New Mexico Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW)

AKA: New Mexico LISW 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 Mexico were reviewed and verified using official materials from the New Mexico Board of Social Work Examiners, including statutes and regulations published in the New Mexico Administrative Code (Title 16, Chapter 63). Information reflects current licensing standards, education requirements, examination expectations, supervised experience, and renewal requirements.

How to Become a Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in New Mexico

A Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) is an advanced social work license in New Mexico, typically pursued after earning a graduate social work degree and completing supervised post-graduate experience. Many LMSWs take this step to move into more autonomous roles, assume higher-level clinical responsibilities, or meet employer and payer expectations for independent-level practice.

The New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) — Board of Social Work Examiners regulates licensure.

Scope of practice can get nuanced, so read the Board’s statutes and rules early—especially if you plan to do independent clinical work, provide supervision, or work in private practice settings (statutes & rules).

Educational Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in New Mexico

Start by confirming you can document a qualifying graduate social work education. Education mismatches are a common reason applications get delayed, especially when the degree level, major, or school accreditation doesn’t match what the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) — Board of Social Work Examiners expects.

Degree level and field to confirm early

New Mexico’s independent/clinical pathway is based on post-graduate social work preparation (the rules discuss “post-graduate” experience for independent/clinical licensure). In practical terms, verify that you have a graduate degree in social work that meets the Board’s education standard before you spend time on exams or supervised hours.

If your program could raise questions—such as an interdisciplinary degree, a counseling-focused degree, or a program outside the U.S.—review the Board’s statutes and rules early so you can address any gaps before applying.

Accreditation: what to look for

To reduce education-related issues, check whether your social work program is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). CSWE accreditation is the standard most state boards rely on when evaluating U.S. social work degrees.

Confirm your program’s accreditation status and dates in CSWE’s directory:
CSWE accreditation.

Education documentation to gather before applying

Collect education documents in a format that’s easy to review. Even with a clearly titled “social work” degree, applications can slow down when transcripts are missing, incomplete, or don’t show the awarded degree.

  • Official transcript(s) showing the awarded degree and conferral date.
  • School name and campus location as it appears on your transcript (helpful when programs have multiple campuses).
  • Name changes: if your legal name differs from your transcript/diploma name, keep supporting documentation ready so records match cleanly.
  • International education (if applicable): be prepared for additional review steps and documentation so the Board can evaluate equivalency under its rules.

If your degree isn’t straightforward

If your degree title or major doesn’t clearly say “social work,” be prepared to show that it is a social work program and that it aligns with what New Mexico recognizes for licensure. Start with the Board’s published rules page, which is where New Mexico consolidates licensing standards and references.

If an education question comes up during the application process, use the Board’s main page to find contact options and guidance:
NMRLD — Board of Social Work Examiners.

Examination Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in New Mexico

To qualify for LISW licensure, New Mexico requires passing an ASWB exam and a separate state jurisprudence exam. 16.63.11 NMAC (rule)

1) ASWB exam (level set by the Board)

The rule does not lock LISW applicants into a single ASWB test level. New Mexico allows either the clinical or advanced ASWB exam, and the Board determines which level applies to your application. Register with the level the Board will accept for your LISW pathway to avoid having to retest because of an exam-level mismatch.

ASWB registration and exam information are available through ASWB: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.

2) New Mexico jurisprudence exam

A passing jurisprudence examination is also required for LISW licensure in New Mexico. This exam is separate from the ASWB test and covers New Mexico-specific laws and rules that govern social work practice.

Timing and coordination tips (to avoid rework)

  • Verify the correct ASWB level before testing. Since the rule allows either “clinical or advanced” as determined by the Board, confirming ahead of time can prevent delays if you take the wrong level.
  • Account for two separate passing results. The rule ties licensure to both an accepted ASWB score and a passing jurisprudence result.
  • Use one consistent name everywhere. Keep your legal name the same on your ASWB registration and licensure application materials so score reporting matches cleanly.

If you need clarification on how New Mexico applies these exam requirements to a specific application, contact the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) — Board of Social Work Examiners.

Supervision Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in New Mexico

Yes—LISW licensure in New Mexico requires supervised, post-graduate experience, so plan to document both your hours worked and supervision received.

What New Mexico requires

To qualify at the independent/clinical level, you need not less than two years of post-graduate direct/clinical social work experience under appropriate supervision. If you’re an LMSW moving to the independent clinical level, the rule also calls for 3,600 hours of licensed master’s-level social work experience completed within no more than 60 months, plus 90 hours of supervision during that same period. Within those supervision hours, no more than 20 hours may come from group supervision. The Board’s rules are in 16.63.11 NMAC (licensure as independent/clinical social worker).

What this means in practice

  • Track both experience and supervision. You’ll need to show you completed the full experience total (hours/years) and the required supervision hours.
  • Stay within the group-supervision cap. If more than 20 of the 90 hours are group-based, you’ll have to make up the difference with other supervision.
  • Mind the time limit. Experience has to be earned within the maximum window in the rule (60 months for the 3,600-hour pathway).

If you need clarity on how New Mexico interprets “appropriate supervision” or what documentation fits your situation, start with the Board’s FAQ page: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/faqs/.

Application Process for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) Licensure in New Mexico

Apply online through the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) — Board of Social Work Examiners. Reviews often pause when required third-party items (such as exam verification or supervision documentation) don’t match what you entered on the application.

Where to apply

Submit your application through NMRLD’s online licensing portal: https://nmrldlpi.my.site.com/bcd/s/login/. If you haven’t used the portal before, create your account early so login problems don’t turn into a last-minute delay.

What to gather before starting the online application

  • Proof that exam requirements are complete.
    New Mexico’s rule for independent/clinical licensure requires applicants to “successfully pass the association of social work board examination, clinical or advanced, as determined by the board and the jurisprudence examination.” Keep your ASWB exam record handy so you can request or confirm reporting through ASWB: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.
    The requirement is stated in 16.63.11 NMAC.
  • Supervision and experience documentation that matches the rule.
    That same rule spells out expectations for post-graduate experience and supervision documentation, including limits on group supervision. Before you submit, confirm that your totals and dates match what supervisors will document. See 16.63.11 NMAC and the Board’s FAQ page for practical clarifications: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/faqs/.
  • Education verification details.
    Have your school information and degree details ready exactly as they appear on official records so mismatches don’t trigger extra review.

How to submit (and what tends to slow reviews)

  1. Complete every field in the portal carefully. Minor inconsistencies—like changes in name formatting, date ranges that don’t match supervision forms, or leaving out a middle initial that appears on other documents—often lead to correction requests.
  2. Line up third-party items early. Exam verification and supervisor documentation depend on other people’s timelines. Request what you need before clicking “submit” so your file doesn’t sit in review waiting on outside paperwork.
  3. Keep your supervision math clean. When hours come from multiple sites or supervisors, verify that totals add up without overlap and that group supervision stays within the rule’s cap. If numbers don’t reconcile, reviewers typically have to pause and ask for clarification.
  4. Use one consistent contact email. It’s easy to miss portal messages and follow-ups when different emails are used across ASWB, supervisors, and the licensing portal.

If something is unclear while you’re applying

Start with the Board’s main page for LISW application navigation, contacts, and related resources: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/.

Licensure Renewal Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in New Mexico

Renewing a New Mexico LISW license means tracking the two-year renewal cycle, completing required CE hours, and keeping records ready for the online renewal process.

Renewal timing (avoid lapses)

New Mexico renews social work licenses on a two-year cycle. Each two-year period requires completion of the CE hours described below. Last-minute renewals often get slowed by missing CE documentation or login/portal access problems, not the renewal form itself. Renewal instructions and links are available on NMRLD’s renewals page: https://www.rld.nm.gov/sw-renewals/.

Continuing education (CE) requirement

30 hours of continuing education are required every two years. Spreading that out to about 15 hours per year helps avoid a rush right before renewal. The Board states this requirement in its FAQs: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/faqs/.

The published FAQ language does not include an ethics-hour breakdown in the same statement as the 30-hour total. As you plan CE, keep completion certificates and supporting details showing the course title, date, provider, and hours awarded so you can produce them quickly if requested.

What to document (and how long to keep it)

  • Completion proof for each CE activity. Save certificates or transcripts that clearly list your name, completion date, and number of hours.
  • A simple running log. A one-page spreadsheet with course name/provider/date/hours makes it easy to confirm you reached 30 hours within the two-year cycle.
  • Consistency with your license record. Use the same name format on CE certificates and in your licensing account to reduce follow-up questions during renewal.

Portal workflow (online renewal)

  1. Sign in to the NMRLD licensing portal: https://nmrldlpi.my.site.com/bcd/s/login/.
  2. Open your LISW license record, then choose the renewal option when it becomes available for your credential.
  3. Attest and/or upload CE information as prompted. Even if uploads aren’t required at submission, keep CE records organized and ready in case of audit or follow-up.
  4. Submit early enough to handle corrections. If anything needs clarification (for example, mismatched names or incomplete CE entries), early submission leaves time to respond without risking a lapse.

If a license lapses

A lapsed license can complicate employment verification and payer credentialing. If you may miss a deadline, start with NMRLD’s renewal page to confirm the right next step (renewal vs. reinstatement) and any status-specific instructions: https://www.rld.nm.gov/sw-renewals/.

Regional Issues

In New Mexico, regional issues usually show up when clients are out of state or services are delivered by telehealth across long distances.

Cross-border practice and multi-state employers

New Mexico borders several states, and many health systems and nonprofits operate across the region. Even with a New Mexico LISW, an employer may still require separate authorization in the state where the client is located at the time of service. If your role includes clients who live (or temporarily stay) outside New Mexico, ask how the employer manages multi-state compliance and which license(s) they expect you to hold.

Telehealth logistics across large service areas

Remote practice is often a practical necessity in a geographically large state. When an employer expects tele-services, plan for extra onboarding time for payer credentialing and internal privileging that may hinge on your New Mexico license status. For common remote-practice questions (documentation expectations, supervision logistics while accruing hours, or how the Board interprets typical practice situations), start with the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) — Board of Social Work Examiners FAQ page: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/faqs/.

Rule interpretation: keep the regulations handy

If employers (especially national telehealth companies) want exact language on New Mexico’s independent/clinical pathway, direct them to the Board’s statutes and rules page instead of relying on informal summaries: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/statutes-rules-and-rule-hearings/. Use this page as well to confirm details when a recruiter’s “standard” requirements don’t match New Mexico’s rules.

Additional Considerations

At the independent level, most delays come from verification details rather than the major milestones. Keeping records clean, names consistent, and documentation easy to audit can save weeks later if the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) — Board of Social Work Examiners asks for clarification or if an employer needs to confirm your status quickly.

Keep a verification-ready file (and update it as you go)

Set up one folder (digital is fine) with final versions of anything you might need to re-submit or re-verify later: supervision documentation, proof of passing the required exams, and any Board correspondence. Use clear filenames with dates (for example, “SupervisionLog_2026-03-31.pdf”) so the current version is obvious. If questions come up about how New Mexico handles common situations while you’re working toward independent licensure, start with the Board’s FAQ page: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/faqs/.

Name matching and identity consistency

Even small mismatches can slow verification, especially when exam records, school records, and licensing records don’t match exactly. Keep your name consistent across documents whenever possible. If you’ve had a name change, keep the supporting paperwork easy to find so you can provide it quickly during review or employer credentialing.

Know where to confirm rule language when something feels “off”

If a recruiter, supervisor, or HR department cites requirements that don’t sound like New Mexico’s pathway, use the Board’s statutes and rules page as the controlling source rather than informal summaries: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/statutes-rules-and-rule-hearings/. It’s also the best place to watch for changes over time so older advice doesn’t steer your plan.

FAQs

These FAQs cover the questions that come up most often when planning New Mexico LISW licensure, including exams, supervision hours, renewal, and timelines.

What exams do I need for LISW licensure in New Mexico?

New Mexico requires an ASWB exam and a jurisprudence exam. The rule language says independent/clinical applicants must “successfully pass the association of social work board examination, clinical or advanced, as determined by the board and the jurisprudence examination,” so confirm which ASWB level the Board will accept before you schedule. Register for the ASWB exam through https://www.aswb.org/exam/, and see the exam requirement in https://www.srca.nm.gov/parts/title16/16.063.0011.pdf.

How many supervised hours are required?

The state requires 3,600 hours of master’s-level social work experience completed within no more than 60 months, along with 90 hours of supervision during that time. Group supervision can count for up to 20 of the 90 supervision hours. These requirements are stated in https://www.srca.nm.gov/parts/title16/16.063.0011.pdf.

How long does it take to qualify?

Expect at least two years after graduation: the rules require not less than two years of post-graduate direct/clinical experience under appropriate supervision, and they also limit how long you have to accumulate hours. Delays often come from incomplete supervision documentation or slow employer verification, so keep your logs and supervisor sign-offs organized as you go.

Where do I apply for LISW licensure?

Submit your application through the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department (NMRLD) online portal: https://nmrldlpi.my.site.com/bcd/s/login/. Before uploading anything, double-check that your name matches across your application, exam records, and supervision paperwork to help avoid processing delays.

Can I practice independently as an LISW in New Mexico?

This independent/clinical license is meant for independent-level practice, but what you can do is defined by New Mexico law and rule language—not by employer job titles. If a position depends on what you may do independently (especially clinical services), use the Board’s statutes and rules page as your reference: https://www.rld.nm.gov/boards-and-commissions/individual-boards-and-commissions/social-work-examiners/statutes-rules-and-rule-hearings/.

What do I need to renew my license?

Renewal requires 30 hours of continuing education every two years. The Board states this in its FAQ materials (“30 hours of continuing education every two years”), which is also where many people look for practical renewal reminders.

What’s the most common reason applications get delayed?

Most delays come down to paperwork: missing supervision details, unclear hour totals, or name/identity mismatches between school records, ASWB records, and your application profile. Clean copies of supervision logs, exam confirmations, and any name-change paperwork usually reduce back-and-forth later.

Is New Mexico part of a social work licensure compact?

The Board does not show a compact pathway for this credential on its main licensing pages, so out-of-state applicants should generally expect a standard application review rather than an automatic compact process. If you’re timing a move or start date, allow extra time for verifications—supervision and exam records are common bottlenecks.

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