the process moving, save dated, versioned copies of supervision agreements, logs, and employer verification letters as they’re completed rather than trying to reconstruct them later. If an employer changes ownership, a supervisor leaves, or record systems change, having documentation that matches the state’s supervision framework can help avoid delays. The supervision rules appear in 172 Neb. Admin. Code ch. 94.
Nebraska notes adoption of the social work compact on its DHHS licensing page. That may help with longer-term mobility planning, but it does not automatically expand what a Nebraska credential authorizes within Nebraska. Job descriptions and service models still need to match Nebraska’s defined scope for the credential being used.
These FAQs cover the most common Nebraska CMSW licensing questions—degree, exam, supervised experience, scope limits, renewal, and where to confirm rules.
You’ll need a master’s degree (or doctorate) in social work from an approved program. Nebraska law says the credential requires “a doctorate or a master’s degree in social work from an approved educational program” (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-2128).
Nebraska requires you to “satisfactorily pass an examination approved by the board,” but the statute doesn’t specify an exam level. In practice, register through ASWB and follow the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice) instructions for the board-approved exam (ASWB exam registration).
Plan on at least 3,000 hours of supervised social work experience, in addition to the MSW/DSW. State law sets this requirement and ties supervision to Nebraska’s supervision definition.
No—Nebraska’s DHHS licensing page says CSWs can’t practice privately, independently, or autonomously, and can’t provide mental health services. Since this can affect job titles and employer credentialing, confirm role expectations early (DHHS scope information).
Delays usually come from missing supervision documentation or experience verification that doesn’t line up with Nebraska’s supervision framework. Keeping signed supervision agreements, dated hour logs, and employer verification letters organized along the way helps avoid last-minute backtracking (see supervision rules in 172 Neb. Admin. Code ch. 94).
You need 32 hours of acceptable continuing education from the prior 24 months, including at least 4 hours in ethics. Nebraska’s regulations for mental health and social work practice lay this out.
No—compact adoption may help with mobility planning, but it doesn’t automatically change what a Nebraska credential authorizes within Nebraska or guarantee immediate multi-state practice privileges.
The best starting point is DHHS — Office of Behavioral Health Licensing (Mental Health and Social Work Practice), with statutes and regulations providing the legal details (DHHS licensing information).