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Many employers in community agencies, hospitals, schools, and case-management settings prefer a New Hampshire Certified Social Worker (CSW) license because it reflects verified education, testing, and supervised experience. It’s a typical route for people seeking a bachelor’s-level social work credential who plan to work in a structured, supervised role rather than practice independently.
New Hampshire CSW licensure is regulated by the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC). The core requirements for an initial CSW license—education, a national exam approved by the Board, and supervised work experience—are set out in RSA 330-A:18-b. Most applicants follow this sequence: earn a CSWE-approved BSW, complete the required supervised experience hours, pass the ASWB exam required by the Board, and then apply through the state’s online portal.
New Hampshire requires a bachelor’s degree in social work (BSW) from a CSWE-approved program. State law describes it this way: “Graduate with a bachelor’s degree in social work from a college or university approved by the Council on Social Work Education.”
On your transcript, the degree should be clearly listed as a completed bachelor’s with a social work major—not “human services” or another related field.
The school should be recognized through the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) accreditation process. Before enrolling, verify that the BSW program itself is CSWE-accredited/approved, since New Hampshire ties the CSW education requirement to that approval.
Delays often come from missing records or transcripts that don’t clearly show the credential. Plan to have:
The CSW license is regulated by the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC). Keep your program choice and documentation aligned with the statutory education standard above so the rest of the licensing steps can move forward without avoidable holdups.
A passing exam is required for a CSW license in New Hampshire. State law says you must “pass a national proctored examination approved by the board”, as stated in RSA 330-A:18-b.
New Hampshire law does not specify a particular ASWB exam level for the CSW license. In practice, plan to take the ASWB exam required by the Board and complete ASWB registration through its exam page: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.
To avoid delays, schedule early enough that your passing result is available when you’re ready to submit your CSW application materials. If you’re unsure which ASWB exam level New Hampshire will accept for CSW, follow the Board’s licensure instructions and the statutory requirement that the exam be one “approved by the board” under RSA 330-A:18-b.
Supervised experience is required to qualify for a CSW license in New Hampshire. State law requires 4,000 hours of supervised work experience for initial licensure, as stated in RSA 330-A:18-b.
When preparing to apply for the CSW license through the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC), plan to document supervised social work employment totaling 4,000 hours. The statute sets the hour requirement but does not describe how supervision must be structured within this provision (for example, specific supervision-hour minimums or group-supervision limits).
CSW applications in New Hampshire move fastest when the file is complete from the start—education proof, exam proof, and supervised experience documentation ready for review. CSW licensing is handled by the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC).
Apply through the state’s online portal: New Hampshire Online Forms – CSW application. The portal helps prevent delays that often come from missing signatures or incomplete fields on paper submissions.
The underlying requirements for initial licensure (education, exam, and supervised experience) are set out in RSA 330-A:18-b.
To renew a New Hampshire CSW license, complete required CE within the two-year cycle and keep audit-ready records for OPLC.
New Hampshire requires 40 approved continuing education hours every 2 years. Out of those 40 hours, at least 6 hours must be in ethics, and those ethics hours must be Category A. The requirements are in N.H. Code Admin. Rules, Mhp 400.
The rules assume you can prove compliance if asked. Store CE records in one place (digital is fine) throughout the cycle instead of trying to rebuild everything right before renewal.
The CE requirement follows a 2-year cycle under Mhp 400. OPLC manages license-specific renewal dates and any renewal window details through its renewal process. Start early enough to resolve problems like missing certificates or unclear course category information.
If questions come up about CE categories, acceptable activities, or reinstatement during renewal, Mhp 400 is the controlling rule set for renewal and continuing education requirements.
New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (OPLC) – Board page
In New Hampshire, geography and border commuting can shape where supervised roles are available and how you document hours across sites.
Many positions (community mental health, hospital systems, school-based services, and agency programs) run across more than one location. If your job covers multiple sites, keep supervision records clearly organized by employer and role so they’re easy to confirm against New Hampshire’s supervised experience requirement in state law (RSA 330-A:18-b). This becomes especially important when you’re combining hours from different settings or your duties change during the supervised period.
If your work or clients regularly cross into Massachusetts, Maine, or Vermont, think through how licensure will be handled on each side of the border. New Hampshire has adopted the Social Work Licensure Compact, intended to support multi-state practice once it’s operationalized (RSA 330-A:18-e). Until compact privileges are available in practice, employers near state lines may still require separate authorization for work performed in another state.
Workforce needs and multi-site service delivery can shift quickly, especially in public-sector and contracted programs. For New Hampshire-specific implementation updates—including compact-related developments—check the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC).
Beyond the core licensing steps, a few practical details—like matching records, employer credentialing timelines, and compact planning—can affect when work can begin.
Keep the name on your application consistent with every supporting document you submit. If your name has changed (for example, after marriage), include documentation that clearly connects your prior and current name so the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC) can confirm your file without repeated follow-up.
Some employers—especially hospitals, larger agencies, and insurance-contracted programs—use their own credentialing process, which can take longer than state licensure. If your start date depends on being licensed, check with HR early about what they need from OPLC and whether the license must be issued before you can begin client-facing duties.
New Hampshire has adopted the Social Work Licensure Compact in state law (RSA 330-A:18-e). This may matter if your role could later extend across state lines; watch for OPLC updates as compact privileges become operational.
If anything feels stalled or unclear, rely on the Board’s main page for announcements and contact options instead of secondhand timelines: New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (OPLC).
These FAQs cover the most common New Hampshire CSW licensing questions—degree, exam, supervised hours, application steps, renewal, and compact status.
You need a bachelor’s degree in social work (BSW) from a CSWE-approved program. This requirement appears in RSA 330-A:18-b, and you can confirm CSWE accreditation through CSWE.
The law requires that you “pass a national proctored examination approved by the board.” State law does not name a specific ASWB level, so follow the Board’s instructions for the exam it approves and register through ASWB.
For this license, New Hampshire requires 4,000 hours of supervised work experience. The requirement is listed in RSA 330-A:18-b. Keep your supervision logs and verification materials organized so they’re ready when requested.
Submit your application through the New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC) online portal: online application. To avoid delays, use the same name across transcripts, exam records, and supervision documentation.
No—CSW licensure does not authorize independent practice. Set expectations for oversight and job duties based on the limits described in RSA 330-A:18-b.
Timing depends on how quickly transcripts, exam results, and supervision verification are matched to your file. The best way to prevent avoidable delays is to submit consistent names, complete documents, and readable supervision verification.
You’ll need 40 approved continuing education hours every 2 years, including at least 6 ethics hours from Category A. The renewal and CE rules are in N.H. Admin. Rules Mhp 400.
Yes—New Hampshire has adopted the Social Work Licensure Compact in state law. If multi-state practice may matter later, follow implementation details under RSA 330-A:18-e.