Points of interest…
- Wyoming issues three license levels (CSW, PCSW, LCSW) through the Mental Health Professions Licensing Board.
- Each level requires a CSWE-accredited degree and a corresponding ASWB exam at the Bachelors, Masters, or Clinical tier.
- LCSW candidates must complete supervised post-master's clinical hours before earning independent practice privileges.
- All licenses renew every two years, and CSW and LCSW holders must complete 45 continuing education hours per cycle.
Wyoming faces a persistent shortage of licensed social workers, particularly in its rural counties where behavioral health providers are scarce and caseloads stretch thin. The state issues three license tiers through the Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board: the Certified Social Worker (CSW) for BSW-level practitioners, the Provisionally Certified Social Worker (PCSW) for MSW holders gaining supervised hours, and the Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) for independent clinical practice.
Each credential carries its own education threshold, ASWB exam category, and, for the LCSW, a structured period of post-graduate supervised experience. Requirements reflected here are current as of 2026. Wyoming has not joined the Social Work Licensure Compact, so clinicians relocating from other states must apply through the board's endorsement process rather than relying on multistate portability. For a comparison, see how Idaho social work license requirements approach a similar rural-state context.
Wyoming Social Work License Types: CSW, PCSW, and LCSW
Wyoming structures its social work credentials around a clear progression from generalist practice to fully independent clinical work. The Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board issues three distinct license types, each with defined scopes of practice that determine where you can work and what services you can provide.1 Understanding these distinctions early helps you plan your education and career trajectory.
Certified Social Worker (CSW)
The CSW credential serves as Wyoming's entry point for professional social work practice. This license is available to practitioners with either a BSW or MSW from a CSWE-accredited program and requires passing the ASWB Bachelors or Masters examination, depending on your degree level.2 Understanding how Wyoming's credentials compare within the broader landscape of levels of social work licensure can help you set realistic timelines.
CSW holders perform non-clinical or limited clinical work under supervision. You cannot practice independently in clinical settings with this credential alone. However, the CSW qualifies you for many generalist positions across the state, including roles in child protective services, case management, community outreach, and social services administration. Agencies such as the Wyoming Department of Family Services typically require at minimum a CSW for child welfare positions.
Provisional Clinical Social Worker (PCSW)
The PCSW functions as a transitional credential for MSW graduates pursuing full clinical licensure. To obtain this provisional status, you must hold an MSW, pass the ASWB Clinical examination, and commit to completing 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience.3
With a PCSW, you can perform clinical social work, including assessments and therapeutic interventions, but only under the supervision of a qualified clinical supervisor. This credential allows you to gain the hands-on experience required for full LCSW licensure while working in clinical settings such as hospitals, behavioral health agencies, and community mental health centers. Independent practice and private practice are not permitted at this level.
Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)
The LCSW represents Wyoming's highest social work credential and authorizes full independent clinical practice. Requirements include an MSW degree, passing the ASWB Clinical exam, and completing 3,000 hours of supervised clinical experience. Of those hours, at least 1,200 must involve direct client contact, and you must accumulate 100 hours of formal supervision.4
LCSW holders can diagnose mental health conditions, provide psychotherapy, operate private practices, and supervise other social workers seeking clinical credentials. This license opens doors to the broadest range of employment settings, from hospitals and mental health clinics to independent private practice.
School Social Workers: A Separate Pathway
If you plan to work specifically in K-12 school settings, note that Wyoming handles school social worker certification separately through the Wyoming Professional Teaching Standards Board rather than the Mental Health Professions Licensing Board. While holding a CSW or higher credential may support your qualifications, school-based practice requires meeting education-specific certification standards. Prospective school social workers should consult both boards to ensure they meet all requirements for their intended practice setting.
Education Requirements by License Level
Wyoming's three-tier licensure system maps directly to two terminal degrees in social work: the bachelor's degree for the entry credential and the master's degree for advanced clinical practice. Each level requires a degree from a program accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE), the sole specialized accrediting body recognized by the U.S. Department of Education for social work programs. CSWE accreditation ensures that curricula meet national competency standards, prepare graduates for the ASWB exams, and satisfy licensure boards across all fifty states. The Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board does not accept degrees from programs that hold only CSWE candidacy status; programs must be fully accredited at the time of graduation for the degree to meet Wyoming licensure requirements.
Certified Social Worker (CSW)
The CSW credential requires a Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) degree from a CSWE-accredited program. A BSW is typically a four-year undergraduate degree, with the final two years focusing on social work courses, field practicum, and supervised internships totaling at least 400 hours. BSW graduates are prepared for generalist social work practice and can apply for entry-level positions in child welfare, community services, and case management immediately upon licensure.
Provisionally Certified Social Worker (PCSW) and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)
Both the PCSW and LCSW credentials require a Master of Social Work (MSW) degree from a CSWE-accredited program. An MSW typically requires two years of full-time study for applicants entering with a non-social-work bachelor's degree. Graduates who hold a BSW from a CSWE-accredited program may be eligible for advanced standing, which compresses the MSW into one calendar year or three semesters by waiving foundation courses and the first practicum. MSW curricula include advanced clinical coursework, specializations (such as mental health, healthcare, or trauma-informed practice), and a minimum of 900 field hours. For a comprehensive overview of social work career paths and the role of education in the profession, see how to become a social worker.
Wyoming residents and online learners can explore CSWE-accredited MSW programs with flexible delivery formats on the Wyoming MSW programs page.
Total Education Timeline
Prospective social workers should budget four years for a BSW and an additional one to two years for an MSW, depending on advanced-standing eligibility. For students beginning with a non-social-work bachelor's degree, the MSW pathway alone takes two years, bringing the total timeline from undergraduate admission to MSW graduation to approximately six years. BSW holders entering an advanced-standing MSW can complete the full educational sequence in five years.
ASWB Exam Requirements for Each License
Passing the Association of Social Work Boards exam is the gateway to Wyoming licensure, but the exam you sit for depends on your degree and the credential you seek. CSW applicants take the ASWB Bachelors exam, PCSW candidates take the Masters exam, and LCSW aspirants must pass the Clinical exam.1 Each exam level assesses the competencies appropriate to that tier of practice, and Wyoming requires a scaled passing score of 90 for all three levels in 2026.2
Exam Registration and Scheduling
Once the Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board approves your application, you will receive an eligibility notice. You then register directly through ASWB's exam registration portal, where you pay the exam fee to ASWB.3 The Bachelors exam costs $230, and the Clinical exam costs $260 in 2026.2 After payment, you schedule your appointment with Pearson VUE, the testing vendor. Appointments are available at Pearson VUE centers across the region, and you will receive an authorization-to-test email confirming your eligibility.
Passing Scores and Retake Policies
All three ASWB exams use scaled scoring, with 90 representing the minimum passing score on a scale from 0 to 200.2 That passing scaled score corresponds to a raw range of 90 to 107 correct answers out of the 150 multiple-choice questions on each exam, depending on the item difficulty mix you encounter.2 The ASWB updated its exam content in August 2026, so be sure to review the current exam outline before you sit.2
Wyoming permits up to three attempts within a calendar year.1 After the third failure, you must complete board-approved remediation or additional coursework before attempting a fourth time.1 Between any two attempts you must wait 90 days.2 Official score reports are released within 14 business days.1
Score Transfers
If you passed an ASWB exam in another jurisdiction and are now applying to Wyoming, you do not need to retake the exam. Request an official score transfer through ASWB, which forwards your result directly to the Wyoming Board.1 For context on how license tiers compare across states, the MSW vs LCSW degree and license differences guide covers how exam requirements map to each credential level. Exam scores remain valid indefinitely, though the Board may require verification that your score was earned on the current examination version.
Explore other Wyoming related topics
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Supervised Clinical Experience for LCSW
Earning the Licensed Clinical Social Worker credential in Wyoming is not simply a matter of passing an exam. The supervised experience period demands a real and sustained commitment, and understanding exactly what the state requires before you start can save you from costly missteps later.
Total Hours and Direct-Client Requirements
Wyoming requires 3,000 post-MSW supervised hours to qualify for the LCSW. Of those, at least 1,200 hours must involve direct client contact. The remaining hours can include related clinical activities such as case consultation and documentation, but the direct-service floor is firm. You will also need to accumulate a minimum of 100 hours of formal supervision across the experience period.
These hours are completed while holding the Provisional Clinical Social Worker (PCSW) credential, which serves as your working license during this interim stage. The PCSW is time-limited, so confirm with the Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board how long you may hold it before you must apply for the full LCSW. Letting that window lapse without applying can interrupt your ability to practice legally.
Supervisor Qualifications
Not just any licensed colleague can supervise you. Wyoming requires that your supervisor hold the designation of Designated Qualified Clinical Supervisor (DQCS).2 Critically, the Board must approve your supervisor before your supervised practice begins.3 Starting hours under someone who has not yet received that approval puts those hours at risk of not counting toward your total.
Group supervision is permitted, but the ratio is capped at two supervisees per supervisor in a group setting.2 Individual supervision is also required, so you cannot fulfill the entire 100-hour minimum through group sessions alone.
Documentation and Plan Requirements
Wyoming requires a formal supervision plan, and you must submit your documentation to the Board within 30 days after your supervision period ends.4 Waiting until the end of your experience to organize records is a common mistake that creates unnecessary stress. Keep a running supervision log from your very first session, noting dates, session length, format (individual or group), and topics covered.
Practical Steps Before You Begin
- Verify credentials first: Confirm your supervisor holds DQCS status and has Board approval before your first supervised session.
- Establish a written plan: Work with your supervisor to create and document a formal supervision agreement that aligns with Board requirements.
- Track hours in real time: Use a spreadsheet or dedicated log to record direct-client hours and supervision hours separately as you go.
- Watch your PCSW expiration: Mark your provisional license expiration date and build your timeline around it from the start.
The supervised experience period is long by design. If you are exploring how social work supervision requirements vary across states, comparing Wyoming's framework with neighboring states can be useful context. Treat the administrative side of the process with the same discipline you bring to clinical work.
Questions to Ask Yourself
Application Steps, Fees, and Background Checks
Applying for a social work license in Wyoming means sending a complete application packet to the Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board, along with all supporting documents, the required fee, and fingerprint cards for a background check. The process is straightforward, but missing pieces can cause delays. Below we walk through the main elements so you can submit correctly the first time.
Starting Your Application
All applicants begin by downloading the current application form from the Board's website. The form asks for your chosen license level , Certified Social Worker (CSW), Provisional Clinical Social Worker (PCSW), or Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) , and basic personal and education details.
You will need to gather several supporting items before mailing or uploading your application:
- Official transcripts: Have your CSWE-accredited BSW or MSW program send transcripts directly to the Board, or include them in a sealed envelope.
- Verification of supervision: If you are applying at the clinical level, you will need forms documenting your supervised experience hours and supervisor's qualifications.
- ASWB exam scores: The Board typically receives scores electronically from ASWB, but you may need to request that they be sent if you tested in another state.
- Application fee: Fees vary by license level and are listed on the Board's fee schedule. Always check the website for the most current amount, as fees can change.
- Additional documentation: Some applicants may need to submit a plan for clinical supervision (PCSW applicants), a copy of a current license from another state (reciprocity candidates), or a name-change document.
Background Checks and Criminal History Review
Wyoming requires both a Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) fingerprint-based check and an FBI criminal history check. You will need to obtain two fingerprint cards from your local law enforcement agency or an approved fingerprinting service. Completed cards and the corresponding processing fees are sent in with your application.
The Board evaluates each criminal history disclosure on a case-by-case basis. Under Wyoming Administrative Rules Title 10, Chapter 3, the Board considers factors such as the nature and severity of the offense, time passed since the offense, and evidence of rehabilitation. You must report all convictions and pending charges; failure to disclose can result in denial. The official rules outline the specific crimes that may disqualify an applicant and describe the appeal process. Reading that chapter before applying can help you understand what to expect if you have a record.
Processing Timelines and Additional Resources
Processing times depend on application volume and the completeness of your packet. Published timelines are approximate, so it is wise to contact the Board directly by phone or email for a realistic estimate. The Board's staff can confirm whether your file is complete and let you know if any additional information is needed.
For extra guidance, consider reaching out to the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) Wyoming Chapter. While NASW does not process applications, the chapter often shares updates on licensing procedures, hosts Q&A sessions, and can connect you with peers who have recently navigated the process. If you are curious how social work licensure in South Dakota handles similar application steps, that neighboring state's process offers a useful comparison.
Path to Social Work Licensure in Wyoming
The road from your first social work class to full clinical licensure in Wyoming spans several years of education, testing, and supervised practice. Below is a realistic timeline showing each major milestone and how long it typically takes.

License Renewal and Continuing Education (CE) Requirements
All three Wyoming social work licenses renew on a two-year cycle, and both the Certified Social Worker (CSW) and Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) require 45 hours of continuing education during each renewal period.1 Wyoming ties license expiration to the holder's date of birth, so your personal renewal deadline may differ from a colleague who earned the same credential at the same time.1 The board sends renewal notices approximately 60 days before expiration, giving you a clear window to complete CE and file paperwork.
CE Hour Breakdown
Of the 45 required hours, at least 3 must address professional ethics and at least 3 must cover suicide assessment and treatment.2 These topic-specific mandates apply to both the CSW and LCSW. The Provisional Certified Social Worker (PCSW) also renews biennially; check directly with the Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board for the specific CE requirements that apply to the provisional tier, as those details can differ from the full license levels.
Approved continuing education must come from ASWB-approved CE providers recognized by the Association of Social Work Boards.2 Online coursework qualifies, which gives Wyoming licensees a wide range of self-paced options from national CE vendors.3 Whatever format you choose, retain your completion certificates: the board may audit CE compliance after renewal.
Renewal Fees and Background Checks
Renewal fees as of 2026 are $143 for the CSW and $168 for the LCSW.1 Beyond the standard renewal cycle, Wyoming requires a background check every four years, so expect that additional step to coincide with every other renewal.1
Lapsed Licenses and Reinstatement
Wyoming does not allow late renewal with a grace period.1 If your license lapses, you cannot simply pay a late fee and continue practicing. Reinstatement requires going through the board's formal process, which may include additional documentation. If a license has been expired for five years or more, the board requires passing the ASWB examination again before reinstatement.1 The practical takeaway: track your expiration date and complete your CE well before the deadline, because the consequences of lapsing are more involved than a simple fine.
Missing your continuing education deadline is the fastest way to lose your Wyoming social work license. It is the most overlooked compliance requirement among social workers new to the state. Set a calendar reminder at least three months before your renewal date so you have ample time to finish your hours and file documentation.
Reciprocity, Endorsement, and the Social Work Licensure Compact
Wyoming offers licensure by endorsement for out-of-state social workers but has not joined the ASWB Social Work Licensure Compact as of 2026.1 That distinction matters: endorsement is a separate Wyoming license you must apply for and hold, not a multi-state practice privilege.
Endorsement: Wyoming's Pathway for Out-of-State Social Workers
If you hold a current social work license in another U.S. state or territory, you can apply for the equivalent Wyoming credential (CSW or LCSW) through endorsement rather than starting from scratch.2 The Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board typically requires:
- A completed endorsement application and the standard licensing fee ($300 for CSW, $350 for LCSW)3
- Verification of your CSWE-accredited BSW or MSW sent directly from the institution
- License verification sent directly from every state where you hold or have held a social work license
- Proof of passing the appropriate ASWB exam (Bachelors, Masters, Clinical, or Advanced Generalist)
- Fingerprint-based background check through the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation and FBI
- For LCSW endorsement: documentation of supervised clinical hours that meet or substantially equal Wyoming's standard (3,000 total hours, 1,200 direct client contact, 100 individual supervision)4
Applicants generally do not have to retake the ASWB exam if they already passed the correct-level exam in another jurisdiction. The Board accepts ASWB score transfers directly from the Association of Social Work Boards licensing process. If your original license was issued under older or non-equivalent standards, Wyoming may require additional documentation or supervised hours to close the gap.
Compact Status: Wyoming Has Not Joined
The ASWB Social Work Licensure Compact, which will eventually allow eligible social workers to practice across member states without a separate license in each one, has been enacted by a growing number of states. Wyoming is not currently a member as of 2026, and no Wyoming compact legislation has advanced to enactment.1 Until that changes, every social worker who wants to practice in Wyoming, including telehealth providers serving Wyoming clients from another state, must hold a Wyoming-issued CSW, PCSW, or LCSW.
Watch the ASWB compact map and the Wyoming Legislature for updates. For context on how social work licensure requirements differ across states, compare requirements in neighboring and compact-member jurisdictions.
Social Worker Salary and Job Outlook in Wyoming
Wyoming employs a relatively small but steady social work workforce across several specializations. The table below summarizes approximate annual wages and total employment for key social work occupations in the state, drawn from 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Because federal salary data maps occupations using standardized classification codes rather than specific degree titles, figures may not perfectly align with every licensed social work role in Wyoming. For a more detailed breakdown of earnings by experience, setting, and credential level, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Occupation | Total Employment | 25th Percentile Salary | Median Salary | 75th Percentile Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 610 | $42,180 | $56,430 | $63,440 |
| Healthcare Social Workers | 150 | $48,510 | $64,800 | $81,300 |
| Social Workers, All Other | 170 | $56,430 | $74,880 | $108,680 |
Social Worker Salary by Metro Area in Wyoming
Wyoming has only two metropolitan statistical areas, Cheyenne and Casper, so a large share of social work employment falls in nonmetropolitan zones where area-level wage data is not always reported. The table below shows available salary figures for the state's metro areas by specialty. Casper tends to offer higher median pay for both child, family, and school social workers and healthcare social workers, though total employment in each area remains modest. For a broader look at compensation trends, visit the salary guide on mastersinsocialworkonline.org.
| Metro Area | Specialty | Employed | 25th Percentile | Median Salary | Mean Salary | 75th Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casper, WY | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 90 | $56,430 | $63,850 | $72,670 | $90,680 |
| Cheyenne, WY | Child, Family, and School Social Workers | 110 | $46,470 | $56,430 | $56,120 | $70,170 |
| Casper, WY | Healthcare Social Workers | 30 | $46,430 | $66,340 | $63,430 | $81,660 |
| Cheyenne, WY | Healthcare Social Workers | 30 | $44,260 | $47,420 | $57,170 | $67,770 |
Frequently Asked Questions About Wyoming Social Work Licensure
Below are answers to the most common questions prospective and current social workers ask about Wyoming licensure. For full details on each topic, refer to the relevant sections earlier in this guide or visit the Wyoming Mental Health Professions Licensing Board website.







