New Hampshire Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker (LICSW)
AKA: New Hampshire LICSW License
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The LICSW is New Hampshire’s clinical social work credential for social workers who want to provide advanced clinical services and show they’ve met the state’s clinical training and testing standards. Many people pursue it after a graduate social work degree when they’re aiming for mental health roles, counseling-focused social work, or other positions centered on clinical assessment and treatment.
In New Hampshire, the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC) regulates LICSW licensure. State law and the Board’s administrative rules spell out the details and definitions, so it helps to use those references when planning.
The complete licensing rules—including definitions and supervision standards—appear in the New Hampshire Code of Administrative Rules under Mhp (Board of Mental Health Practice rules).
New Hampshire sets a clear education standard for LICSW licensure: earn a graduate social work degree from a CSWE-approved program.
State law says an LICSW applicant “has received a 2-year master’s degree or doctorate degree in social work from a school approved by the Council on Social Work Education” (RSA 330-A:18). That means the Board expects a master’s degree in social work (or higher) specifically in social work, not another behavioral health discipline.
The statute ties eligibility to the Council on Social Work Education. Before you enroll, verify that your program is CSWE-accredited/approved using CSWE’s accreditation directory (CSWE Accreditation). Reviewers commonly check this early in the application review.
When you apply through the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC), have your education records ready and easy to confirm. These items typically keep the review moving:
If you need clarification on how New Hampshire defines acceptable education or other licensing terms, see the Board’s administrative rules under Mhp (N.H. Board of Mental Health Practice rules).
New Hampshire includes an exam requirement for LICSW licensure. State law requires that an applicant have “passed a national proctored examination approved by the board.” (RSA 330-A:18)
The statute does not specify a particular ASWB exam level. In practice, most candidates satisfy the “national proctored examination” requirement by taking the ASWB exam required by the board. ASWB handles registration and exam administration here: https://www.aswb.org/exam/.
Since New Hampshire’s statute uses general language (“national proctored examination approved by the board”), select the ASWB exam level that matches what the Board approves for LICSW applicants under its rules and application requirements, then register accordingly.
Yes—New Hampshire requires supervised, post-master’s clinical experience before an LICSW license can be issued.
State law requires a minimum of 2 years of post-master’s experience, including at least 3,000 hours of post-master’s, supervised clinical experience. Supervision must come from a board-approved supervisor: a licensed independent clinical social worker, a licensed clinical mental health counselor supervisor, or another supervisor who meets criteria set in the Board’s rules (RSA 330-A:18).
Submit New Hampshire’s LICSW application online through the Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC). Processing tends to move fastest when your materials clearly show the three items the Board must verify by law: a qualifying social work degree, post-master’s supervised clinical experience, and a passing national exam.
File the LICSW application through the New Hampshire online forms portal: New Hampshire OPLC online application portal.
If supervision came from someone other than an LICSW or licensed clinical mental health counselor supervisor—or if your experience settings are hard to categorize—start by reviewing the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice rules so your documentation matches how supervision is evaluated: N.H. Code Admin. Rules (Mhp).
Licensing authority: New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC).
New Hampshire LICSW renewal runs through OPLC and typically involves CE attestation, timely filing, and keeping audit-ready records.
The Board’s administrative rules set New Hampshire’s renewal timing, including the renewal period length and exact deadlines. Confirm the current cycle details on the Board’s rules page: N.H. Code Admin. Rules (Mhp), Board of Mental Health Practice.
The Board’s rules govern CE for renewal. Since CE requirements may include specific categories (for example, ethics) or limits on certain formats, keep records that clearly show compliance if you’re selected for audit:
If you’re unsure whether a training counts (topic fit, format, or provider type), document it using the categories and definitions in the Mhp rules so reviewers can verify it quickly.
Complete renewal through New Hampshire’s online forms system used by OPLC: OPLC Online Forms Portal.
If a renewal is flagged for follow-up: send clear, organized attachments (certificate + agenda/description + your CE log line item). That package is easy to review and reduces back-and-forth.
In New Hampshire, most “regional” friction points show up around border-area employment and how supervision works when teams (and supervisors) are based in different states.
In southern New Hampshire, clinicians often work with employers, referral networks, or clients connected to Massachusetts, Maine, or Vermont. Even when a role is advertised as “remote” or “hybrid,” HR commonly checks that you can practice under New Hampshire licensure when the work is treated as New Hampshire practice. If a position spans multiple states, employers typically ask which state license(s) you hold and where services will be delivered.
Smaller agencies and more rural parts of the state may have fewer on-site supervisors who meet New Hampshire’s standards. State law allows the required post-master’s supervised clinical experience to be supervised by a board-approved licensed independent clinical social worker or a licensed clinical mental health counselor supervisor, and it also permits other supervisors if they meet criteria set in rule. That flexibility helps when the best-fit supervisor isn’t local, but employers may still request documentation up front showing the supervision plan fits New Hampshire’s framework under RSA 330-A:18 and the Board’s rules.
Relevant authorities: RSA 330-A:18 and the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC) administrative rules (Mhp).
The most reliable way to “future-proof” New Hampshire LICSW licensure is to keep a clear verification trail that aligns with how the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Practice (Office of Professional Licensure and Certification – OPLC) reviews eligibility under its statute and rules.
Even after you’re licensed, employers, credentialing panels, and insurers may request primary-source verification of education, exam passage, and supervised experience. Keep board-facing records—final supervision attestations, job descriptions that show clinical duties, and any board correspondence—in one dated folder so you can respond quickly without reconstructing details years later. The core eligibility elements are in RSA 330-A:18, with additional detail in the Board’s administrative rules (Mhp).
Job titles and HR categories don’t always match licensing language, especially in integrated care, community mental health, or hospital settings. If responsibilities are split across programs or sites, map duties and supervision arrangements back to the Board’s framework in rule—particularly when a supervisor sits outside the immediate workplace structure or holds a different license type than expected.
If your name changes between graduate school, ASWB testing, and licensure paperwork, minor mismatches can slow later verification. Keep copies of documents that link identities (for example, legal name change records) with degree and exam records to prevent delays when an employer or credentialing entity requests confirmation.
These FAQs cover the most common New Hampshire LICSW licensing questions—degree, exam, supervised hours, supervision, and how to submit the online application.
A master’s degree (or doctorate) in social work from a CSWE-approved school is required. Keep an official transcript available, since it’s often requested later for verification. The statutory requirement appears in RSA 330-A:18.
New Hampshire requires that you “pass a national proctored examination approved by the board.” In practice, register for the ASWB exam the Board accepts and make sure your exam record matches your legal name and identifying details. Registration begins at ASWB.
Plan on at least 2 years of post-master’s experience and at least 3,000 hours of post-master’s, supervised clinical experience under an approved supervisor. Save dated supervision documentation (contracts, logs, and final attestations) so you can verify hours and supervisor eligibility without rebuilding records later. The baseline requirement is listed in RSA 330-A:18.
A board-approved licensed independent clinical social worker or a licensed clinical mental health counselor supervisor may provide supervision, and the rules also allow other supervisors if they meet “reasonable and specific criteria” set in Board rules. Confirm fit with the Board’s framework before you start so your hours remain straightforward to count; the detailed standards are in the Board’s administrative rules (Mhp).
Submit your application through the New Hampshire OPLC online forms portal. Gather your transcript, exam documentation, and supervised-experience verification ahead of time so you can upload or submit everything without delays. Start here: NH online application portal.
No—earning the degree doesn’t grant LICSW status by itself. New Hampshire ties LICSW eligibility to meeting the education requirement, completing post-master’s supervised clinical experience, and passing the Board-approved national exam (see RSA 330-A:18), so expect a supervised period before you apply.
The quickest route is usually at least two years after completing your MSW, since the law requires a minimum of 2 years and 3,000 hours of post-master’s supervised clinical experience. Timing varies based on how steadily you accrue hours and how well you maintain supervision documentation.
Keep one dated folder with your final transcript, ASWB exam confirmation, supervision agreements/logs, supervisor license details, and any Board correspondence. Solid records help not only with initial licensure but also with future employer credentialing, insurance panels, and license verification requests.