Minnesota Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW)

AKA: Minnesota LISW License

Social Worker License

by Social Worker License Staff

Updated: April 12th, 2026

Last verified: April 12th, 2026

This guide was last reviewed against official information published by the Minnesota Board of Social Work, along with the applicable Minnesota Statutes (Chapter 148E – Social Workers) and related administrative rules governing licensure. These sources define the state’s requirements for education, examination, supervised practice, scope of practice, and license renewal.

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

The Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) is Minnesota’s master’s-level license for social workers who want to practice independently in nonclinical social work settings. Employers often look for this credential in health care, schools, public agencies, and community organizations when a role requires advanced judgment, independent practice authority, and clear professional accountability.

The Minnesota Board of Social Work regulates licensing. For the standard LISW-by-examination path, the core requirements are a qualifying graduate social work degree, a passing ASWB Advanced Generalist exam score, a criminal background check for initial licensure unless an exception applies, and documentation of 4,000 hours of nonclinical supervised practice. Minnesota also draws an important scope line: an LISW may practice independently, but may not engage in clinical practice except under supervision allowed by law.

Educational Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in Minnesota

LISW licensure in Minnesota begins with a graduate degree in social work that meets the state’s accreditation standard. For most applicants, that means a master’s degree in social work.

Required degree level and field

Minnesota law requires a graduate degree in social work from a program accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE), the Canadian Association of Schools of Social Work, or a similar accreditation body the Board designates. The statute also recognizes a doctorate in social work from an accredited university.

  • Degree level: A graduate social work degree is required.
  • Degree field: The degree must be in social work, not a related field like counseling, psychology, or human services.
  • Doctoral option: A doctorate in social work from an accredited university can also satisfy the education requirement.

Accreditation: what it means in practice

A straightforward way to meet Minnesota’s education standard is to earn your degree from a CSWE-accredited program. That is usually the clearest path for application review.

Education documentation to prepare

  • Official transcript: It should show the degree awarded, the major, and the date the degree was conferred.
  • Program identification: Your records should clearly identify the program as a social work degree program.
  • Accreditation support if needed: If accreditation is not obvious from the transcript or school materials, be ready to document that the program met Minnesota’s statutory standard when your degree was conferred.

Examination Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in Minnesota

To qualify for standard LISW licensure in Minnesota, you must pass the ASWB Advanced Generalist exam. Minnesota’s standard LISW application page and Minn. Stat. § 148E.055 both use that exam level for the LISW by-examination path.

Which exam to take

  • Required level: ASWB Advanced Generalist
  • Equivalent exams: Minnesota law allows an equivalent exam if the Board designates one, but most applicants satisfy the requirement with the ASWB Advanced Generalist exam.

How to register

Register through ASWB and follow its scheduling and testing instructions here: ASWB exam information.

When to take the exam

Because Minnesota treats exam passage as part of your standard LISW eligibility file, it helps to plan your exam date around when the rest of your materials will be ready. A passing score alone will not move the application forward if supervised-practice documentation or other required items are still missing.

Supervision Requirements for Licensed Independent Social Worker (LISW) in Minnesota

Yes. Minnesota requires documentation of 4,000 hours of nonclinical supervised practice for the standard LISW-by-examination path.

The Minnesota Board’s current LISW application page states that standard LISW applicants must document 4,000 hours of nonclinical supervised practice. The Board’s nonclinical supervision page further explains that this nonclinical supervision framework is a one-time requirement for LGSWs in nonclinical practice who are progressing to LISW, and that the Board requires documentation of 100 hours of supervision over 4,000 hours of practice.

What to document

  • Total practice hours: 4,000 hours of nonclinical supervised practice
  • Supervision verification: The Board’s supervision page and forms should be used to document the required supervision
  • Consistent records: Keep dates, totals, and supervisor information accurate across all forms and logs

Important scope point after licensure

Minnesota allows an LISW to practice independently, but an LISW may not engage in clinical practice except under supervision by an LICSW or another supervisor allowed by law. That distinction matters if a job includes therapy or other clinical treatment services.

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

Apply through the Minnesota Board of Social Work’s online system, and make sure your degree, exam, supervised-practice documentation, and background-check requirement all line up before you submit.

Where to apply

Submit the standard LISW application through Minnesota’s Online Services portal. General licensing information is available from the Minnesota Board of Social Work.

What to have ready before you apply

  • Graduate social work degree documentation: Official transcript showing degree, major, and conferral date
  • ASWB Advanced Generalist exam passage: A passing score that the Board can verify
  • Nonclinical supervised-practice verification: Documentation showing the required supervised-practice requirement has been met
  • Criminal background check readiness: The Board requires a fingerprint-based criminal background check for all initial licensure applicants unless the applicant already holds a current standard or temporary Minnesota social work license
  • Consistent identifying information: Use the same legal name across transcripts, exam records, CBC records, and your portal profile

Common avoidable delays

  • Transcript issues: The degree is not yet posted, or the transcript does not clearly show degree, major, and conferral date
  • Supervision records do not line up: Totals, dates, or supervisor details are incomplete or inconsistent
  • Background-check timing: The Board cannot issue the license until the CBC requirement is completed when it applies
  • Name mismatches: Differences between school, ASWB, CBC, and portal records slow matching and review

How long processing usually takes

The Minnesota Board says getting a standard license generally takes at least three months, and often longer. Initial application review typically takes 30 to 60 days from the date the Board receives the application. If supporting documents are missing or unclear, processing can take longer.

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

Renewing an LISW in Minnesota means tracking the two-year cycle, completing the required continuing education, and renewing through the online system with clear records.

Renewal cycle

Minnesota social work licenses renew on a two-year cycle.

Continuing education (CE) requirements

For each two-year renewal term, Minnesota requires 40 total hours of continuing education, including:

  • 2 hours in social work ethics
  • 4 hours in cultural responsiveness

Up to 50% of the total may be completed through independent learning.

What to keep

  • Completion certificates or transcripts showing course title, date, and hours
  • A CE log showing your total hours for the current cycle
  • Category notes identifying which courses count toward ethics and cultural responsiveness

How to renew online

  1. Sign in to Online Services: soc.hlb.state.mn.us
  2. Select the LISW renewal option
  3. Complete the attestations and renewal questions
  4. Submit the renewal and save confirmation

For renewal instructions and status questions, use the Board’s license renewal page.

Regional Issues

Regional issues matter most when a Minnesota-based LISW role crosses state lines or uses tele-services with clients located outside Minnesota.

Border-state and multi-state work

A Minnesota LISW is still a Minnesota license. If a role includes clients in neighboring states, confirm early whether additional authorization is required where the client is located.

Tele-services and client location

Tele-services can create licensing issues quickly when a client moves or receives services outside Minnesota. If telework is part of the job, clarify how the employer handles cross-border service delivery and client-location rules.

Social Work Licensure Compact

Minnesota has adopted the Social Work Licensure Compact in statute. That can matter for border-area practice and multistate service delivery, but applicants should still confirm current implementation details and employer expectations before assuming compact-based practice rights are available for a specific role.

Additional Considerations

Independent practice is not the same as clinical practice

The LISW allows independent nonclinical social work practice, but it is not Minnesota’s clinical social work license. If a role includes therapy or other clinical treatment functions, make sure the job’s supervision structure and license expectations match Minnesota law.

Keep your file verification-ready

It helps to keep transcripts, exam records, supervision verification, CE records, and any Board correspondence organized in one place. That makes application, renewal, and employment credentialing easier to manage.

FAQs

What degree do I need to become an LISW in Minnesota?

You need a master’s degree in social work from a qualifying accredited program, or a doctorate in social work from an accredited university.

Which ASWB exam do I take for Minnesota LISW licensure?

You need the ASWB Advanced Generalist exam for the standard LISW-by-examination path.

How much supervised practice do I need before I can be licensed as an LISW?

Minnesota’s standard LISW application page requires documentation of 4,000 hours of nonclinical supervised practice. The Board’s nonclinical supervision materials describe that as 100 hours of supervision over 4,000 hours of practice for LGSWs in nonclinical practice progressing to LISW.

Is a criminal background check required?

Yes. For initial licensure, Minnesota requires a fingerprint-based criminal background check unless you already hold a current standard or temporary Minnesota social work license.

Can an LISW provide therapy or psychotherapy in Minnesota?

Not independently. An LISW may not engage in clinical practice except under supervision by an LICSW or another supervisor allowed by law.

Where do I apply for Minnesota LISW licensure?

Apply through the Minnesota Board of Social Work’s Online Services portal.

How long does it take to get an LISW license in Minnesota?

The Minnesota Board says standard licensing generally takes at least three months, and initial review usually takes 30 to 60 days from the date your application is received.

What do I need to renew my LISW license in Minnesota?

You need 40 total continuing education hours every two years, including 2 hours in ethics and 4 hours in cultural responsiveness. Up to half of the total may be completed through independent learning.

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