Master of Science in Occupational Therapy: MSOT Program Complete Guide
MSOT program guide: 2-3 year timeline, prerequisites, ACOTE accreditation, fieldwork, NBCOT exam, $80-95K salary, and how it compares to the OTD.

Choosing a Master of Science in Occupational Therapy (MSOT) is one of the bigger calls you will make on the road to becoming a licensed OT, and it is worth slowing down to see what you are actually signing up for. An MSOT is currently the most common entry-level credential in the field, but the ground is shifting under us.
ACOTE, the national accreditor, has been openly debating whether the doctorate should replace the master's as the minimum standard, and that conversation has not gone away. What it means for prospective students right now is simple: do your homework before you commit two-plus years of your life and somewhere north of $80,000.
Most MSOT programs run between 24 and 36 months of full-time study, with a heavy mix of lecture, lab, and fieldwork. You will sit through anatomy, neuroscience, kinesiology, psychosocial theory, pediatrics, and adult rehab — then strap on a clinical apron and put all of it to work with real patients. By the end, you should be ready to sit for the NBCOT exam, get state licensed, and start earning somewhere in the $80,000 to $95,000 range, with plenty of room to grow once you specialize.
This guide walks through how the MSOT compares to the OTD, what programs look for in applicants, what your two years of school actually look like, and how to pick a school that will not crush your wallet for a salary that does not justify it. The answers are not always what brochures tell you — and the worst mistake is taking the first acceptance letter without running the cost numbers.
MSOT Quick Facts
What the MSOT Actually Is
The MSOT — sometimes branded as an MOT or MSOT depending on the school — is a graduate-level professional degree that prepares you to practice as an occupational therapist. It is not a research master's the way a thesis-driven MS in psychology is. It is closer in spirit to a PA or PT program: heavy coursework, supervised clinic time, and a clear vocational endpoint. You leave with a job, not a research portfolio.
Here's the catch that trips a lot of applicants up. To practice OT in the United States you need three things stacked in order: a degree from an ACOTE-accredited program, a passing score on the NBCOT certification exam, and a license issued by your state. Skip any one of them and you cannot legally use the OTR credential. The MSOT handles the first link; the other two come after graduation, and both cost extra time and money.
One thing worth saying out loud: an MSOT is not the same as a degree in kinesiology, health science, or rehabilitation studies. Those undergrad programs feed into OT school, but they do not let you practice on their own. If anyone is selling you an "OT certificate" that is not ACOTE-accredited, walk away. The accreditation gate is absolute — state boards and the NBCOT will not even let you sit for the exam without it.
The flip side is that ACOTE accreditation is fairly portable. A degree from a Florida-accredited program qualifies you for licensure in California, Texas, or any other state, as long as you meet that state's specific application requirements. You are not locked into the region where you trained, which gives you flexibility most professional licenses do not.

An MSOT is the entry-level professional master's degree that, paired with the NBCOT exam and state licensure, lets you practice as a registered occupational therapist (OTR). Most programs take roughly 2.5 years and end with two full-time clinical placements totaling 24 weeks of supervised practice.
MSOT vs. OTD: The 2027 Question
This is the elephant in the room. For years, ACOTE has discussed moving the entry-level standard from the master's (MSOT) to the doctorate (OTD). The deadline has been pushed around and softened, but the direction of travel is real — schools are quietly reclassifying programs, and a growing share of new graduates already hold an OTD.
So which one should you pick? Look at it like this:
- MSOT — cheaper, faster, and gets you into the workforce sooner. For now, employers treat OTR and OTR are basically the same, paywise.
- OTD — longer by 6–12 months, more expensive, but includes a capstone project and gives you a stronger position if you want to teach, manage, or move into specialty practice.
Bottom line: if you are starting school in 2025 or 2026, the MSOT is still a fine choice, especially if you want to keep debt manageable. If you are applying for entry in 2027 or beyond, watch ACOTE updates carefully — some programs may only offer the OTD by then. The risk is not that your MSOT becomes invalid; it stays accredited and your OTR license stays good. The risk is that down the road employers may give preference to OTDs for the same job, the way nursing has shifted toward BSN preference.
MSOT vs. OTD at a Glance
24-36 months full-time. Public in-state tuition $30-60K, private $90-130K. Lower opportunity cost since you graduate sooner and start earning faster. Same NBCOT exam, same OTR credential, same starting pay as OTD graduates.
30-42 months full-time. Adds 6-12 months and roughly $30-50K in tuition over the MSOT. Includes a doctoral capstone project, usually a 14-week experiential placement plus a written deliverable. Better fit for academia, leadership, or research-oriented careers.
Negligible at entry level for clinical roles. Both degrees start around $80-95K. OTDs may earn a small premium of $3-8K in management or academic positions after three to five years of practice, but rank-and-file clinic pay is identical.
OTD is the direction ACOTE has signaled. MSOT remains accredited and your OTR license stays valid for life once earned, but new hires in 2030+ may face employer preference for the OTD credential the way nursing has shifted toward BSN-preferred hiring.
Prerequisites: What You Need Before You Apply
Every MSOT program publishes its own list, but the overlap is huge. You will almost always need a bachelor's degree (the major itself is flexible, but psychology, kinesiology, biology, and health science dominate), a stack of prerequisite courses, observation hours under a licensed OT, and decent letters of recommendation.
Here's the part nobody likes to admit: the GRE is on the way out. Plenty of programs dropped it during COVID and never brought it back. Check school by school — some big names still require it, but a growing list is GRE-optional or GRE-blind. Do not assume.
The course prereqs are predictable. Expect to need anatomy and physiology (two semesters with labs), abnormal psychology, lifespan development, statistics, sociology or anthropology, and often a medical terminology class. Some schools add physics or neuroscience. Skipping even one of these can knock you out of the running, so build the list early and chase it down.
Observation hours are the unsexy part of the application that quietly separates strong candidates from weak ones. Programs publish a minimum — 40, 60, 100 — but competitive applicants show up with 150 to 300 hours across at least three settings. Pediatric clinic, adult acute rehab, and mental health is the gold-standard mix. School systems, hand therapy clinics, and skilled nursing facilities round out a strong portfolio. Log every hour as you go: date, location, supervising OT's name, and a one-line reflection. You will need this material for your personal statement and interviews.

MSOT Application Checklist by Category
Bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution, minimum 3.0 GPA but a 3.4+ is realistic for competitive programs. Prerequisite coursework needs to be completed within the last 5-7 years and graded B or better. Official transcripts from every institution you have attended — including community college courses — must be sent through OTCAS, not directly to schools. Course names matter: a 'human anatomy' course at one school may not satisfy a program that lists 'human anatomy with cadaver lab' as a requirement.
Inside the MSOT Curriculum
The first year of an MSOT is almost entirely foundation work. You will sit through functional anatomy with a cadaver lab in most programs, neuroanatomy that hurts your brain but pays off forever, kinesiology, and the theory courses that frame how OTs think about occupation, environment, and meaning. None of it is optional.
The second year shifts to applied practice. Expect dedicated courses in pediatric OT, adult physical rehabilitation, mental health and psychosocial OT, geriatric care, and assistive technology. Most programs also embed Level I fieldwork into the second year — short, part-time placements that let you observe and assist before you take over a caseload yourself.
By the end of didactic work, you should be able to evaluate a patient using standardized tools, write a defensible plan of care, document treatment correctly, and justify what you did to a payer. That last point matters more than students expect. OT documentation is a legal and reimbursement skill, not just paperwork. Bad notes get claims denied, which gets clinicians fired, which gets new grads quietly screened out in their first review.
Research methods is woven through most programs too. You will read literature, critique studies, and likely complete a capstone or evidence-based practice project. For an MSOT, this is usually a smaller-scale assignment than the OTD capstone — think a structured literature review or a poster presentation rather than a full original research project. It is enough to teach you how to evaluate clinical evidence, which is what matters in practice.
Level II fieldwork is two full-time placements, 12 weeks each, totaling 24 weeks of unpaid clinical work. You cannot graduate — or sit for NBCOT — until both are passed. Failing a placement can add 4–6 months to your program.
Fieldwork: Level I and Level II Explained
Fieldwork is where MSOT students stop being students and start being clinicians. ACOTE splits it into two levels, and they look almost nothing alike.
Level I is observational. You shadow, you help out, you write reflection journals. Programs typically build in three or four Level I placements across the curriculum, each lasting a week or two. The goal is exposure — you see pediatrics, mental health, adult rehab, and maybe home health or community settings.
Level II is the real deal. Two placements, each 12 weeks full-time, where you progressively take over a caseload under a licensed OT's supervision. By the end of Level II, you should be functioning at roughly 80% of an entry-level OT's productivity. Sites grade you with a standardized tool called the FWPE. Score too low and you repeat the placement — sometimes at a different site, sometimes after remediation.
Placement matters more than students realize. A Level II site that runs a structured orientation, gives you regular feedback, and lets you carry a real caseload by week four will turn you into a competent new grad. A poorly run site can leave you behind. If you hit a placement where you are not learning, talk to your fieldwork coordinator early. Most schools are willing to advocate for you, but they cannot help if you stay quiet until week ten.

What to Do During Level II Fieldwork
- ✓Show up early and leave on time — your supervisor is silently grading consistency and professionalism from day one, before they ever care about your clinical reasoning
- ✓Ask for structured feedback weekly, not just at the midterm and final FWPE evaluation; build it into a regular Friday check-in so issues surface while there is time to correct them
- ✓Document every treatment session the same day, ideally within the hour; let notes pile up and you will scramble at the end of the week, miss billable codes, and tank your perceived productivity
- ✓Take initiative on caseload by week 4 — do not wait to be handed cases. Volunteer to evaluate new admissions, write discharge summaries, and lead family meetings under supervision
- ✓Build a relationship with the OT assistants and rehab techs on staff; they teach you practical skills — transfer techniques, equipment quirks, scheduling logic — that faculty rarely cover
- ✓Bank study questions for NBCOT as you go — each clinical placement teaches exam-relevant content. Keep a running document of topics that came up, diagnoses you treated, and standardized assessments you administered
- ✓Track your productivity weekly. By week 8, you should be hitting 60-70% of an entry-level caseload; by week 12, 80%+. If you are behind, ask your supervisor specifically how to close the gap
Cost, Debt, and ROI
Let's talk numbers. MSOT tuition varies wildly. In-state public programs can run $30,000 to $60,000 total, while private programs often hit $90,000 to $130,000. Add living expenses for two-plus years and the all-in cost can flirt with $200,000.
The starting salary of $80,000 to $95,000 sounds healthy until you run the debt math. A graduate carrying $150,000 in loans on an $85,000 income is looking at $1,500+ monthly payments under standard repayment. That math gets uncomfortable fast.
What works in your favor: OT is on Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) eligible track if you work for a nonprofit hospital or school district, which most early-career OTs do. Ten years of qualifying payments and the balance is gone. State-level loan repayment programs exist too, especially for OTs willing to work in rural or underserved areas — some pay $20,000–$50,000 toward loans over a few years.
A practical rule of thumb: try to keep total OT-school debt below your expected first-year salary. If you can find a program that costs $70,000 total and you will earn $85,000 starting, the math works. If you are looking at $180,000 in tuition for the same $85,000 starting salary, push back hard before signing. The brand-name difference rarely pays for itself in this profession, where employers care more about your NBCOT pass and your fieldwork performance than which school's name is on the diploma.
Choosing an MSOT: Trade-offs
- +Faster to the workforce than an OTD by 6-12 months, which means an extra half-year to year of full-time clinical income
- +Lower total tuition than the doctoral route, often $30,000-50,000 less depending on the school and program length
- +Same entry-level pay as OTD graduates for clinical positions in hospitals, clinics, schools, and home health
- +Same NBCOT exam, same OTR license, same legal scope of practice — patients, payers, and most employers do not distinguish
- +Plenty of accredited programs nationwide — roughly 200 to choose from, giving you geographic and price flexibility
- +Strong PSLF eligibility if you work for a nonprofit hospital or public school district, which most early-career OTs do
- −Long-term accreditation status is uncertain past ACOTE's continued OTD push, even though current MSOT licenses remain valid
- −Limited advantage for academic, research, or higher-education teaching career paths where the OTD is increasingly preferred
- −Some employers — particularly large hospital systems and academic medical centers — may start preferring OTD candidates by the mid-2030s
- −Heavy unpaid fieldwork (24 weeks of Level II) compresses your earning potential during school and pushes the break-even point further out
- −Prerequisite coursework can add a year of post-bachelor's work if you did not plan your undergrad major around OT-school requirements
Top MSOT Programs and How to Pick One
The big-name programs — Boston University, USC, Washington University in St. Louis, Tufts, NYU, Colorado State — carry weight, but they also carry sticker prices that can hit $130,000 in tuition alone. Less famous schools turn out equally capable clinicians who pass NBCOT at the same rate, sometimes higher.
Three numbers matter more than program prestige when you compare schools: NBCOT first-time pass rate, total cost of attendance, and graduation rate. ACOTE publishes all three on its website. A school with a 95% pass rate and $50,000 tuition is, on paper, a better deal than a name-brand program at $130,000 with an 88% pass rate.
Visit if you can. Sit in on a class. Ask current students about fieldwork placement — a program that struggles to place students in good Level II sites is one to avoid, no matter how prestigious the brochure looks. The clinic, not the classroom, is where you learn to be an OT.
Hybrid and online MSOT programs deserve a careful look too. A handful are ACOTE-accredited and use a blended model: didactic work online, in-person intensives a few times per semester, and traditional in-person fieldwork. They are not "easier" — the clinical components are identical — but they can let you keep a part-time job or stay near family while you study. Just confirm ACOTE accreditation in writing; some programs market themselves aggressively while still being in candidacy status, which is not the same thing as being fully accredited.
After Graduation: NBCOT, Licensure, and Your First Job
The day you finish Level II, the work is not over. You still need to pass the NBCOT OTR exam — 200 multiple-choice questions and three clinical simulation cases, scored on a scale where 450 passes. Most graduates sit for it within 60 to 90 days of finishing school, while the material is still fresh.
Pass rate for first-time U.S. graduates sits around 80% in most recent years. If you fail, you can retake after 45 days, but most states will not license you until you have a passing score in hand. Budget 6–8 weeks of dedicated study after graduation — do not assume you can pass cold off Level II.
Once you have your NBCOT score, apply for state licensure in whichever state you plan to work. Application fees, background checks, and processing times vary widely — some states issue temporary licenses within two weeks, others take three months. Start that paperwork the day you submit your NBCOT registration, not the day you find out you passed.
First jobs typically land in skilled nursing facilities, outpatient clinics, hospitals, schools, or home health. SNF and home health tend to pay highest at entry; pediatric school-based positions pay less but offer the most predictable schedule. Specialty certifications — hand therapy (CHT), low vision, sensory integration, assistive technology — come later, usually after two to five years of practice, and can add $5,000–$15,000 to your annual earnings depending on setting.
One final reality check. The MSOT is a strong vocational path with steady demand and meaningful work, but it is not a fast track to wealth. Pick it because helping people regain function — kids learning to dress themselves, stroke survivors relearning to cook, injured workers returning to their jobs — energizes you. The financial math works for most graduates, the work is genuinely rewarding, and the profession's growth outlook is solid. Just go in eyes open about what the two years and the debt look like.
OT Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.