Licensure Requirements: Timelines, Supervised Hours, and Exam Details
Earning the LMFT credential is a multi-stage process, and understanding each phase helps you plan realistically. From the first day of graduate school to the moment you hold a license, most candidates invest four to six years, depending on state requirements and whether they accumulate supervised hours on a full-time or part-time basis.
The Master's Degree: Your Academic Foundation
Nearly every state requires a master's degree in marriage and family therapy or a closely related field. Most programs run 60 semester credit hours and take two to three years of full-time study to complete. Within those credits you will cover core competencies such as systemic therapy models, human development, psychopathology, ethics, and research methods, along with a practicum or internship component that introduces you to clinical work under faculty supervision.
Whether your program holds accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education (COAMFTE) matters more than many applicants realize. Graduating from a COAMFTE-accredited online MFT program typically streamlines the licensure process: most state boards accept the curriculum at face value, and some states explicitly require COAMFTE accreditation or its equivalent. If you attend a non-accredited program, you may need to document each course individually, complete additional coursework, or satisfy extra supervised-experience requirements before your state board will approve your application. Choosing an accredited program from the start can save months of paperwork and potential delays.
Post-Degree Supervised Clinical Experience
After graduation, you enter a supervised practice period as an associate, intern, or pre-licensed therapist (the title varies by state). Most states require between 2,000 and 4,000 hours of post-degree supervised clinical experience, with a specified portion consisting of direct client contact, meaning face-to-face assessment and treatment rather than documentation or case consultation. You will also need a set number of hours working under an approved supervisor, often at a ratio of one supervision hour for every several client-contact hours. For a closer look at this phase, see our overview of marriage and family therapy internship hours.
- Total supervised hours: Typically 2,000 to 4,000, depending on the state.
- Direct client contact: Usually at least half of the total required hours.
- Supervision sessions: Commonly one hour of individual or two hours of group supervision per week of practice.
Accumulating these hours on a full-time caseload generally takes one and a half to two and a half years. Part-time clinicians may need three years or longer, making pace of practice the single biggest variable in total time to licensure.
Licensure Examinations
Once your supervised hours are approved, you must pass a licensing examination. Two primary options exist:
- The national examination administered by the Association of Marital and Family Therapy Regulatory Boards (AMFTRB): Accepted in the majority of U.S. states and territories, this is the most common pathway. The exam covers clinical knowledge, ethical practice, and treatment planning across the lifespan.
- State-specific examinations: A small number of states administer their own jurisprudence or clinical exams in addition to, or instead of, the national exam. California, for instance, requires its own state-developed clinical exam.
Pass-rate data for the national exam is published periodically by AMFTRB, though the most recent publicly available figures may lag by a year or more. Candidates who graduate from COAMFTE-accredited programs and complete structured exam preparation tend to report higher first-attempt pass rates. Regardless of which exam your state requires, most candidates schedule two to four months of dedicated study after finishing their supervised hours.
Putting the Timeline Together
For a comprehensive roadmap, our guide to becoming an MFT walks through each milestone. Here is a realistic breakdown for the full journey:
- Master's degree: 2 to 3 years
- Post-degree supervised practice: 1.5 to 3 years
- Exam preparation and processing: 2 to 6 months
That adds up to roughly four to six years from enrollment to licensure. Candidates in states with higher hour thresholds, those working part-time, or those who need to retake an exam will land closer to the six-year mark. Planning ahead, choosing a COAMFTE-accredited program, and securing a supervised position promptly after graduation are the three most effective ways to keep your timeline on the shorter end.