Missouri Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)

AKA: Missouri LCSW License

Social Worker License

by Social Worker License Staff

Updated: April 13th, 2026

Last verified: April 13th, 2026

This guide was last reviewed against official information published by the Missouri Committee for Social Workers, along with the applicable Missouri Revised Statutes (Chapter 337 – Social Workers) and related administrative rules governing licensure. These sources define the state’s requirements for education, examination, supervised experience, scope of practice, and license renewal.

How to Become a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in Missouri

In Missouri, the LCSW is the clinical social work license for professionals seeking state recognition to provide clinical social work services under licensure. MSW graduates often pursue it when they plan to work in clinical settings where employers, payers, and professional standards expect a clinical credential.

Educational Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in Missouri

Missouri’s LCSW education requirement begins with a master’s degree in social work (or, in some cases, a doctorate in social work that the state accepts). The Missouri State Committee for Social Workers reviews education as part of licensure eligibility under RSMo § 337.615.

Degree level and field

State law allows either of the following to meet the education requirement:

  • A master’s degree from a college or university program of social work; or
  • A doctorate degree from a school of social work that is acceptable to the committee.

Practically speaking, the degree needs to come from a graduate social work program—not a related counseling or psychology program labeled “social services” or “human services.”

Accreditation and “approved” programs

If you’re using the master’s route, Missouri accepts a program of social work that is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE), or one that is otherwise recognized and approved by the committee under state law. That approval language appears in the statute (RSMo § 337.615). You can confirm CSWE accreditation through CSWE’s accreditation directory.

Education documentation to expect when applying

When you apply, plan to provide documentation showing you completed the graduate degree so the committee can confirm the program and award date. Application instructions and submission steps are handled through the state’s licensing portal at MO Professional Registration Online (MOPRO).

Examination Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in Missouri

To qualify for Missouri LCSW licensure, a passing score is required on a committee-approved social work exam (RSMo § 337.615).

Which exam is required?

The Missouri State Committee for Social Workers (Division of Professional Registration) uses the ASWB exam as its licensing examination. Register for the ASWB exam Missouri requires for the license level you’re seeking, then follow Missouri’s authorization steps through the state process.

ASWB Exam registration and information

How registration and authorization typically works

Two pieces need to line up:

  • Authorization/eligibility from Missouri (so ASWB can release a seat to you under Missouri’s requirements); and
  • Your ASWB registration and scheduling after you’re authorized.

Since Missouri sets eligibility through committee rules, confirm timing (for example, whether the exam comes after certain application steps) through the committee’s licensing information and rules page: Missouri social work rules & statutes.

When to take the exam (avoid timing mismatches)

Schedule the exam when Missouri will recognize you as eligible. Taking it too early or scheduling under the wrong jurisdiction/credential can cause delays while records are corrected. A straightforward approach is to begin your licensure process in Missouri’s online portal and follow the prompts for exam authorization and score reporting.

MO Professional Registration Online (MOPRO)

Passing scores and score reporting

Missouri requires a “passing score, as defined by the committee,” on an approved exam (RSMo § 337.615). During ASWB registration, select Missouri for score reporting so your results match to your licensure file without extra back-and-forth.

Supervision Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in Missouri

Yes. Missouri requires supervised post-degree clinical experience before the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers (Division of Professional Registration) will issue the LCSW.

Under state law, you must complete at least 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience with a qualified clinical supervisor. Those hours must be finished in no less than 24 months and no more than 48 consecutive calendar months (RSMo § 337.615).

What this means in practice

  • This is required for licensure, not just something employers look for. Your hours must be supervised and completed within the 24–48 month timeframe set out in the statute.
  • Your supervisor has to meet Missouri’s definition of a “qualified clinical supervisor.” The statute points to that definition in section 337.600. If you’re unsure whether someone qualifies, check Missouri’s rules and statutes before counting any hours toward licensure.

You can find related statutory and regulatory details (including definitions and committee rules) on the committee’s rules and statutes page: Missouri social work rules & statutes.

Application Process for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) Licensure in Missouri

Missouri’s LCSW application moves fastest when what you submit matches what the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers (Division of Professional Registration) can confirm: your education, exam results, and supervised clinical experience. Many delays come from missing verifications or paperwork that doesn’t show the required details clearly.

Where to apply

Submit your application through Missouri’s online licensing system: MoPRO.

What to have ready before starting the online application

  • Proof of qualifying graduate social work education.
    State law requires a master’s degree in social work from a CSWE-accredited program (or a program approved by the committee under Missouri law), or an acceptable doctorate in social work (RSMo § 337.615). Applications often slow down when the degree title, major, or school/program information isn’t easy to confirm from the documents provided.
  • Exam completion information.
    Missouri requires a passing score “as defined by the committee” on an exam approved by the committee (RSMo § 337.615). The statute doesn’t name a specific ASWB exam level, so follow the board’s directions on which ASWB exam is required and use ASWB’s exam page for registration steps: ASWB Exam.
  • Supervised clinical experience verification.
    You need at least 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience with a qualified clinical supervisor, completed in no less than 24 months and no more than 48 consecutive calendar months (RSMo § 337.615). Make sure your supervision paperwork clearly shows both total hours and the timeframe—those are frequent mismatch points.

Common avoidable delays (and how to prevent them)

  • Education documents don’t clearly match Missouri’s degree requirement.
    When CSWE accreditation isn’t obvious from the materials, be ready to show the program meets Missouri’s statutory standard.
  • Experience documentation doesn’t line up with the required window.
    Missouri ties supervised experience to a minimum/maximum timeframe (24–48 consecutive months). Missing dates or conflicting dates across forms commonly lead to correction requests and delays.
  • Supervisor qualification is unclear.
    Your hours must be supervised by a “qualified clinical supervisor” as defined in Missouri law. If the signer’s credentials aren’t identified or don’t clearly meet that definition, expect follow-up.
  • Name mismatches across records.
    If transcripts, exam records, and supervision verification show different names (such as after a name change), include consistent identifying information so staff can match records without extra outreach.

If something needs clarification

Start with the committee’s main page for official instructions and any posted forms or updates: Missouri State Committee for Social Workers. For statutes and rules referenced during review, use the committee’s rules and statutes page: Missouri social work rules & statutes.

Licensure Renewal Requirements for Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in Missouri

Renew on time and keep your CE paperwork organized. Missouri requires continuing education each renewal cycle, and renewal goes faster when your CE records are ready before you log into the portal.

Renewal timing (and avoiding a lapse)

Missouri’s social work rules tie continuing education to each renewal cycle, but the CE rule itself does not list a specific renewal due date or expiration schedule. Renewals are completed through the state’s online licensing system, MoPRO. If your license is nearing expiration, renewing as soon as the system allows can help avoid last-minute issues such as payment problems or missing CE documentation.

Continuing education (CE) required for renewal

Missouri requires 30 clock hours of acceptable continuing professional education completed before renewal to renew an LCSW license. Out of those 30 hours, 3 clock hours must be in ethics. The renewal cycle runs 24 months. These requirements are set out in 20 CSR 2263-2.030.

  • Schedule the ethics hours early. Since ethics is a separate requirement (3 hours), it’s easy to finish everything else and still be short on ethics when renewal is close.
  • Track “clock hours” the same way throughout the cycle. Save certificates and completion records that clearly list the course title, date, provider, and hours so your total cleanly reaches 30.

What to keep in your records

Renewal tends to go smoothly when your documentation is complete. Keep:

  • CE completion certificates that show the number of clock hours earned.
  • An ethics CE record that clearly identifies the course as ethics and shows at least 3 clock hours.
  • A running total for the full cycle so you can confirm you reached 30 hours before you submit the renewal.

Renewal workflow in MoPRO

  1. Sign in to MoPRO: https://mopro.mo.gov/license/s/.
  2. Select the license to renew and follow the renewal prompts.
  3. Complete any required attestations, including that you finished CE for the cycle (with ethics included in that total), as prompted.
  4. Submit payment and confirmation. Save a copy of the confirmation page or receipt for your records.

If you’re unsure whether a course counts

If questions come up about acceptable CE or other renewal-related requirements, start with the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers (Division of Professional Registration) rules and statutes page: https://pr.mo.gov/socialworkers-rules-statutes.asp.

Regional Issues

Regional issues in Missouri usually show up when clients, supervisors, or employers cross state lines, especially with telehealth and multi-state systems.

Cross-border practice and multi-state employers

When an employer serves clients in multiple states (or assigns clinicians across state programs), licensure expectations can shift fast. In Missouri, the licensing home base is the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers (Division of Professional Registration). Use it as the first stop when you need to sort out what requires Missouri licensure versus another state’s credential: https://pr.mo.gov/socialworkers.asp.

Telehealth and “where the client is”

Tele-services make it easy for a client to be physically outside Missouri during a session (travel, school, temporary relocation). Employers often treat that as an out-of-state practice question and may require additional licensure where the client is located. To confirm how Missouri defines regulated practice and titles, start with Missouri’s rules and statutes page: https://pr.mo.gov/socialworkers-rules-statutes.asp.

Planning supervision when you’re not near major metros

In areas where clinical supervisors are harder to find locally, plan supervision logistics early—before taking a role that expects progress toward clinical licensure. Missouri law ties clinical licensure to supervised clinical experience completed within a specific time window, so delays in securing qualified supervision can slow your overall timeline. The supervised experience framework is set out in RSMo § 337.615: https://revisor.mo.gov/main/OneSection.aspx?section=337.615.

Additional Considerations

Title use and role clarity

In Missouri, scope and documentation issues are easiest to avoid when you clearly identify which credential applies in each setting. Job postings and internal HR titles may use “clinical social worker” loosely, but regulated titles and clinical authority come from state licensure. If the role includes clinical services, align the position description, informed-consent language, and signature block with the license held—and make sure public-facing profiles (clinic website, directories, telehealth platforms) reflect the same information.

If you need clarity on what a specific title means under Missouri law or rule, start with the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers (Division of Professional Registration) rules/statutes page: https://pr.mo.gov/socialworkers-rules-statutes.asp.

Out-of-state education and “committee-approved” programs

Missouri’s statute accepts qualifying degrees not only from CSWE-accredited programs, but also from programs “recognized and approved by the committee” through separate statutory procedures. This is most relevant for applicants whose education falls outside CSWE accreditation pathways (including some out-of-state or international programs). If that describes your background, confirm early how the committee reviews program acceptability to avoid surprises later in the process.

Using the online portal without delays

Missouri’s licensing steps run through the state’s online system. Before you begin an application task in the portal, collect names and contact details exactly as they appear on official records (school name at time of graduation, legal name history if applicable). Even small mismatches can slow verification and lead to extra back-and-forth messages. The portal entry point is: https://mopro.mo.gov/license/s/.

FAQs

What degree do I need to become an LCSW in Missouri?

Missouri requires a master’s in social work (or a qualifying doctorate). The law recognizes a master’s from a CSWE-accredited program or a program the committee approves through its process, and it also allows a doctorate in social work that the committee finds acceptable (RSMo § 337.615).

Which ASWB exam do I need for Missouri LCSW licensure?

Missouri requires “a passing score, as defined by the committee, on an examination approved by the committee.” In practice, you’ll register for the ASWB exam pathway the committee accepts and follow the eligibility steps connected to your application (ASWB exam registration; RSMo § 337.615).

How many supervised clinical hours are required in Missouri?

At least 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience are required with a qualified clinical supervisor. Those hours must be completed in no less than 24 months and no more than 48 consecutive calendar months (RSMo § 337.615). Keep a clear audit trail as you go—dates, setting, supervisor credentials, and hour totals—so verification is straightforward when you apply.

How do I apply for LCSW licensure in Missouri?

Apply through Missouri’s online portal. Submit uploads that match your official records—legal name history, school name at graduation, and any supervision documentation—to reduce avoidable delays (Missouri online licensing portal).

Does an LCSW in Missouri have independent practice authority?

Scope of practice and title protections are set out in Missouri’s statutes and rules, which are the most reliable place to confirm what an LCSW can do without supervision in a particular setting. If your question involves psychotherapy language, advertising, or job descriptions, start with the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers rules/statutes page (rules & statutes).

How long does it usually take to become an LCSW in Missouri?

The supervised experience alone must take at least 24 months and must be completed within 48 consecutive months. Beyond that, timing depends on how quickly education and exam items post and how easily your supervision documentation can be verified (RSMo § 337.615).

What are the renewal continuing education requirements?

Each renewal cycle requires 30 clock hours of acceptable continuing professional education, including 3 clock hours of ethics (20 CSR 2263-2.030). Save CE certificates as PDFs with consistent filenames (provider-date-hours-topic) to make renewals and audits easier.

I was educated outside CSWE accreditation—can Missouri still accept my degree?

Possibly. Missouri law allows degrees that are “recognized and approved by the committee” through its approval process, which matters most for non-CSWE pathways (RSMo § 337.615; see also RSMo § 337.627). Confirm acceptability early so you don’t invest time in supervision hours before your education is cleared.

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