New Mexico Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW)
AKA: New Mexico LBSW License
What's Here? - Table of Contents
The LBSW is New Mexico’s entry-level social work license for people who have earned a bachelor’s degree in social work and want a state credential to begin practicing in social work roles. Many new BSW graduates pursue it when applying for jobs that require licensure, working in agencies that expect regulated practice, or gaining experience before moving on to advanced licensure. The license brings your work under New Mexico’s Social Work Practice Act and the Board’s rules, which also define clear boundaries on scope of practice. For example, an LBSW must not practice independently as a private practitioner.
Licensing is overseen by the New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners (New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department).
New Mexico’s LBSW education requirement is simple: earn a bachelor’s degree in social work (BSW) from a CSWE-accredited program. The licensing rule says applicants “must possess… a bachelor’s degree in social work from a program accredited by the council on social work education” (16.63.9 NMAC).
The requirement hinges on both the degree and the program’s accreditation, so paperwork is where delays usually happen. Have records ready that show you earned a bachelor’s in social work and that the program was CSWE-accredited when you attended/graduated.
To check whether a particular school’s social work program is CSWE-accredited, use CSWE’s accreditation directory (CSWE Accreditation). For New Mexico’s exact LBSW qualification language, see the baccalaureate rule in 16.63.9 NMAC.
To qualify for New Mexico LBSW licensure, pass the ASWB exam required for your level and a state jurisprudence exam (16.63.9 NMAC).
The New Mexico rule says you must pass “the association of social work board examination,” but it does not name a specific ASWB exam level in the rule text. In practice, follow the Board’s direction on which ASWB exam to take for the LBSW application.
New Mexico also requires passing a jurisprudence examination in addition to the ASWB exam (see 16.63.9 NMAC). This typically focuses on New Mexico’s laws and rules that govern social work practice.
The rule requires passing both exams for licensure, but it does not give a required order or a specific timeline. Plan your testing dates around when your application materials will be ready so scores attach to the correct file without extra back-and-forth.
The exam requirement (“successfully pass the association of social work board examination and the jurisprudence examination”) appears in New Mexico’s baccalaureate social worker rule: 16.63.9 NMAC.
New Mexico does not list a separate, post-degree supervised experience requirement to qualify for the LBSW license. The baccalaureate rule emphasizes holding a CSWE-accredited BSW and passing the required exams, and it does not specify a set number of supervised hours or years for initial licensure (see 16.63.9 NMAC).
Supervision still plays an important role in practice, even without a stated hour requirement. Under New Mexico’s baccalaureate rule, an LBSW must not practice independently as a private practitioner (16.63.9 NMAC). Many LBSWs work in roles where oversight is part of the position and workplace policies.
The New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners (New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department) also provides general supervision directions and an application form that may be useful in supervised settings, even though it is not an LBSW licensure prerequisite: Supervision General Directions and Application (PDF).
The fastest LBSW applications in New Mexico come in as a complete file: proof of a CSWE-accredited BSW, passing exam results (ASWB and jurisprudence), and everything submitted through the state’s online licensing portal.
The New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners (New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department) processes applications. File your LBSW application through the New Mexico Regulation & Licensing online portal: https://nmrldlpi.my.site.com/.
If anything needs clarification during review, use the Board’s main page for contact pathways and official updates: New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners.
Build your renewal plan around New Mexico’s fixed CE window: all continuing education must be completed within the current two-year renewal period, July 1 through June 30. Leaving everything to the end of the cycle can lead to preventable issues like missing certificates, coursework completed outside the window, or unfinished category hours.
Where an LBSW works in New Mexico can shape travel, supervision access, and cross-border coordination with nearby states and communities.
Outside the Albuquerque–Santa Fe corridor, agencies often serve large geographic areas. Job postings commonly reflect that reality: driving between sites, coordinating with schools and clinics in different towns, and keeping documentation consistent when supervisors or multidisciplinary teams are not on-site every day. Since New Mexico’s rules do not allow an LBSW to practice independently as a private practitioner, positions in smaller communities are typically set up under an agency umbrella with defined oversight rather than stand-alone practice. The prohibition on independent private practice is stated in the baccalaureate licensure rule (16.63.9 NMAC): https://www.srca.nm.gov/parts/title16/16.063.0009.pdf.
New Mexico’s continuing education rules require cultural awareness training as part of renewal (six of the 30 hours). Many employers treat that requirement as a baseline—especially in roles serving tribal communities, border communities, and multilingual households—so it helps to keep those certificates organized for onboarding, audits, and renewal. See 16.63.12 NMAC (Continuing Education): https://www.srca.nm.gov/wp-content/uploads/attachments/16.063.0012.pdf.
When a role includes clients who live in another state—or regular coordination with out-of-state programs—employers usually expect staff to understand that licensure is state-based. Keep services clearly tied to New Mexico-authorized practice settings, and use the New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners’ statutes and rules when questions come up about cross-border service delivery or job duties: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/statutes-rules-and-rule-hearings/.
Job postings and internal HR systems sometimes default to broad titles like “social worker” or “case manager.” In New Mexico, make sure business cards, email signatures, and documentation don’t suggest independent private practice authority under an LBSW. The baccalaureate rule is explicit that an LBSW must not practice independently as a private practitioner (16.63.9 NMAC): https://www.srca.nm.gov/parts/title16/16.063.0009.pdf.
When a role includes tasks that sound like psychotherapy, diagnosis, or independent treatment planning, stop and compare the job description with New Mexico’s Social Work Practice Act and the Board’s rules before taking those duties on as written. This comes up often when employers launch new programs or reclassify positions and the wording hasn’t caught up with licensing boundaries. Start with the Social Work Practice Act (NMSA 1978, Chapter 61, Article 31): https://www.rld.state.nm.us/uploads/files/Printable%20Version%20SW%20Statute%2001_08_16.pdf.
After licensure, routine questions still pop up—name changes, address updates, employer verification requests, or figuring out which rule applies. In most cases, the fastest place to start is the New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners (New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department) page and its statutes/rules hub: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/.
A bachelor’s degree in social work (BSW) from a program accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) is required. New Mexico’s baccalaureate rule lists a CSWE-accredited BSW as the minimum education requirement (16.63.9 NMAC).
The rule requires you to “successfully pass the association of social work board examination and the jurisprudence examination.” That typically means registering for the ASWB exam required by the Board and completing New Mexico’s jurisprudence requirement as part of licensure (16.63.9 NMAC; ASWB exam info: https://www.aswb.org/exam/).
No post-degree hour totals are listed in New Mexico’s LBSW rule as a condition of initial licensure. If an employer asks you to document supervision for a role, follow the Board’s supervision directions so the arrangement matches what New Mexico recognizes (Supervision General Directions and Application).
No—New Mexico’s baccalaureate rule states that an LBSW “must not practice independently as a private practitioner.” If a job description uses “independent” or “private practice” language, treat it as a red flag and compare the duties to the rule before accepting them (16.63.9 NMAC).
Submit your application through the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department’s online portal. Expect to upload education and exam-related documentation during the process (https://nmrldlpi.my.site.com/).
The timeline mostly depends on how quickly you complete the exam steps and how soon all documents are received and accepted during application review. Missing items or mismatched names across records are common causes of delays, so double-check everything before uploading.
You need 30 hours of continuing education every two years, including 6 hours in cultural awareness, earned within the renewal period described in the CE rule (16.63.12 NMAC). Renewal details and access typically run through the state renewal page (https://www.rld.nm.gov/sw-renewals/).
New Mexico has its own LBSW license category with specific education and exam requirements, so “transferring” usually means applying under New Mexico’s rules and showing you meet them. Use the New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners’ statutes/rules hub to compare your out-of-state credentials with New Mexico’s requirements (statutes, rules, and rule hearings).