The LCSW path in Connecticut.
Connecticut has moderate shortage pressure, which means LCSW competition for clinical roles is balanced. LCSWs still earn materially more than LMSWs — up to $85,570 in the highest-paying settings.
Earn your MSW from a CSWE-accredited program
Most candidates start with a 2-year traditional MSW or a 1-year Advanced Standing MSW (for BSW holders). Connecticut accepts MSWs from any CSWE-accredited program — nationwide or online.
1–2 yearsObtain LMSW / entry-level state license
After your MSW, apply for Connecticut's entry-level license (often LMSW or equivalent). This allows you to begin accruing supervised clinical hours toward LCSW. Typically requires the ASWB Masters exam.
2–4 months applicationComplete 3,000 supervised clinical hours
Accrue 3,000 supervised clinical hours under a qualified Connecticut-approved LCSW supervisor. This is the single biggest bottleneck in the process. Start supervision search during your final MSW semester.
2 yearsPass the ASWB Clinical exam
Once hours are complete, pass the ASWB Clinical exam (170 questions, 4 hours). National first-time pass rate is 75.3%. Most candidates prep 2–4 months using ASWB official practice exams and third-party study materials.
2–4 months prepApply for LCSW licensure
Submit the LCSW application to the Connecticut state board with supervisor verification, exam results, and any state-specific forms (jurisprudence exam in some states). Processing typically takes 6–12 weeks.
6–12 weeksThe supervision bottleneck: Nationally, the MSW-to-supervisor ratio is roughly 3.5×. That means many social workers delay LCSW licensure by 6–18 months waiting for supervision access. Start finding supervision during your final MSW semester — not after graduation.
SWU's supervision marketplace is built specifically to solve this. Browse LICSW supervisors →