Best free resources for ASWB prep in 2026 — compiled list

by Priya S. 562 views3 replies
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Priya S.OP
January 16, 2026

I've been compiling resources as I study for my ASWB - Association of Social Work Boards certification and figured I'd share what I've found. All free unless noted.

Practice Tests:

  • PracticeTestGeeks — most comprehensive collection I've found, good question explanations, covers ASWB - Association of Social Work Boards, LCSW - Licensed Clinical Social Worker, and LICSW - Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker Exam. Free.
  • Official practice materials from the certifying body — usually 1 free sample exam, worth doing even though it's short

Study Materials:

  • The official ASWB exam handbook / candidate guide (PDF, free from the certifying body's website)
  • YouTube — search for "ASWB exam prep" — there are surprisingly good free video reviews for most social work certifications
  • Reddit r/certifications — people post their exam experiences and tips regularly

Paid (worth it if budget allows):

  • Official study guides run $30-80 for most social work certifications — worth it if your exam has lots of specific factual content
  • Some certifying bodies offer prep courses — check if your employer covers it (many do for required certifications)

What resources have others found useful for social work exams? I'll add them to this list.

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Tom B.
January 16, 2026

Great list. I'd add: LinkedIn Learning has some social work-related courses that overlap with cert content, and if you have a library card many libraries give free access to it. Also check if your local library has access to O'Reilly or similar — tons of technical content there.

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Mike D.
January 16, 2026

The official candidate guide is something a lot of people skip but it literally tells you the topic weighting and domain breakdown. It's the roadmap for your study plan. Never skip it.

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Lisa C.
January 16, 2026

For ASWB - Association of Social Work Boards specifically, I found the PracticeTestGeeks explanations were detailed enough that I didn't need to buy a separate study guide. The combination of doing the practice questions + reading every explanation (for both right and wrong answers) covered most of the content I needed.

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