Points of interest…
- Missouri issues four social work licenses: LBSW, LMSW, LAMSW, and LCSW, each requiring a CSWE-accredited degree.
- Every license level maps to a specific ASWB exam, from Bachelors through Clinical.
- LCSW candidates must complete a structured period of supervised post-graduate clinical hours before applying.
- Missouri participates in the Social Work Licensure Compact, offering a mobility option for out-of-state licensees as of 2026.
Missouri issues four distinct social work licenses, from the entry-level Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW) to the independently practicing Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW). Each credential carries specific education, examination, and supervision requirements enforced by the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers.
Regulatory updates in recent years mean 2026 applicants should verify current requirements directly with the Committee before submitting materials. Fee schedules, supervision hour thresholds, and continuing education mandates can shift between renewal cycles, and outdated information costs time.
Missouri's participation in the social work license Compact also creates new mobility options for practitioners relocating from other member states, though traditional endorsement remains available for those outside the compact.
Missouri Social Work License Types at a Glance
Four distinct credentials are issued by the Missouri Committee for Social Workers, each tied to a specific education level, exam, and scope of practice.1 Understanding which license aligns with your career goals is the first step toward practicing legally in the state.
Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW)
The LBSW is Missouri's entry-level credential. It requires a bachelor's degree in social work from a CSWE-accredited program and a passing score on the ASWB Bachelors exam. No post-degree supervised experience is needed before you can apply.1 Holders of this license perform generalist, nonclinical social work, which typically includes case management, client advocacy, community outreach, and referral coordination in settings such as schools, nonprofits, and government agencies.
Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW)
The LMSW is designed for practitioners who hold a master's degree in social work. Candidates must pass the ASWB Masters exam. Like the LBSW, no supervised post-graduate hours are required for initial licensure. The scope of practice covers advanced generalist and nonclinical services, opening the door to program development, policy analysis, and supervisory roles that go beyond what the LBSW permits.
Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)
Missouri's LCSW is the clinical-practice credential and the license most employers require for independent therapeutic work. It calls for a master's or doctoral degree in social work, completion of 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience, and a passing score on the ASWB Clinical exam.1 Once licensed, an LCSW may diagnose and treat mental health and behavioral disorders, conduct psychotherapy, and practice independently without ongoing supervision.
Licensed Advanced Macro Social Worker (LAMSW)
The LAMSW is a less commonly discussed but important credential for social workers whose interests lie in macro-level practice, including administration, research, community organizing, and policy advocacy. It requires a master's or doctoral degree, 3,000 hours of supervised experience in a macro-practice setting, and a passing score on the ASWB Advanced Generalist exam. This license recognizes expertise that falls outside the clinical track while still demanding a comparable level of post-graduate preparation.
Choosing the Right License
If you plan to provide therapy or clinical assessments, the LCSW is your target. If your ambitions center on leadership, organizational change, or systems-level advocacy, the LAMSW may be the better fit. Many practitioners begin with the LBSW or LMSW and then pursue an advanced credential after gaining experience. Whichever path you choose, every Missouri license requires graduation from a CSWE-accredited program and successful completion of an ASWB exam at the corresponding level. For a broader look at how these tiers compare nationwide, see the levels of social work licensure overview.
Education Requirements by License Level
Every social work credential in Missouri hinges on one non-negotiable foundation: graduation from a Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) accredited program at the appropriate degree level. The Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW) requires a CSWE-accredited bachelor of social work degree, while the Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW), Licensed Advanced Macro Social Worker (LAMSW), and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) all require a CSWE-accredited Master of Social Work. Attempting to substitute a psychology, sociology, or counseling degree will not satisfy Missouri's statutory education requirement, regardless of content overlap.
What CSWE Accreditation Means and Why It Matters
The Council on Social Work Education is the sole accrediting body recognized by the U.S. Department of Education for social work programs. CSWE sets minimum competency standards, curriculum frameworks, and field practicum hours that ensure graduates enter the profession with a shared baseline of knowledge in human behavior, policy, ethics, diversity, and intervention methods. Missouri's licensing statutes cite CSWE accreditation explicitly because it provides regulatory assurance that an applicant has completed the discipline-specific preparation necessary for safe, competent practice. Programs without CSWE accreditation, even if regionally accredited as an institution, do not meet Missouri's education requirement.
Online MSW Programs and Missouri Licensure
A common concern among prospective students is whether online MSW degrees qualify for Missouri licensure. The answer is yes: the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers accepts CSWE-accredited master's degrees regardless of delivery format. No in-state residency requirement or mandate for on-campus attendance exists at the board level. What matters is that the program holds current CSWE accreditation and that the student completes all required field practicum hours under proper supervision, which most online MSW programs arrange in the student's local community. For a curated directory of online and campus-based MSW programs that satisfy Missouri's education requirement, visit the Missouri MSW programs page at /states/missouri/.
Clinical Concentration for the LCSW Track
While all CSWE-accredited MSW programs prepare graduates for generalist and advanced practice, the LCSW license in Missouri requires competency in clinical assessment, diagnosis, and psychotherapy. Many programs offer distinct clinical or direct-practice concentrations that embed this content throughout advanced coursework and field placements. Although the Missouri board does not mandate a specific concentration label, applicants pursuing the LCSW should ensure their MSW curriculum and practicum hours included clinical social work skill development. Review the board's official application materials or contact the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers directly to confirm whether your planned or completed coursework aligns with the clinical licensure pathway.
ASWB Exam Requirements and How to Register
Which ASWB exam do you need to take for your Missouri social work license?
The answer depends on the license level you are pursuing. Missouri maps each credential to a specific ASWB examination:
- LBSW: Bachelors exam
- LMSW: Masters exam
- LAMSW: Advanced Macro exam
- LCSW: Clinical exam
One important detail for LCSW candidates: Missouri allows applicants to sit for the Clinical exam before completing all required supervised hours. Check directly with the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers for the exact supervision-hours threshold that triggers early-sit eligibility, as this figure is subject to change.
How to Register for the ASWB Exam
The registration process follows a defined sequence. Skipping steps or registering out of order can delay your authorization to test.
1. Submit your license application to the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers and wait for approval. 2. Once approved, you will receive an Authorization to Test (ATT) from ASWB. 3. Use your ATT to register with ASWB, which partners with Pearson VUE for test delivery. 4. Schedule your appointment at a Pearson VUE testing center near you. Centers are available throughout Missouri and nationally.
Your ATT has an expiration window, so schedule promptly after receiving it.
Retake Policy and Waiting Periods
If you do not pass on your first attempt, ASWB requires a 90-day waiting period before you can retest.1 There is no universal cap on the total number of attempts across ASWB's policies2; however, individual states govern their own limits3, so confirm Missouri's current position with the state board before planning multiple retakes.
One provision worth knowing: ASWB offers a 90-day waiting period waiver for candidates who scored within 10 correct answers of the passing standard.1 This waiver is not automatic. It requires state board permission and can be granted no more than twice within a 12-month period.2 If you believe you qualify, contact the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers to initiate the waiver request.
Preparing for the Exam
Pass rates vary by exam level and year, and ASWB does not publish disaggregated state-level data regularly. Nationally, the Clinical exam has historically seen lower first-attempt pass rates than the Bachelors or Masters exams, so plan your study timeline accordingly.
A few preparation strategies that consistently serve candidates well:
- Use ASWB's own practice tests: They reflect the current exam blueprint and are the most accurate simulation available.
- Choose current prep materials: The ASWB exam transitioned to a revised format in recent years. Study guides and courses from before that transition may not match what you will see on test day. Verify that any prep course or book references the current exam content outline.
- Commercial prep providers: ASWB exam prep courses from providers such as AATBS and Therapist Development Center offer structured courses with practice questions and content review modules.
Give yourself adequate lead time. Most candidates benefit from six to twelve weeks of structured study, particularly for the Masters and Clinical exams.
Explore other Missouri related topics
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Supervised Experience for LCSW and LAMSW
After earning your MSW, you cannot apply for a clinical or advanced macro license on education alone. Missouri requires a structured period of supervised post-graduate practice before the state will consider you eligible for the Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) or Licensed Advanced Macro Social Worker (LAMSW) credential.
Total Hours and Timeline
Missouri requires 3,000 supervised hours of post-MSW experience, completed over a minimum of 24 months and a maximum of 48 months.1 That four-year window is firm, so planning your supervision arrangement before you begin accruing hours is essential. Hours accumulated outside an approved supervision contract do not count toward your total, which is the single most common mistake candidates make during this phase.
Group supervision is permitted, but no more than 50 percent of your total supervision hours may come from group sessions.1 The remaining hours must be earned through individual supervision, at a minimum frequency of two hours of individual supervision for every two weeks of practice.
Supervisor Qualifications
Not everyone with a social work license can serve as your supervisor. Missouri requires that your supervisor hold an active Missouri social work license, hold a degree from a CSWE-accredited program, have at least five years of post-licensure experience, and have completed a board-required 16-hour supervisor training.2 For the clinical track, your supervisor must hold an LCSW. Before a single supervised hour counts, you and your supervisor must file a supervision contract with the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers. If your supervisor changes for any reason, you must notify the board within 14 days and file a new contract.3
Finding a Qualified Supervisor
Locating a supervisor who meets all of Missouri's criteria can take time, especially in rural areas or in agencies that primarily employ macro-level staff. If you want to understand how state supervised hours for LCSW compare across jurisdictions, the licensure hub covers requirements nationally. Several strategies improve your chances in Missouri:
- Employer inquiry: Ask during your job search whether your prospective employer has an LCSW on staff willing to supervise. Some agencies build this into the role.
- Missouri NASW chapter: The state chapter maintains directories and networking events where supervisors actively seek supervisees.
- Board registry: Check the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers for any board-published supervisor resources or registries.
- Private supervision agreement: If your workplace cannot provide a qualifying supervisor, you may arrange private supervision with an independent LCSW, typically at an out-of-pocket cost. Negotiate this before accepting a position so there are no surprises.
Keep detailed, dated records of every supervision session, including the format (individual or group), topics covered, and hours logged. The board may request documentation at any point, and organized records protect you if questions arise during your application review.
Questions to Ask Yourself
Application Steps, Fees, and Background Checks
Most applicants weigh moving fast against getting the paperwork right the first time: a rushed submission triggers deficiency notices and adds weeks, while a careful packet typically clears review without follow-up. Missouri's process is the same regardless of license level (LBSW, LMSW, LCSW, or LAMSW), but the supporting documents differ.1
The Application Sequence
The Missouri Committee for Social Workers accepts applications through the MOPRO online portal.2 Plan to complete these steps in order:
- Submit the application form: LBSW and LMSW candidates file the combined Application for Licensure (LMSW/LBSW).3 LCSW and LAMSW candidates file the clinical or advanced generalist application that matches their post-graduate experience.
- Pay the application fee: Fees are set by the Committee and posted on pr.mo.gov. Confirm the current amount in the portal before paying, since the state periodically adjusts its fee schedule.
- Authorize a fingerprint-based background check: Missouri has required this since 2019. Fingerprints are processed through the Missouri State Highway Patrol and FBI via the state's approved vendor. The vendor charges a separate fee at the time of scheduling.
- Send official transcripts: Your CSWE-accredited program must send transcripts directly to the Committee showing your conferred BSW, MSW, or DSW.
- Register and sit for the ASWB exam: Register with ASWB (not the state) and pay ASWB's exam fee. ASWB transmits your score to Missouri once you pass.
Timelines and Denials
Processing typically takes several weeks after all materials, including background check results, reach the Committee. Missouri does not advertise a general expedited review track for new applicants, so building in lead time before a job start date is wise.
If the Committee denies an application or the background check surfaces a disclosable issue, the applicant can respond with a sworn affidavit and supporting documentation explaining the circumstances.3 The Committee reviews these on a case-by-case basis, and applicants have the right to a hearing before the Administrative Hearing Commission if they wish to appeal a final denial. For a broader look at social work license denial reasons and the appeals process, including how criminal history is evaluated, see our dedicated topic guide.
Path to Social Work Licensure in Missouri
Missouri offers two main licensure tracks: a shorter path to the LBSW or LMSW for those entering direct practice, and a longer path to the LCSW for clinicians seeking independent practice authority. The timeline below outlines each milestone, with approximate durations and licensure-related costs (tuition excluded).

License Renewal and Continuing Education
License renewal is the process every Missouri social worker (LBSW, LMSW, LCSW) must complete to keep their credential active and legally usable. Renewal is handled through the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers and tied to a personal calendar marker rather than a fixed statewide date, so the deadline is unique to you.
Renewal Cycle and Fees
Missouri uses a biennial renewal cycle anchored to the licensee's birth month. Your license expires on the last day of your birth month every two years, and the Committee typically opens the renewal window roughly 60 to 90 days before expiration. The standard renewal fee is $65 per cycle. Submit your renewal and continuing education documentation before the expiration date to avoid late fees or a lapse in licensure.
Continuing Education Requirements
Missouri requires 30 contact hours of continuing education for social workers per two-year renewal cycle for all license levels.2 Within those 30 hours, you must complete:
- Ethics: 3 hours of CE specifically in professional ethics2
- Suicide prevention: 2 hours of CE in suicide assessment, treatment, or management2
The remaining hours can cover clinical practice, cultural competence, supervision, policy, or other social work topics. CE must be earned through Committee-approved providers, including ASWB-approved continuing education sponsors, NASW chapters, accredited universities, and recognized national organizations.2 Online and correspondence courses are accepted without a cap, so a fully virtual CE plan is permissible.2 The Committee conducts random audits, so retain certificates of completion for at least the current and prior renewal cycle.
Lapsed Licenses and Reinstatement
A license that is not renewed by the expiration date becomes lapsed. You may not legally practice social work in Missouri on a lapsed license. If the license remains lapsed for more than two years, you generally cannot simply renew: you must reapply, which can involve a new application, additional fees, and demonstrating current CE.3 A lapsed license is distinct from a revoked or disciplined license, which involves a formal board action and a separate reinstatement petition process. Contact the Committee directly before practicing if there is any question about your status.
Do not wait until the final months of your renewal period to chase CE credits. Spread your coursework evenly across the full two-year cycle, and keep a digital folder with certificates of completion for every course you finish. This habit protects you during an audit and prevents the stressful scramble that catches many licensees off guard near renewal deadlines.
Reciprocity, Endorsement, and the Social Work Licensure Compact
Can you use your out-of-state social work license to practice in Missouri without starting from scratch? The answer depends on whether you're relying on the Social Work Licensure Compact or Missouri's traditional endorsement process, and as of 2026, both pathways exist but operate differently.
Missouri's Compact Membership Status
Missouri became the first state in the nation to enact Social Work Licensure Compact legislation in 2023, passing Senate Bills 70 and 157.1 The compact officially took effect in Missouri on July 7, 2023,2 and Missouri remains an active member state in 2026.3 The compact was designed to allow licensed social workers to practice across member states without obtaining separate licenses in each jurisdiction. However, multistate license privileges under the compact are not yet available as of mid-2026.3 The compact requires a 12- to 24-month implementation period following its activation, which occurred in April 2024 after seven states had joined.4 Social workers should monitor the ASWB and Missouri Committee for Social Workers for updates on when multistate privileges will become operational.
Traditional Endorsement for Out-of-State Licensees
Until compact privileges are fully implemented, social workers licensed in other states must apply for Missouri licensure through the traditional endorsement process.3 Missouri requires applicants to submit verification of their current license from the original issuing state, official transcripts demonstrating graduation from a CSWE-accredited program, verification of ASWB exam scores, and completion of a background check.3 All documentation must be submitted to the Missouri Division of Professional Registration. The endorsement application does not waive any of Missouri's core requirements: you must have passed the same level of ASWB exam (Bachelors, Masters, or Clinical) as the license you seek in Missouri, and for clinical licensure, your supervised experience hours must meet Missouri's standards.
Compact Privilege vs. Endorsement
Once multistate privileges become available, compact members will be able to practice in Missouri and other member states without filing separate state applications, provided their home state is also a compact member and they hold a valid license in good standing.5 If you are relocating from a neighboring compact member such as Arkansas social work license requirements, understanding how endorsement timelines compare across states can help you plan ahead. Traditional endorsement, by contrast, requires a Missouri-specific application, fees, and credential review. Missouri does not currently offer temporary or provisional licenses for out-of-state social workers relocating while their endorsement application is being processed,3 so plan your timeline accordingly and apply well before you intend to begin practice in the state.
Missouri Social Worker Salary Overview
The table below summarizes approximate 2024 annual wages for major social work occupations in Missouri, based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. Because federal salary data uses broad occupational codes that do not map perfectly to every social work specialty or license level, these figures should be treated as useful benchmarks rather than precise predictions. For a deeper look at how Missouri compares nationally and how specialization affects earning potential, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Occupation | Total Employment | 25th Percentile | Median Salary | 75th Percentile | Mean Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 7,970 | $42,360 | $47,200 | $53,140 | $48,660 |
| Healthcare Social Workers | 4,630 | $43,400 | $53,060 | $69,300 | $57,660 |
| Social Workers, All Other | 1,120 | $44,990 | $52,080 | $98,320 | $69,060 |
Social Worker Salary by Metro Area in Missouri
Salaries for social workers in Missouri vary considerably by metro area and specialty. The table below draws from federal occupational wage data to show how median annual pay differs across major Missouri metros for three social work categories. Kansas City generally leads in compensation, while smaller metros such as Jefferson City and Cape Girardeau tend to fall below the statewide average. Nationally, the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 7 percent job growth for social workers between 2024 and 2034, translating to roughly 75,000 new positions, so demand in Missouri metros is expected to remain strong. For a deeper look at pay trends, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Metro Area | Child, Family, and School Social Workers (Median) | Healthcare Social Workers (Median) | Social Workers, All Other (Median) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kansas City, MO | $49,380 | $64,500 | $81,730 |
| St. Louis, MO | $49,500 | $56,890 | $64,390 |
| Springfield, MO | $46,490 | $53,480 | $49,750 |
| Columbia, MO | $45,910 | $57,110 | N/A |
| Joplin, MO | $46,720 | $48,770 | $52,080 |
| Jefferson City, MO | $46,750 | $48,420 | $44,990 |
| Cape Girardeau, MO | $45,440 | $47,980 | N/A |
| St. Joseph, MO | $45,680 | $46,530 | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions About Missouri Social Work Licensure
Below are answers to common questions about earning and maintaining a social work license in Missouri. For deeper detail on any topic, refer to the corresponding section of this guide or visit the Missouri State Committee for Social Workers website.






