Points of interest…
- Virginia issues three social work licenses: the LBSW, LMSW, and LCSW, each requiring a CSWE-accredited degree.
- Application fees range from $100 for the LBSW to $165 for the LCSW, plus $230 for the ASWB exam.
- Virginia has enacted the ASWB Social Work Licensure Compact, although it is not yet operational in 2026.
- All Virginia social work licenses renew biennially and require continuing education to stay active.
Entry-level generalist practice or independent clinical work: Virginia draws a clear line between the two by issuing three distinct social work licenses, each tied to a specific degree, exam, and scope of practice. The Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW), Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW), and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) credentials are regulated by the Virginia Board of Social Work, and all three carry requirements that reflect 2026 standards.
The practical challenge for candidates is that each tier layers on additional obligations: a higher degree, a different ASWB exam, and, for the LCSW, thousands of hours of post-master's supervised clinical experience. Application fees, fingerprinting, continuing education rules, and social work licensure requirements in Maryland and other bordering states add further complexity for practitioners considering cross-border work. Virginia's early adoption of the Social Work Licensure Compact signals where multistate practice is headed, though the Compact is not yet operational.
Virginia Social Work License Levels at a Glance
Virginia offers three tiers of social work licensure, each aligned with a specific education level, supervised experience requirement, and scope of practice. The three credentials, LBSW, LMSW, and LCSW, represent distinct practice pathways, from entry-level generalist roles under supervision to fully independent clinical practice with authority to diagnose and treat mental health disorders. Understanding levels of social work licensure helps you identify which credential aligns with your degree and career goals.
LBSW: Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker
The LBSW is Virginia's entry-level credential for social workers holding a bachelor's degree.1 To qualify, candidates must complete a CSWE-accredited BSW program and pass the ASWB Bachelor's Exam. Following initial licensure, LBSWs must complete 3,000 hours of supervised post-degree experience before advancing.1 The scope of practice is limited to non-clinical generalist social work under supervision, which typically includes case management, community outreach, advocacy, resource coordination, and basic client support. LBSWs may not conduct independent clinical assessments or provide psychotherapy.
LMSW: Licensed Master's Social Worker
The LMSW credential requires a CSWE-accredited MSW degree and passage of the ASWB Master's Exam.2 Unlike the LBSW, the LMSW does not require post-degree supervised experience hours for initial licensure.2 LMSWs engage in non-clinical generalist practice and, in many settings, may work independently without direct supervision. However, the LMSW scope does not include independent clinical practice, diagnosis of mental health disorders, or provision of psychotherapy. LMSWs often work in case management, program coordination, policy analysis, community organizing, school social work, and non-clinical mental health support roles. This license serves as a stepping stone for master's-level practitioners who intend to pursue clinical licensure or prefer generalist practice.
LCSW: Licensed Clinical Social Worker
The LCSW is Virginia's highest and most versatile social work credential, permitting independent clinical practice.3 To qualify, candidates must hold an MSW, pass the ASWB Clinical Exam, and complete 3,000 hours of supervised post-graduate clinical experience under an approved supervisor.3 LCSWs may diagnose mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders; provide individual, family, and group psychotherapy; develop treatment plans; and bill insurance independently. This license is essential for social workers pursuing private practice, clinical leadership, or specialized clinical roles in healthcare and mental health settings.
Provisional and Temporary Permits
Virginia does not issue a formal provisional or temporary practice permit for social workers. Candidates working toward LBSW or LCSW licensure must complete their supervised hours under the appropriate unlicensed or limited-scope status as defined by their employer and board regulations, but no interim credential is granted during that period.
Education Requirements by License Level
Demand for credentialed social workers continues to outpace supply across Virginia, making accreditation status the single most consequential factor in choosing a degree program.
What CSWE Accreditation Means and Why It Matters
The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) is the national accrediting body for social work programs in the United States. Virginia requires that your degree come from a CSWE-accredited program at every license level. There are no exceptions. A degree from a non-accredited program will disqualify your application regardless of the institution's overall reputation or your academic record.
Accreditation signals that a program meets nationally standardized competency frameworks, covers required content areas such as ethics, human behavior, policy, and practice, and embeds a structured field education component. It is not just a formality; it is the board's mechanism for ensuring that every applicant enters practice with a consistent foundational skill set.
Requirements by License Level
- LBSW: Requires a CSWE-accredited Bachelor of Social Work (BSW). A bachelor's degree in psychology, sociology, or a related field does not qualify. The BSW typically takes four years to complete and includes a supervised practicum, usually 400 hours or more embedded in the curriculum.
- LMSW: Requires a CSWE-accredited Master of Social Work (MSW). The standard MSW is a two-year program, but applicants who hold a CSWE-accredited BSW may qualify for advanced standing, which can reduce the program to approximately one year by waiving foundational coursework.
- LCSW: Also requires a CSWE-accredited MSW, but with an added consideration: your graduate program's track matters. MSW programs offer both clinical and nonclinical (macro or policy-focused) concentrations. Virginia's clinical license requires post-graduate supervised experience in direct clinical practice, and that pathway is only realistic if your MSW included clinical coursework and clinical field hours. If you pursued a macro or administration track, you may hold an LMSW but will face significant barriers to meeting LCSW eligibility. Choose your concentration with your long-term license goal in mind.
MSW Field Education
CSWE standards require all MSW programs to include a minimum number of supervised field hours, typically 900 hours across the full program. These practicum hours are completed at approved field sites under licensed supervision and are separate from the post-graduate hours required for the clinical license. They are built into the degree itself, so you are accumulating hands-on experience before you ever apply for licensure.
Online Programs Count
Virginia treats CSWE-accredited online MSW programs the same as their in-person counterparts. As long as the program holds CSWE accreditation, the delivery format does not affect licensure eligibility. This matters for working adults and those in rural parts of the state who may not have a brick-and-mortar MSW program nearby. For a list of Virginia MSW program options, including online-friendly formats, visit Virginia MSW programs and online formats.
ASWB Exams: Which Test for Each Virginia License
Every social work license in Virginia requires a separate ASWB exam tailored to that license level. The Virginia Board of Social Work does not allow one exam to satisfy multiple license tiers, so understanding which test aligns with your target credential is a critical first step before you register.
Virginia's Three License Levels and Their Corresponding ASWB Exams
Virginia issues three primary social work licenses, each with its own ASWB exam requirement:
- LBSW (Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker): Requires the ASWB Bachelors exam. This entry-level license is for BSW graduates who want to practice generalist social work under supervision.
- LMSW (Licensed Master's Social Worker): Requires the ASWB Masters exam. This is the graduate-level license for MSW holders who practice non-clinical social work or are gaining post-degree experience toward clinical licensure.
- LCSW (Licensed Clinical Social Worker): Requires the ASWB Clinical exam. This is the independent clinical license, available after completing supervised post-MSW experience.
You cannot substitute a higher-level exam for a lower credential. For example, if you are applying for the LMSW after earning your MSW, you must pass the Masters exam, even if you already hold a Bachelors-level license. Later, when pursuing the LCSW, you will take the separate Clinical exam.
How to Register for Your ASWB Exam in Virginia
Registration is handled directly through the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB). Start by creating an account at aswb.org and submitting an application to the Virginia Board of Social Work. Once your education is verified and your eligibility is approved, the board will issue an authorization to test. You then return to ASWB to pay the exam fee and schedule your appointment at a Pearson VUE testing center. Exam fees are set by ASWB and vary by level; check the ASWB website for current pricing, as rates are subject to change. Virginia does not add a separate state testing fee, but you may need to pay a separate licensure application fee to the board.
Scheduling is flexible, with test centers available throughout Virginia and in neighboring states. Most candidates book their exam 4-6 weeks out, but availability can vary by location and season.
What Score Do You Need to Pass?
Virginia adopts the nationally recognized passing standard set by ASWB for each exam level. The passing score is expressed as a scaled score and is determined through rigorous psychometric analysis. Candidates receive a pass/fail result immediately after completing the computer-based test. If you do not pass, a diagnostic report indicating your performance in each content area is provided, which can guide your retake preparation. Virginia allows you to retake the exam, but you must re-register and pay the fee each time. There is typically a 90-day waiting period between attempts.
Preparing for the Exam: Timeline and Study Tips
Plan on 8-12 weeks of structured study. Begin by reviewing the ASWB content outline for your exam level, available free on the ASWB website, which describes the exact knowledge, skills, and abilities tested. The official ASWB online practice exam is the closest simulation of the real test and offers a scaled score estimate; many candidates take one early in their prep and another a week before test day.
National first-time pass rates for the Bachelors exam are generally strong, while the Clinical exam tends to be more challenging, with pass rates dipping below 75% in some cycles. This reflects the exam's depth in clinical assessment, diagnosis, and treatment planning. Virginia-specific pass rate data is not published separately, but statewide outcomes closely mirror national trends.
Important: Take the Correct Exam for Your License Level
A common point of confusion is whether passing the Clinical exam satisfies the testing requirement for the LMSW. It does not. The Virginia Board of Social Work requires a separate, level-appropriate exam for each license application. If you plan to eventually hold both the LMSW and LCSW, budget time and fees for two exams. For a broader comparison of social work licensing levels and how they align with licensure across states, see our complete license guide.
Supervised Experience for the LCSW
Earning the Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) credential in Virginia requires a structured period of post-master's supervised clinical experience. This phase bridges classroom learning and independent clinical practice, and the Virginia Board of Social Work sets specific parameters around hours, supervision format, and timelines.
Hour Requirements
Virginia requires a minimum of 3,000 hours of supervised post-graduate clinical experience before you can apply for the LCSW. Within that total, at least 1,380 hours must consist of face-to-face client contact, meaning direct clinical work such as assessment, diagnosis, and psychotherapy. You must also accumulate at least 100 hours of formal clinical supervision. These thresholds are non-negotiable, so keeping a running tally from day one is essential.
Supervisor Qualifications and the Supervision Contract
Your supervisor must hold an active clinical social work license (LCSW or its equivalent in another jurisdiction) and meet the board's experience requirements for providing supervision. Before you begin logging hours, you and your supervisor should execute a formal supervision contract that outlines the scope of your clinical work, the frequency of supervision sessions, and the goals for your development. This contract is not just a best practice; the board expects documentation of the supervisory relationship as part of your eventual application.
If you need to change supervisors midway through, file updated documentation promptly. Gaps in supervision or undocumented transitions are among the most common reasons applications stall during the board's verification process.
Timeline and Extension Options
Most candidates complete their 3,000 hours within two to four years, depending on whether they work full-time in a clinical setting. Virginia allows a 12-month extension beyond the standard completion window if you can demonstrate good cause. Requesting the extension before your deadline passes is critical; retroactive approvals are not guaranteed.
Group vs. Individual Supervision
Virginia permits a portion of your 100 supervision hours to come from group supervision sessions, but there are caps on how many group hours count toward the total. Individual supervision must make up the majority of your logged supervision time. Group sessions typically involve no more than six supervisees, and each session must be led by a qualified supervisor.
Documenting Hours and Avoiding Common Pitfalls
Use a structured log, whether a spreadsheet or one of the commercial supervision-tracking tools available, to record each session with dates, hours, and a brief description of the clinical activity or supervision topic. Have your supervisor co-sign entries regularly rather than waiting until the end of the process. Common pitfalls include:
- Inconsistent record-keeping: Reconstructing months of clinical hours from memory invites errors and delays.
- Supervisor lapses: If your supervisor's license expires or they relocate, hours logged during an unlicensed period may not count.
- Mixing non-clinical hours: Administrative tasks, case management without a clinical component, and purely educational activities generally do not qualify as face-to-face client contact.
When you submit your LCSW application, the board will verify your supervised experience through supervisor attestation forms and may request your detailed logs. Having clean, well-organized documentation makes this step straightforward. States structure LCSW requirements differently, so if you are considering practicing across state lines, review the specific supervision standards wherever you plan to be licensed.
Application Steps, Fees, and Background Check
The initial application fee for an LBSW in Virginia is $100, the LMSW costs $115, and the LCSW carries a $165 application fee.1 These amounts cover only the Board's processing; candidates should budget for the ASWB exam fee ($230 at the time of publication), fingerprinting and background check costs, and the National Practitioner Data Bank self-query.
Documents and Application Portal
Every applicant submits through the Virginia Department of Health Professions online portal. The Virginia Board of Social Work maintains the centralized application system at dhp.virginia.gov/about/boards/socialwork.2 Required documentation varies by license level but typically includes official transcripts sent directly from your CSWE-accredited program, your ASWB exam passing score report, and proof of lawful U.S. presence (driver's license or passport). LCSW candidates also upload verification of supervised post-graduate experience: a signed attestation form from each clinical supervisor confirming the 3,000 clinical hours and 100 hours of face-to-face supervision,3 plus the supervisor's valid license number and supervision registration with the Board. When supervisors first register with the Board to supervise an LCSW candidate, a one-time $50 supervision registration fee applies.1
Background Check and Fingerprinting
All three license levels require a fingerprint-based criminal history record check through the Virginia State Police and the FBI.3 Applicants schedule their fingerprinting appointment through an approved vendor (typically Fieldprint or an authorized live-scan provider) and pay a combined fee that usually ranges from $50 to $75 for both state and federal searches. The Board may also require a self-query from the National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB.hrsa.gov), which costs approximately $10 and delivers results to the applicant within minutes online. Any history of disciplinary action, criminal conviction, or denial of licensure in another jurisdiction must be disclosed on the application, along with a written explanation and supporting documents. Misdemeanor or felony convictions do not automatically bar licensure, but the Board reviews each case individually.
Processing Time and Total Estimated Cost
Once the Board receives a complete application including transcripts, exam score, fingerprints, and all attestations, review typically takes four to six weeks. Incomplete files or requests for additional documentation extend that window. Total upfront costs for an LBSW applicant approximate $380 to $405 (exam $230, application $100, fingerprinting and NPDB $50 to $75); the LMSW ranges from $395 to $420 (exam $230, application $115, background checks $50 to $75); and the LCSW runs $445 to $520 (exam $230, application $165, background $50 to $75, supervision registration $50).1 Candidates should download fee schedules and the most current application instructions directly from the Virginia Board of Social Work website, as fees and requirements are subject to legislative updates.
Cost and Timeline Breakdown by License Level
The path to social work licensure in Virginia varies significantly depending on the credential you pursue. Below is a side-by-side look at what each license level typically requires in terms of time and out-of-pocket costs for exams, applications, fingerprinting, and related fees. For the most current fee amounts, always verify with the Virginia Board of Social Work.

License Renewal and Continuing Education
Staying current with renewal deadlines is one of the most overlooked aspects of maintaining a social work career in Virginia, yet a lapse can carry consequences as serious as having to re-take the ASWB exam. All Virginia social work licenses operate on a two-year renewal cycle,1 with the current continuing education (CE) period running from July 1, 2024 through June 30, 2026. Regardless of license level, you must complete your CE hours and submit your renewal before that deadline.
CE Hour Requirements by License Level
Virginia's CE expectations scale with the scope of practice each credential authorizes.
- LBSW: 15 total CE hours per cycle, including at least 3 hours in ethics.2 A minimum of 10 hours must come from Category I activities (formal, structured learning such as workshops, courses, or conferences). Up to 5 hours may come from Category II activities (less formal options such as self-study or peer consultation).
- LMSW: The same structure applies: 15 total hours, 3 in ethics, at least 10 from Category I, and no more than 5 from Category II.2
- LCSW: 30 total CE hours per cycle, with at least 6 hours in ethics. A minimum of 20 hours must be Category I, and up to 10 may be Category II.2
Up to 2 hours of volunteer service may also count toward your total in any cycle.2
Approved Formats and Providers
Virginia accepts a range of CE formats, including live in-person seminars, synchronous webinars, and online self-paced courses. Category I activities generally require a structured educational component with measurable learning objectives, while Category II allows more flexible formats. The Virginia Board of Social Work does not maintain a single mandatory list of approved providers, but it does set criteria that qualifying activities must meet. Always verify that a course or provider satisfies the board's standards before counting it toward your renewal.
Renewal Fees
Renewal fees for the current cycle are approximately:
These amounts are based on the most recent published fee schedule. Confirm exact figures on the Virginia Board of Social Work renewal portal before submitting, as fees can be adjusted between cycles.
What Happens if Your License Lapses
If you miss the renewal deadline, your license enters a lapsed status. Virginia does allow an extension of up to one year in certain circumstances,2 but practicing on a lapsed license is a violation of state law. If you remain lapsed beyond the grace or extension window, you may face a more involved reinstatement process that can include additional fees, updated documentation, and in some cases, re-examination via the ASWB. Avoiding that scenario is straightforward: mark your calendar, complete your CE hours well before the deadline, and submit your renewal through the board's online portal.
For the most current CE catalog, renewal deadlines, and detailed guidance on what qualifies as Category I versus Category II credit, visit the Virginia Board of Social Work continuing education page through the Virginia Department of Health Professions website.
Endorsement, Reciprocity, and the Social Work Licensure Compact
Social work licensure across state lines is undergoing a major shift, and Virginia is among the states that have already enacted the ASWB Social Work Licensure Compact1 , though the Compact is not yet operational in 2026.2 For now, social workers moving to Virginia from another state must navigate the Virginia Board of Social Work's endorsement process to transfer their license.
How Virginia Endorsement Works
Endorsement is the pathway for licensed social workers in other states to obtain a Virginia license without retaking the full initial application. The Virginia Board of Social Work evaluates each application to determine if the applicant's education, exam, and supervised experience are substantially equivalent to Virginia's requirements.3 At every level , LBSW, LMSW, and LCSW , you must hold a current, active license in good standing from another state and have passed the corresponding ASWB exam. Education must come from a CSWE-accredited program: a BSW for LBSW, or an MSW for LMSW and LCSW.
The Board requires a completed application, official transcripts, verification of your out-of-state license, and proof of passing ASWB scores. A fingerprint-based background check is mandatory for all endorsement applicants, just as it is for new licensees.3 The LCSW endorsement additionally demands documentation of at least 3,000 hours of post-MSW supervised clinical experience completed over a minimum of two years.4 If your supervised experience falls short, the Board may issue a provisional license or require additional supervised practice in Virginia. Application fees apply and are nonrefundable.
The ASWB Social Work Licensure Compact in Virginia
Virginia enacted the Social Work Licensure Compact through legislation (HB 326 / SB 239) that became effective April 12, 2024.1 However, as of June 2026, the Compact is not yet operational nationwide2 , it will take effect once a specified number of states have enacted it and the Compact Commission sets up its infrastructure. Once operational, the Compact will allow eligible social workers in member states to hold a multistate license, granting them practice privileges across participating states without needing separate licenses.
Because the Compact is not yet issuing multistate licenses, Virginia social workers must still obtain a license by examination or endorsement in each state where they practice. For out-of-state practitioners eager to work in Virginia, this means the current path remains endorsement through the Virginia Board of Social Work. The Compact will eventually streamline cross-border practice, but until then, Virginia's existing endorsement rules remain the default.
Common Scenarios and License-Level Differences
- Military spouses: Virginia recognizes the need for license portability for military families. While no special endorsement shortcut exists in Board regulations, applications from military spouses are processed with standard timelines. Contacting the Board directly can help clarify any expedited review options under state military licensing statutes.
- Telehealth: Providing remote services to clients in Virginia requires a Virginia social work license, unless the Compact becomes operational and both your home state and Virginia are members.2 Unlicensed telehealth practice into Virginia is a violation of state law.
- Bordering-state practitioners: Social workers in Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, or North Carolina who see clients in Virginia must secure Virginia licensure through endorsement. The maryland social work licensure requirements differ from Virginia's in key respects, so review both states' rules before applying. The Compact will eventually simplify cross-border practice, but for 2026, separate state licenses are necessary.
- Level differences: LBSW and LMSW endorsement primarily hinges on education and exam equivalency. LCSW endorsement adds the supervised clinical experience requirement, making it more demanding. If your home state's LCSW criteria differ, the Board may require additional documentation or even a period of supervised practice in Virginia.
For a broader comparison of licensing levels and how Virginia stacks up against other states, visit our social work licensure hub.
Virginia Social Worker Salary Snapshot
The table below summarizes approximate annual wages and total employment for social worker occupations across Virginia, based on 2024 data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. Because these figures reflect broad occupational categories rather than specific license levels, salaries may vary depending on your credentials, specialization, and employer. For a deeper look at earning potential by role and experience, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Occupation | Total Employment | 25th Percentile Salary | Median Salary | 75th Percentile Salary | Mean Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 8,160 | $49,530 | $60,280 | $76,450 | $65,040 |
| Healthcare Social Workers | 2,680 | $55,860 | $64,200 | $77,520 | $67,040 |
| Social Workers, All Other | 1,000 | $54,960 | $86,690 | $105,810 | $81,620 |
Social Worker Salary by Metro Area in Virginia
Salaries for social workers in Virginia vary considerably depending on your metro area and specialty. The table below draws from the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics data to compare median annual wages and estimated employment across the state's major regions. Note that figures for the Northern Virginia area (which falls within the Washington, D.C. metropolitan statistical area) are reported under that broader D.C. metro designation and are not broken out separately here. Nationally, the BLS projects roughly 6 percent job growth for social workers between 2024 and 2034, with an estimated 74,000 annual openings, signaling steady demand across the profession. For a deeper look at earnings by license level, specialty, and experience, visit the full salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Metro Area | Specialty | Estimated Employment | Median Annual Wage | 25th Percentile | 75th Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Norfolk | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 1,630 | $60,190 | $49,640 | $74,500 |
| Richmond | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 1,420 | $60,430 | $49,800 | $75,060 |
| Roanoke | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 340 | $51,530 | $48,630 | $63,480 |
| Lynchburg | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 280 | $54,750 | $48,400 | $62,540 |
| Charlottesville | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 230 | $58,220 | $50,860 | $67,550 |
| Winchester | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 180 | $58,150 | $48,020 | $65,280 |
| Harrisonburg | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 150 | $59,660 | $47,150 | $70,320 |
| Blacksburg, Christiansburg, Radford | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 130 | $49,360 | $44,990 | $58,010 |
| Staunton, Stuarts Draft | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 120 | $53,390 | $51,730 | $65,480 |
| Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Norfolk | Healthcare Social Workers | 510 | $61,470 | $52,500 | $75,900 |
| Richmond | Healthcare Social Workers | 470 | $64,750 | $57,300 | $76,980 |
| Roanoke | Healthcare Social Workers | 160 | $60,710 | $49,010 | $75,310 |
| Charlottesville | Healthcare Social Workers | 150 | $67,810 | $58,330 | $76,300 |
| Lynchburg | Healthcare Social Workers | 90 | $60,970 | $54,000 | $69,430 |
| Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Norfolk | Social Workers, All Other | 280 | $88,170 | $69,620 | $104,330 |
| Richmond | Social Workers, All Other | 260 | $89,070 | $56,740 | $112,690 |
| Roanoke | Social Workers, All Other | 90 | $92,850 | $70,160 | $103,460 |
Frequently Asked Questions About Virginia Social Work Licensure
Below are answers to common questions about earning and maintaining a social work license in Virginia. For detailed guidance on each step, refer to the relevant sections earlier in this guide or visit the Virginia Board of Social Work website.







