Michigan Social Work License by Endorsement

Social Worker License

by Social Worker License Staff

Updated: March 23rd, 2026

Last verified: March 23rd, 2026

This guide was last reviewed against official information published by the Michigan Board of Social Work, along with the applicable Michigan Public Health Code (Part 185 – Social Work) and related administrative rules governing licensure. These sources define the state’s requirements for education, examination, supervised experience, scope of practice, and license renewal.

Michigan Social Work License by Endorsement

Michigan does not offer automatic social work reciprocity. Instead, the state uses a process called licensure by endorsement for applicants who already hold an active social work license in another state or province of Canada.

That distinction matters. A reciprocity page that suggests your out-of-state license simply transfers into Michigan would be misleading. Michigan still reviews your application, confirms your license status, and may require you to show that your education, exam history, and supervised experience match Michigan’s standards for the license level you want.

The Michigan Board of Social Work (LARA – Bureau of Professional Licensing) handles endorsement applications through MiPLUS. Michigan recognizes different endorsement pathways depending on the credential and how long you have been actively licensed in another jurisdiction.

Important First Point: Michigan Uses Endorsement, Not Reciprocity

If you are moving to Michigan or planning to practice there, do not assume your current social work license transfers automatically. Michigan’s official licensing guides use the term endorsement, and the details vary by credential.

That is especially important because Michigan has a specific 10-year rule for endorsement applicants.

The 10-Year Rule for Michigan Endorsement Applicants

Michigan’s current licensing guides distinguish between applicants who have been actively licensed for more than 10 years and those who have been licensed for less than 10 years.

  • More than 10 years licensed: Michigan generally presumes you meet section 16186 of the Public Health Code for the credential you are seeking.
  • Less than 10 years licensed: You must still comply with the ordinary Michigan rule requirements for that credential.

In practice, that means endorsement is not always “easier” in the same way. For many applicants with fewer than 10 years of licensure, endorsement still involves proving supervised experience, exam history, and other background requirements that align with Michigan’s standards.

Which Social Work Licenses Can Be Obtained by Endorsement in Michigan?

Michigan’s social work system includes the following main professional credentials:

  • Licensed Bachelor’s Social Worker (LBSW)
  • Licensed Master’s Social Worker (LMSW)
  • Registered Social Service Technician (RSST)

Michigan does not use the title LCSW. If you hold an LCSW in another state, the closest Michigan equivalent is generally the LMSW with a clinical designation, depending on your education, supervised experience, and exam history.

Michigan LBSW by Endorsement

If you hold an active bachelor’s-level social work license in another state, Michigan may allow you to apply for the LBSW by endorsement.

What Michigan typically looks for

  • An active out-of-state social work license in good standing
  • Verification of licensure sent directly from every jurisdiction where you hold or have held a license
  • Required education for the bachelor’s-level license
  • ASWB Bachelor’s exam score verification
  • If licensed for less than 10 years, proof that you meet Michigan’s regular licensure rule for the bachelor’s license

If you have held your out-of-state license for under 10 years, expect Michigan to look more closely at the supervised experience and exam pieces rather than treating your current license alone as enough.

Michigan LMSW by Endorsement

If you hold an active master’s-level social work license in another state, Michigan may allow you to apply for the LMSW by endorsement.

What Michigan requires for many LMSW endorsement applicants

  • Online application through MiPLUS
  • Application fee
  • Criminal background check
  • Human trafficking training
  • Implicit bias training
  • Verification of licensure from every state or country where you hold or have held a master’s social work license
  • ASWB score verification for the Advanced Generalist or Clinical exam, depending on your Michigan pathway

If you have been licensed less than 10 years

Michigan’s current master’s licensing guide says applicants licensed in another state for less than 10 years must also submit a completed Supervisor’s Verification of Social Work Experience for Master’s Social Worker License showing 4,000 hours of post-degree supervised work experience, work experience, or both.

If you have been licensed more than 10 years

The guide says that applicants who hold an active out-of-state license and have been licensed for more than 10 years are presumed to meet section 16186 of the code. That can make the process more straightforward, but it does not eliminate the need for the application, licensure verification, and other items that apply to all applicants.

What if your current license is called LCSW?

Many out-of-state applicants search for “Michigan LCSW endorsement,” but Michigan does not issue an LCSW license. Instead, master’s-level social workers are licensed as LMSWs, and Michigan uses clinical and macro designations. If you hold an LCSW elsewhere, your application should be written and structured around the Michigan LMSW pathway.

Michigan RSST by Endorsement

Michigan also allows registration by endorsement for out-of-state social service technician applicants.

How Michigan handles RSST endorsement

  • If you hold an active registration from another state and have been actively engaged in the practice of social work for more than 10 years, Michigan presumes you meet section 16186.
  • If you have been actively engaged for less than 10 years, you must comply with the ordinary Michigan rule for social service technician registration.

This is one reason endorsement deserves its own guide page. The state’s handling of out-of-state applicants is real, but it is not a blanket reciprocity policy.

Step-by-Step: How to Apply for a Michigan Social Work License by Endorsement

  1. Identify the Michigan credential that actually matches your current license. This is especially important if your current state uses titles like LCSW or LICSW that Michigan does not use.
  2. Create a MiPLUS account and begin the endorsement application through Michigan’s online licensing system.
  3. Request verification of licensure from every jurisdiction where you hold or have held a social work license.
  4. Request ASWB score transfer if the Michigan guide for your credential requires exam verification.
  5. Gather supervised experience forms if you have been licensed less than 10 years and your pathway requires Michigan to verify experience.
  6. Complete human trafficking and implicit bias training if they apply to your application.
  7. Complete the background check after Michigan sends the required instructions.
  8. Submit the application only when your supporting documents are lined up cleanly, including name consistency across all records.

Common Endorsement Problems and Delays

1. Using the wrong Michigan license title

A common problem is searching or applying as though Michigan offers an LCSW. It does not. In Michigan, the master’s-level credential is the LMSW. That mismatch can create confusion in planning, internal linking, and reader expectations.

2. Not realizing the 10-year rule changes the process

Applicants often assume endorsement works the same way for everyone. It does not. Michigan draws a line at 10 years of active licensure or registration for endorsement applicants.

3. Waiting too long on verification forms

Licensure verification and supervised-experience forms often take longer than the application itself. Start those requests first.

4. Name mismatches across records

If your ASWB record, old license, school record, and Michigan application use different names or versions of your name, matching documents can take longer.

5. Assuming “good standing” is enough by itself

Even if your out-of-state license is active and in good standing, Michigan may still require exam verification, supervised experience verification, or both, especially if you have been licensed for fewer than 10 years.

FAQs

Does Michigan offer social work reciprocity?

No. Michigan uses licensure by endorsement, not automatic reciprocity.

Can I transfer my LCSW to Michigan?

Not as an LCSW title, because Michigan does not issue an LCSW license. Most applicants coming from an LCSW state would look at the LMSW pathway in Michigan, usually with a clinical focus if their background matches that track.

Does Michigan have an LCSW?

No. Michigan uses the title Licensed Master’s Social Worker (LMSW) rather than LCSW.

What happens if I have been licensed less than 10 years?

Michigan generally requires you to meet the ordinary Michigan rule for the credential you are seeking. For LMSW applicants, that includes supervised-experience verification and ASWB score verification under the current licensing guide.

What happens if I have been licensed more than 10 years?

Michigan’s guides say you are presumed to meet section 16186, but you still need to complete the endorsement application and the items that apply to all applicants, such as licensure verification and other required documentation.

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