Points of interest…
- Indiana issues three license levels: LBSW, LSW, and LCSW, each requiring a CSWE accredited degree and a tier specific ASWB exam.
- LCSW candidates must complete a structured period of supervised clinical practice under a board approved supervisor after earning their LSW.
- Indiana has not joined the Social Work Licensure Compact, so out of state applicants must apply through the board's endorsement process.
- The full path from a BSW to independent LCSW practice in Indiana typically spans eight to ten years.
Indiana issues three tiers of social work licensure: the Licensed Bachelor Social Worker (LBSW), the Licensed Social Worker (LSW), and the Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW). Each credential unlocks a distinct scope of practice, from generalist direct services at the bachelor's level to independent clinical diagnosis and treatment at the LCSW level. The Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board oversees all three credentials.
The practical tension for most applicants is timeline and investment. Moving from an accredited BSW to an LCSW typically spans eight to ten years when supervised post-degree hours are factored in. Choosing the wrong entry point, or misunderstanding supervisor qualifications, can extend that timeline further. For a full comparison of social work license levels, the licensure hub breaks down how each tier differs nationally.
Demand for licensed clinical social workers in Indiana continues to outpace supply, particularly in rural counties and community mental health settings, which gives the LCSW credential real labor-market weight.
Indiana Social Work License Types: LBSW Vs. LSW Vs. LCSW
Indiana's social work licensure system provides three distinct credentials, each with its own scope of practice, education requirements, and level of independence. Understanding the differences between the Licensed Bachelor Social Worker (LBSW), Licensed Social Worker (LSW), and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) is critical for choosing the career path that fits your goals.
Licensed Bachelor Social Worker (LBSW)
The LBSW is Indiana's entry-level license.1 It authorizes bachelor's-prepared social workers to perform generalist tasks such as case management, resource linkage, and client advocacy, always under supervision. LBSW holders must work within an agency or organizational setting; they cannot engage in independent practice or provide clinical diagnoses. To qualify, you need a CSWE-accredited BSW and must pass the ASWB Bachelor's examination.
Licensed Social Worker (LSW)
The LSW is a master's-level license designed for social workers who hold an MSW from a CSWE-accredited program.1 LSW practitioners engage in a broader range of nonclinical activities, including advanced case management, policy analysis, program development, and supervisory roles. While they may work more autonomously than LBSWs in many nonclinical contexts, LSWs are not permitted to practice independently or diagnose mental health conditions. An LSW must pass the ASWB Master's examination. Supervision requirements vary by setting, but the license does not authorize unsupervised clinical work.
Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)
The LCSW is Indiana's most advanced credential, granting full independent clinical authority.1 LCSW holders can diagnose and treat mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders, provide psychotherapy, and open private practices. This license requires an MSW, completion of post-master's supervised clinical experience as defined by the Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board,2 and a passing score on the ASWB Clinical examination. LCSWs are also qualified to supervise both LBSWs and LSWs in many contexts.
LSW vs. LCSW: What's the Difference?
For a broader look at how these credentials compare nationally, see the levels of social work licensure guide.
- Independent practice: LSW license prohibits independent practice; LCSW allows it.
- Clinical authority: LSW is a nonclinical license, meaning you cannot diagnose or treat mental disorders. LCSW grants full clinical and diagnostic authority.
- Supervised experience: Earning an LSW requires only the MSW and the Master's exam. The LCSW adds a mandatory period of post-master's supervised clinical hours and a more rigorous Clinical-level exam.
- Career trajectory: An LSW often works in macro roles (policy, administration, community organizing), while an LCSW can perform psychotherapy, behavioral health counseling, and independent clinical assessments.
In short, the LSW is a master's-level nonclinical credential, and the LCSW is the clinical license that enables independent practice and diagnosis. All three licenses are regulated by the Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board,2 which oversees application, examination, and renewal for social workers in the state.
Education Requirements for Each License Level
Indiana's three-tier social work licensure system is built on a foundation of accredited education, with each credential requiring progressively advanced training. The Licensed Bachelor Social Worker (LBSW), Licensed Social Worker (LSW), and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) each demand distinct academic qualifications, and the state enforces strict standards to ensure practitioners are prepared for the complexity of social work practice.
Bachelor's Degree: LBSW Foundation
The Licensed Bachelor Social Worker (LBSW) requires a bachelor's degree in social work (BSW) from a program accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). This undergraduate pathway typically takes four years of full-time study and includes supervised field education that introduces students to generalist social work practice. Indiana accepts only CSWE-accredited BSW programs for LBSW licensure, so prospective applicants should verify their program's accreditation status before applying. The BSW prepares graduates for entry-level practice in schools, hospitals, community agencies, and other settings, though it does not authorize clinical diagnosis or independent psychotherapy.
Master's Degree: LSW and LCSW Gateway
Both the LSW and LCSW require a master's degree in social work (MSW) from a CSWE-accredited program. Full-time MSW programs generally take two years to complete, though candidates with a CSWE-accredited BSW may qualify for advanced standing, condensing the MSW into roughly one year. The LSW permits supervised clinical social work practice and serves as a prerequisite for the LCSW, Indiana's independent clinical license. After earning the MSW and passing the required ASWB exam, LSW holders must complete two or more years of supervised post-graduate clinical experience before they become eligible for the LCSW. For details on Indiana's MSW programs and their formats, visit /states/indiana/.
Foreign-Educated Applicants
Applicants who completed their social work degree outside the United States must obtain a credential evaluation from a CSWE-recognized service to demonstrate equivalency to a CSWE-accredited program. The Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board provides the specific list of accepted evaluation agencies and any additional documentation requirements on its official website. Foreign-educated candidates should initiate this process early, as evaluations can take several weeks or longer.
Timeline Overview
The complete path to clinical licensure in Indiana spans approximately eight years: four years for the BSW, two years for the MSW (or one with advanced standing), and at least two years of supervised post-MSW clinical practice to qualify for the LCSW. For a comprehensive overview of the social work licensure requirements and career trajectory, see /careers/how-to-become-a-social-worker/.
ASWB Exam Requirements and Registration
The Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) examination remains the universal gateway to licensure across all 50 states, and Indiana is no exception. Each license level in Indiana requires passing a specific tier of this national standardized exam, making preparation a critical step in your credentialing journey.
Which Exam Matches Your License Level
Indiana aligns its license categories directly with ASWB exam social work levels:
- LBSW applicants: Must pass the ASWB Bachelors examination, which tests foundational social work knowledge appropriate for BSW-level practice.
- LSW applicants: Must pass the ASWB Masters examination, assessing competencies expected at the graduate level.
- LCSW applicants: Must pass the ASWB Clinical examination after completing supervised experience, evaluating advanced clinical assessment and intervention skills.
Each exam covers four content domains: human development, assessment, interventions, and professional ethics. The Clinical exam places heavier emphasis on diagnostic reasoning and clinical decision-making.
The Registration Process Step by Step
You cannot simply register for the ASWB exam on your own. Indiana requires board approval before you can sit for the examination:
1. Submit your license application to the Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board with all required documentation. 2. Once the board reviews your credentials and education, you will receive authorization to take the exam. 3. With authorization in hand, create an account at ASWB.org and register for your designated exam level. 4. ASWB will issue eligibility confirmation to Pearson VUE, the testing administrator. 5. Schedule your exam date and location through Pearson VUE at an available testing center.
The exam itself lasts four hours and consists of 170 multiple-choice questions, though only 150 are scored. Preliminary pass or fail results appear on screen immediately after you finish, with official score reports typically arriving within a few weeks. For the current examination fee, visit ASWB.org directly, as pricing is subject to periodic updates.
Practical Preparation Strategies
Success on the ASWB exam requires focused study rather than last-minute cramming:
- Purchase official ASWB practice exams to familiarize yourself with question format and pacing.
- Dedicate substantial time to reviewing the code of ethics social work, as ethical scenarios appear throughout all exam levels.
- For the Clinical examination specifically, plan for eight to twelve weeks of consistent study, given the advanced material and higher stakes.
Many candidates find value in structured prep courses or study groups, though self-directed preparation works well for disciplined learners.
The ASWB Clinical exam carries a notably lower national pass rate than the Bachelors or Masters level exams. If you are pursuing the LCSW, plan to budget additional study time well before your test date. A structured prep course can make a significant difference, especially for the clinical vignette questions that many candidates find most challenging.
Supervised Clinical Experience for the LCSW
Earning your Licensed Clinical Social Worker credential in Indiana requires more than passing the ASWB Clinical exam. You must first hold an active LSW or Temporary LSW, then complete a structured period of post-degree supervised clinical practice before you can apply for the LCSW.1
Hour Requirements and Timeline
Indiana requires 3,000 hours of supervised clinical social work experience completed over a minimum of 24 months.1 You have up to five years to finish the requirement, so there is flexibility, but do not treat that window as an invitation to delay.2 The state also sets a floor for ongoing oversight: you must receive at least 4 hours of supervision per month throughout the experience period.1
Of the total supervision hours, at least 100 must be individual supervision (one supervisor, one supervisee).1 The remaining hours may be completed in group supervision, up to a maximum of 100 group hours.3 Meeting both the clinical practice hours and the supervision hour thresholds is required, so track each category separately from day one.
Supervisor Qualifications
Your supervisor must hold an active LCSW.1 Before you log a single hour, confirm that your intended supervisor meets this requirement. Indiana does not allow you to retroactively count hours supervised by someone who was not properly credentialed at the time. If you want to understand state supervised hours for the LCSW more broadly, requirements vary considerably across jurisdictions. A quick license verification through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency database can save you from a costly mistake.
Forms I and II: When and How to Use Them
Indiana uses two forms to document your supervised experience:1
- Form I (Verification of Supervision): Filed at the start of the supervisory relationship. It outlines the supervision plan and must be submitted before you begin accumulating hours. Download it from the Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board website.
- Form II (Verification of Experience): Filed when your supervision period is complete. Your supervisor signs off on the total hours and confirms that the experience met board requirements. This form accompanies your LCSW application.
Do not wait until the end to gather signatures or reconstruct records. Maintain a running log of every supervision session, noting the date, duration, format (individual or group), and topics covered. Your supervisor should countersign your log periodically so there are no disputes later.
Practical Tips Before You Start
Verify your supervisor's licensure status before your first session, not after. Confirm that your employment setting provides the type of clinical work the board recognizes. Ask your supervisor to review Form I with you so both parties understand the obligations before the clock starts. Small administrative steps at the outset protect months or years of professional effort.
Application Steps, Fees, and Background Checks
The move to a fully online application portal has streamlined the administrative side of social work licensure, but incomplete paperwork remains the most common stumbling block for Indiana applicants. The Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board processes all applications through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA) online system, and each level, LBSW, LSW, and LCSW, follows the same general sequence.1 Ensuring every document is uploaded correctly and fees are paid avoids weeks of unnecessary delay.
Online Application Portal
Start by visiting the Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board page on IN.gov and follow the link to the IPLA online portal. Create an account, select the appropriate license type, and complete the application form. The system will prompt you to attach required documents and pay the fee before submission. After submitting, you can log back in at any time to check your application status and see if the board has requested additional information.
Required Documents and Fees
A complete application for any Indiana social work license must include three core components: official transcripts, ASWB exam score verification, and authorization for a criminal history background check.1 Official transcripts must show conferral of a CSWE-accredited degree and can be sent electronically directly from your school or by mail in a sealed envelope. The ASWB will transmit exam scores to the board once you pass; do not mail a paper score report yourself.
The board charges a flat $50 application fee for the LBSW, LSW, and LCSW licenses.1 If you are applying for a temporary permit, the fee is $25.1 These fees are separate from the ASWB exam registration fee, which you pay directly to the testing service when scheduling your exam. The IPLA portal accepts credit cards or electronic checks; verify the current fee schedule on the board's website before paying, as amounts are subject to legislative change.
Fingerprint-Based Background Check
Indiana requires a fingerprint-based state and FBI criminal history check for all license applicants.1 You must be fingerprinted at an authorized vendor. In most cases, IdentoGO locations throughout the state handle this service. Schedule an appointment online through the vendor's website, bring valid photo identification, and pay the fingerprinting fee at the time of service. Results are transmitted electronically to the board; processing typically takes two to four weeks, though volume can occasionally extend that. Complete fingerprinting early in your application timeline so that clearance does not become a bottleneck.
Processing Timelines and Avoiding Delays
Once your application is submitted and all supporting materials are received, the board ordinarily reviews files within four to six weeks. Peak periods, such as just after graduation cycles, may slow turnaround. The most frequent cause of delay is an incomplete application: a missing transcript, an exam score not yet received, or a background check that has not been initiated. To keep your application moving, request transcripts as soon as your degree posts, take the ASWB exam only after the board confirms your eligibility, and schedule your fingerprinting appointment early. Monitor your IPLA portal inbox for status updates; if the board requests additional information, respond promptly to reset the review clock.
Temporary Permit Option
Indiana issues a temporary permit for applicants who have completed all requirements except passing the ASWB exam. This permit is available at the LSW and LCSW levels and allows supervised practice for a defined period while you arrange testing or await scores. To qualify, you must have already submitted your application, paid the $25 permit fee, and met all education and clinical experience requirements for LCSW licensure. The permit is not a substitute for licensure. You must pass the exam within the permit's validity window, or you will need to cease practice. Check the board's current permit duration and renewal conditions before relying on this option.
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Path to Social Work Licensure in Indiana
The full path from your first social work degree to independent clinical licensure in Indiana spans roughly eight to ten years. Here is the typical LCSW timeline, with a faster track noted for BSW holders who qualify for an advanced-standing MSW program.

License Renewal and Continuing Education (CE) Requirements
Proactive renewal versus last-minute scrambling: the approach you take to maintaining your Indiana social work license will determine whether you practice without interruption or face costly reinstatement hurdles. Understanding the state's two-year renewal cycle and continuing education structure helps you stay compliant and focused on your clients rather than administrative headaches.
The Two Year Renewal Cycle
Indiana social work licenses expire on a biennial schedule, with renewal periods established by the Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board. Licensees receive renewal notices before their expiration date and must complete the process through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA) online portal. The portal allows you to verify your current license status, submit renewal applications, and pay associated fees electronically. Mark your calendar well in advance of your expiration date to avoid any gaps in your authorization to practice.
Continuing Education Requirements
Indiana requires licensed social workers to complete continuing education credits for social workers during each renewal period. These hours are divided into two categories:
- Category I: Includes structured learning activities such as workshops, seminars, conferences, and academic courses. These activities typically involve direct instruction and interaction with educators or peers.
- Category II: Encompasses self-directed learning such as independent study, professional reading, and presentations you deliver to other professionals. These hours often have caps limiting how many can count toward your total.
Within your total CE requirement, you must complete a mandatory ethics component. This code of ethics social work training ensures you remain current on professional standards, boundary issues, and legal obligations specific to social work practice. The board specifies how many ethics hours must be included, so verify the exact requirement through the official board website before planning your CE schedule.
Consequences of a Lapsed License
Allowing your license to lapse creates significant professional and financial consequences:
- Practice prohibition: You cannot legally practice social work in Indiana while your license is expired, which may disrupt employment and client care.
- Reinstatement fees: Restoring a lapsed license typically requires payment of additional fees beyond standard renewal costs.
- Potential re-examination: Depending on how long your license has been expired, the board may require you to retake the ASWB exam before reinstatement.
- Employment complications: Employers verify license status, and gaps can affect hiring decisions, promotions, or contract renewals.
Set reminders, track your CE hours throughout the renewal period, and submit your renewal application early. The IPLA portal makes this manageable if you stay organized. Visit the Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board website for current fee schedules, exact CE hour totals, and detailed renewal instructions specific to your license level.
Questions to Ask Yourself
Reciprocity, Endorsement, and the Social Work Licensure Compact
Moving to a new state often forces social workers to weigh the time and cost of re-licensing against career opportunities, and Indiana's endorsement pathway is the primary mechanism for bridging that gap. Because Indiana has not joined the Social Work Licensure Compact as of 2026,1 out-of-state practitioners must apply directly to the Indiana board rather than practicing under a multistate privilege.
Endorsement for Out-of-State Social Workers
Indiana offers licensure by endorsement through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency and its Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board.2 This pathway is available for both the LSW and the LCSW. To qualify, you generally need to supply:
- Proof of current licensure: Verification from every state where you hold or have held a social work license, typically sent directly from the issuing board.
- Education transcripts: Documentation of a CSWE-accredited BSW or MSW degree, depending on the license level you are seeking.
- ASWB exam score: Evidence that you have passed the appropriate ASWB examination (Masters level for the LSW, Clinical level for the LCSW).2
- Supervised experience (LCSW only): Verification of at least 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience completed over a minimum of two years.1
- Background check: Fingerprinting and a criminal background check are required for all endorsement applicants.2
The board evaluates whether your existing credentials are substantially equivalent to Indiana's requirements. If any element falls short, such as insufficient supervised hours, you may need to complete additional requirements before the license is granted.
Indiana and the Social Work Licensure Compact
As of mid-2026, 32 states have enacted legislation to join the ASWB Social Work Licensure Compact.1 Indiana is not among them. The compact is designed to let social workers hold a single home-state license and obtain a "compact privilege" to practice in other member states without submitting a separate application to each one. Because Indiana has not joined, this streamlined option is not available for practitioners who want to work in Indiana or for Indiana-licensed social workers seeking to practice in compact member states.
It is worth distinguishing between these two pathways:
- Endorsement requires you to submit a full application to the Indiana board, pay applicable fees, clear a background check, and wait for board review before you can practice.
- Compact privilege (not yet available in Indiana) would allow eligible social workers from other compact states to begin practicing here without obtaining a separate Indiana license.
If multistate practice is part of your career plan, monitor the compact's progress in Indiana through the board's official communications. Legislative adoption could simplify the process significantly in future sessions.
For a broader look at how social work license requirements by state compare, understanding how Indiana's standards align with neighboring jurisdictions can help you plan ahead, especially if you anticipate relocating or working across state lines.
Social Worker Salary in Indiana
Salaries for social workers in Indiana vary considerably depending on specialty area and experience level. The following table draws from the most recent Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2024 data) and covers three major social work categories tracked in the state. For a deeper look at compensation trends and how Indiana compares nationally, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Occupation | Estimated Employment | 25th Percentile | Median Salary | 75th Percentile | Mean Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 6,270 | $48,730 | $51,400 | $61,310 | $55,130 |
| Healthcare Social Workers | 4,320 | $58,170 | $67,220 | $79,970 | $69,600 |
| Social Workers, All Other | 510 | $62,150 | $80,410 | $94,310 | $79,080 |
Social Worker Salary by Metro Area in Indiana
Salaries for social workers in Indiana vary by metro area and specialty. The table below draws on 2024 federal wage data for three common social work occupation categories across Indiana's major metro areas. Keep in mind that national projections point to roughly 6% job growth for social workers overall through 2034, with mental health and substance abuse social workers growing at an even faster pace (around 10% to 11%). For a deeper look at compensation trends, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Metro Area | Specialty | Employment | Median Salary | 25th Percentile | 75th Percentile | Mean Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indianapolis-Carmel-Greenwood | Child, Family, and School | 1,980 | $51,690 | $48,730 | $62,540 | $56,680 |
| Indianapolis-Carmel-Greenwood | Healthcare | 1,840 | $68,420 | $59,410 | $80,560 | $70,780 |
| Fort Wayne | Child, Family, and School | 410 | $52,030 | $48,730 | $60,100 | $55,280 |
| Fort Wayne | Healthcare | 440 | $73,450 | $59,380 | $81,920 | $70,780 |
| Fort Wayne | All Other | 100 | $74,090 | $61,850 | $90,130 | $77,110 |
| South Bend-Mishawaka | Child, Family, and School | 450 | $50,780 | $46,190 | $61,580 | $54,380 |
| South Bend-Mishawaka | Healthcare | 180 | $66,090 | $57,060 | $78,810 | $68,660 |
| South Bend-Mishawaka | All Other | 30 | $79,270 | $59,530 | $96,620 | $78,070 |
| Evansville | Child, Family, and School | 370 | $52,030 | $48,730 | $70,700 | $61,360 |
| Evansville | Healthcare | 220 | $60,430 | $50,610 | $77,690 | $64,510 |
| Lafayette-West Lafayette | Child, Family, and School | 130 | $50,780 | $48,730 | $60,490 | $53,160 |
| Lafayette-West Lafayette | Healthcare | 120 | $72,680 | $58,920 | $79,540 | $69,900 |
| Elkhart-Goshen | Child, Family, and School | 150 | $54,600 | $48,730 | $61,130 | $56,030 |
| Elkhart-Goshen | Healthcare | 80 | $66,400 | $58,660 | $81,650 | $68,920 |
| Bloomington | Child, Family, and School | 110 | $51,400 | $48,730 | $60,390 | $54,880 |
| Bloomington | Healthcare | 80 | $64,440 | $54,370 | $81,870 | $67,820 |
| Terre Haute | Child, Family, and School | 200 | $50,600 | $48,730 | $56,540 | $53,440 |
| Terre Haute | Healthcare | 70 | $64,500 | $57,410 | $76,220 | $67,560 |
| Muncie | Child, Family, and School | 130 | $48,730 | $48,420 | $55,700 | $52,610 |
| Muncie | Healthcare | 60 | $74,590 | $58,700 | $76,970 | $69,160 |
| Michigan City-La Porte | Child, Family, and School | 110 | $48,730 | $43,010 | $54,070 | $49,860 |
| Michigan City-La Porte | Healthcare | 50 | $73,840 | $57,660 | $77,820 | $69,220 |
Can you make $200,000 as a social worker? Bureau of Labor Statistics data for Indiana shows the 75th percentile well below that threshold, but private practice LCSWs in high-demand specialties (trauma, addiction) or administrative leadership roles can earn significantly above the median. For a detailed earnings breakdown by license level and setting, visit our salary guide.
Frequently Asked Questions About Indiana Social Work Licensure
Below are answers to common questions about pursuing social work licensure in Indiana. For a broader overview of the process, see the sections above or visit mastersinsocialworkonline.org for additional resources.







