If you hold a counseling, social work, marriage and family therapy, or addiction license or certification, you already know this: every state and every board has its own continuing education rules. The number of hours is different. The topics are different. The split between online/asynchronous vs. live/synchronous is different. Even who counts as an âapproved providerâ is different.
What most people donât realize is that the only thing that really counts is whatâs written in your boardâs rules. Not what a CE provider claims. Not what someone posted in a Facebook group or what AI tells you. Not even whatâs summarized on the boardâs license renewal page.
This post walks you through, step by step, how to:
- Find the actual rules for your license
- Pull out what you need: hours, topics, formats, and provider types
- Build a simple checklist so you always know which CE is âsafeâ for you
You can repeat this same process for every license and every state you hold a license in.
You should repeat this process every renewal cycle (for most people, every two years) because laws and rules change and boards rarely notify you.
Step 1: List every license you have to renew
On a sheet of paper (or in a simple document), write down each license you hold:
- License type (LPC, LMFT, LCSW, LADAC, etc.)
- State where it was issued
Do this for every license. If you are licensed in multiple states, donât assume they all accept the same courses or formats. You may need additional courses or live hours beyond what your âhomeâ state requires.
Step 2: For each license, go straight to the rules
Work through your list one license at a time.
- Google:
[State] [license type] board
Example: Florida LMHC Board, Tennessee LCSW Board, Alabama LMFT Board - On the boardâs site, ignore the renewal/FAQ page for now. Look for a link that says:
- âLaws and Rulesâ
- âRules and Regulationsâ
- âRules of the Boardâ
- Click the link for the rules of the board. You want the actual rule document for your profession.
- Once you are on the page with the boardâs rules, use CTRL+F (or your browserâs search function) and type âcontinuing education.â That should jump you straight to the continuing education section.
That section is where your CE requirements actually live.
Step 3: Pull out the information you actually need
From the continuing education section, youâre looking for a few practical things. Write them down as you go.
- Renewal timing and total hours
- Your renewal date (or renewal month)
- How often you renew (annually, every 2 years/Biennially, every 3 years)
- How many total CE hours you need each renewal cycle
- Whether there is a different rule for your first renewal
- Required courses/topics Most states have certain mandatory topics such as:
- Multicultural / cultural competence / anti-oppression
- Suicide prevention
- Ethics
- Trauma-informed care
- Laws and rules
- Supervision (if you are an approved supervisor)
For each required topic, write down:
- The topic name
- How many hours you need in that topic
- Whether those hours must be live/synchronous or can be online/asynchronous
- Synchronous vs. asynchronous Some states donât care about format. Many do.
- If your rule does not mention live vs. online at all, write:
âNo specific live vs. online limits in the rule.â - If your rule does mention format, write down:
- Minimum hours that must be live/synchronous/real-time
- Maximum hours that can be online/asynchronous/home study
- If your rule does not mention live vs. online at all, write:
A few states, like Alaska, Utah, Maryland, New York, Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama, still require at least some live or real-time interactive CE. However, many of these can be completed via live, interactive webinars. Do not assume your state lets you do 100% self-paced online. Check.
- Approved education providers Most rules have a section listing who is allowed to offer CE that âcounts.â Common examples:
- Board-approved providers
- National organizations such as NBCC, NAADAC, APA, ASWB, etc.
- Other state boards of the same profession
That usually means:
- If a course is offered by a provider approved by NBCC, NAADAC, or another state board of the same profession, it is generally acceptable.
- Some states (for example, New York) will only accept providers they have directly approved.
Step 4: Use the rule or call the board (not social media or AI)
If you get stuck or something is unclear, call or email the board and ask very direct questions, like:
- âWhen is my renewal date?â
- âHow many CE hours do I need each renewal cycle?â
- âWhich specific topics or courses are required for renewal, and how many hours of each?â
- âAre courses from education providers approved by NAADAC or other state boards of [your profession] acceptable for my license?â
Write down who you spoke with, the date, and what they told you, or save the email.
Step 5: Donât trust the renewal page alone
Renewal pages on your state boardâs website are often over-simplified. They may:
- Leave out required topics
- Skip details about live vs. online
- Not mention restrictions on providers
- Be out of date
To prevent a lot of heartache and possibly getting your license suspended:
- Use the rules and direct answers from the board as your sources.
- Use the renewal page only as a quick reminder of dates and links, not as your âbible.â
When in doubt, go back to the rules or ask someone at the board, not a marketing email and not a Facebook thread.
ALLCEUs offers weekly LIVE CEUs and unlimited on-demand CEUs. ALLCEUS is an approved education provider for NAADAC, IC&RC and multiple state boards of Counseling, Family Therapy and Social Work.