The Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) exam is the licensing examination required for social workers across the United States and Canada. This guide covers all four exam levels, the 170-question format, content area breakdowns, passing score requirements, and step-by-step registration instructions to help you prepare effectively.
The ASWB exam is the standardized licensing examination administered by the Association of Social Work Boards. Every U.S. state and Canadian province requires social workers to pass one of the four ASWB exam levels to obtain licensure. The exam assesses your knowledge across core social work competencies including human development, assessment, intervention planning, professional ethics, and practice evaluation. Understanding the exam structure and what each level requires is the first step toward passing on your first attempt.
The ASWB exam is offered at four distinct levels, each corresponding to a different stage of social work education and practice experience. Your state licensing board determines which exam level you must take based on your degree and the license category you are seeking.
Associate Level
The Associate exam is designed for individuals who hold a degree from a social work program that is not accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) or for those with a non-social work degree who work in social work settings. This level is not available in every state. The Associate exam tests foundational knowledge of social work principles, human behavior, and basic intervention skills at an entry-level scope.
Bachelors Level
The Bachelors exam is for graduates of CSWE-accredited BSW (Bachelor of Social Work) programs. This exam covers foundational social work knowledge appropriate for entry-level generalist practice. Content focuses on human development and behavior, assessment and intervention planning at the individual and family level, professional relationships and values, and the ethical standards that govern social work practice. The Bachelors level tests your readiness to practice under supervision in direct service roles.
Prepare for the Bachelors-level content with our ASWB Bachelors Trivia practice quiz to test your knowledge across the core content domains.
Masters Level
The Masters exam is for graduates of CSWE-accredited MSW (Master of Social Work) programs. This level tests advanced knowledge including specialized clinical and macro practice skills, supervision concepts, program evaluation, and more complex assessment and intervention techniques. The Masters exam expects a deeper understanding of theoretical frameworks, diversity and social justice issues, and the ability to apply knowledge to complex client situations. Many states require the Masters exam for Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) or equivalent credentials.
Clinical Level
The Clinical exam is the most advanced ASWB examination. It is designed for MSW graduates who have completed the required post-degree supervised clinical experience (typically 2-3 years of supervised direct practice, though requirements vary by state). The Clinical exam focuses on clinical assessment and diagnosis, psychotherapy and clinical intervention methods, treatment planning, crisis intervention, and clinical supervision. This is the exam required for the Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) credential, which is the highest level of social work licensure in most states and the credential needed for independent clinical practice and insurance reimbursement.
| Exam Level | Education Required | Experience Required | Typical License |
|---|---|---|---|
| Associate | Non-CSWE degree in social work setting | Varies by state | LSW (some states) |
| Bachelors | BSW from CSWE-accredited program | None (entry-level) | LSW, LBSW |
| Masters | MSW from CSWE-accredited program | None to minimal | LMSW, LGSW |
| Clinical | MSW from CSWE-accredited program | 2-3 years supervised clinical practice | LCSW, LICSW |
All four levels of the ASWB exam share the same basic format but differ in the weight given to each content area and the complexity of the questions asked.
Exam Structure
Every ASWB exam consists of 170 multiple-choice questions. Of these, 150 are scored questions that count toward your result, and 20 are pretest items that ASWB is evaluating for future exams. You cannot tell which questions are scored and which are pretest items, so you must treat every question as if it counts. You have 4 hours to complete the exam, which gives you approximately 1.4 minutes per question. The exam is administered on a computer at Pearson VUE test centers throughout the United States and Canada.
Content Areas Across All Levels
The ASWB organizes exam content into four major knowledge domains. The percentage weight of each domain varies by exam level:
| Content Area | Bachelors | Masters | Clinical |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human Development, Diversity, and Behavior in the Environment | 25% | 24% | 22% |
| Assessment and Intervention Planning | 28% | 28% | 27% |
| Interventions with Clients/Client Systems | 27% | 27% | 28% |
| Professional Relationships, Values, and Ethics | 20% | 21% | 23% |
What Each Content Area Covers
Sharpen your assessment and intervention knowledge with our ASWB Bachelors MCQ practice quiz, which covers questions across all four content domains.
Understanding how the ASWB exam is scored helps you set realistic preparation targets and interpret your results correctly.
How the Exam Is Scored
The ASWB uses a scaled scoring system rather than a simple percentage-correct approach. Your raw score (number of questions answered correctly out of 150 scored items) is converted to a scaled score that accounts for slight variations in difficulty between different versions of the exam. This means the number of questions you need to answer correctly may vary slightly depending on which form of the exam you receive.
The passing scaled score is 99 on a scale that ranges from approximately 70 to 130. This does not mean you need 99% correct. The scaled score of 99 typically corresponds to answering roughly 93-107 of the 150 scored questions correctly, depending on the difficulty of the specific exam form. In general terms, aim to answer at least 70-72% of questions correctly to be confident of passing.
Preliminary Results
When you finish the exam at the Pearson VUE test center, you receive a preliminary pass/fail result on screen immediately. This preliminary result is accurate in the vast majority of cases. Your official score report is sent to your state licensing board within approximately two weeks. If you fail, the official report includes a breakdown of your performance by content area, which helps you identify which domains need more study before retaking the exam.
Pass Rates
ASWB publishes aggregate pass rate data. Recent pass rates by exam level are approximately:
| Exam Level | First-Attempt Pass Rate | Overall Pass Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Associate | ~70% | ~65% |
| Bachelors | ~74% | ~69% |
| Masters | ~78% | ~72% |
| Clinical | ~80% | ~75% |
The Clinical exam has the highest pass rate despite being the most advanced, likely because candidates have years of supervised clinical practice before sitting for the exam. The Bachelors and Associate exams have lower pass rates partly because candidates have less practice experience to draw from when answering application-based questions.
Retaking the Exam
If you do not pass, you can retake the exam. ASWB requires a 90-day waiting period between attempts. You must reapply through your state licensing board and pay the $230 exam fee again. There is no limit on the total number of attempts, though some states impose their own restrictions. Use the content area breakdown on your score report to focus your study on weak areas before retaking.
The ASWB exam registration process involves both your state licensing board and the ASWB. Understanding the steps prevents delays and ensures a smooth exam experience.
Step-by-Step Registration
What to Bring on Exam Day
Exam Day Tips
Build confidence before exam day by working through our ASWB Bachelors Trivia and ASWB Bachelors MCQ practice quizzes to familiarize yourself with the question format and content areas.
The ASWB exam contains 170 multiple-choice questions. Of these, 150 are scored questions that determine your pass/fail result, and 20 are unscored pretest items that ASWB uses to evaluate questions for future exam forms. You cannot distinguish between scored and pretest questions during the exam, so treat every question as if it counts. You have 4 hours to complete all 170 questions.
The passing scaled score is 99 on the ASWB scoring scale. This is not a percentage โ the scale runs from approximately 70 to 130. A scaled score of 99 typically means you need to answer roughly 93-107 of the 150 scored questions correctly, depending on the difficulty of your specific exam form. As a general guideline, aim for at least 70-72% accuracy to be confident of passing. The scaled scoring system ensures fair comparison across different exam versions.
Your state licensing board determines which exam level you must take. Generally: the Bachelors exam is for BSW graduates seeking entry-level licensure (LSW, LBSW), the Masters exam is for MSW graduates seeking master-level licensure (LMSW, LGSW), and the Clinical exam is for MSW graduates with completed supervised clinical experience seeking clinical licensure (LCSW, LICSW). The Associate exam is for individuals with non-CSWE-accredited degrees working in social work settings and is only available in certain states. Check with your specific state board for exact requirements.
Most candidates study for 2-4 months before taking the ASWB exam. A structured study plan of 8-12 weeks with 10-15 hours of study per week is a common approach. The right timeline depends on how recently you completed your degree, your comfort level with the content areas, and which exam level you are taking. Clinical exam candidates often need less study time because they have years of supervised practice to draw from. Bachelors-level candidates may need more time because they are closer to the entry-level content and have less practice experience to contextualize the material.
Yes. ASWB requires a 90-day waiting period between exam attempts. You must reapply through your state licensing board and pay the $230 exam fee for each retake. There is no ASWB-imposed limit on the number of attempts, though some states have their own restrictions (for example, some states limit you to a certain number of attempts within a specified timeframe). Your score report from a failed attempt includes a content area breakdown that shows your performance in each domain, which is valuable for focusing your study before the retake.
The ASWB exam fee is $230 per attempt. This fee is set by ASWB and is the same across all four exam levels. Your state licensing board may charge additional application and processing fees on top of the ASWB exam fee. Total costs including state fees typically range from $300 to $600 depending on your state. If you need to retake the exam, you pay the $230 ASWB fee again for each attempt. Some states also require background checks, which may carry additional fees.