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Social Work Licensure Compact

Social Work Licensure Compact in Wisconsin

UnverifiedVerified June 16, 2026

SWCompactMap provides informational summaries of Social Work Licensure Compact status by state. Compact participation and eligibility depend on individual licensing history and state-specific rules that are still being finalized. Verify with your state's social work board and the Social Work Licensure Compact Commission before relying on anything here. Not affiliated with the Commission, ASWB, CSWE, NASW, or any state board.

Card A

Is Wisconsin in the compact?

Unverified

We could not confirm this state’s status from a primary source. We show it as unverified rather than assert a status we cannot cite.

Claimed enacted only by a secondary aggregator, with no primary-source confirmation found during research, and not listed on the Commission’s member page. Status shown as unverified rather than asserted either way.

Card B

Can you use it yet?

Not operational yet

The compact is not operational anywhere yet — no multistate licenses or practice privileges are being issued. As of June 16, 2026, no multistate licenses or practice privileges are being issued. ASWB indicated implementation is likely within roughly 9–12 months of May 2026 (i.e. late 2026 to mid-2027); the Commission has reported it is working toward offering multistate licenses. Verify the current launch status with the Commission before relying on it.

Card C

What the privilege would enable

A multistate license (the compact “privilege”) is intended to let a social worker who holds a license in good standing in their compact home state practice in other member states without obtaining a separate license in each one — similar to how the nursing and physical-therapy compacts work.

Final eligibility rules are still being written by the Commission and are not yet in force. Based on the model legislation and analogous compacts, a social worker will generally need an active, unencumbered license in their home (residence) member state, must meet the education and examination requirements for the relevant practice level (bachelor’s, master’s, or clinical), and is expected to clear a background check. Specifics may change — always confirm with your home-state board and the Commission.

Card D

What to do next

We could not confirm Wisconsin’s status from a primary source, so we don’t assert one. Check the Commission’s member list and your state board directly.

Other member states

30 states have enacted the compact. A few others:

Verified against the Social Work Licensure Compact Commission for Wisconsin on June 16, 2026

Professional review in progress

SWCompactMap provides informational summaries of Social Work Licensure Compact status by state. Compact participation and eligibility depend on individual licensing history and state-specific rules that are still being finalized. Verify with your state's social work board and the Social Work Licensure Compact Commission before relying on anything here. Not affiliated with the Commission, ASWB, CSWE, NASW, or any state board.

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