Supervised Experience & Clinical Hours for Alabama LMFT Licensure
After earning your qualifying degree, the next major milestone is completing a period of supervised clinical practice. Alabama requires this hands-on experience before you can apply for full LMFT licensure, and the rules governing supervision are specific. Understanding them from the start will help you avoid costly delays.
How Many Hours and How Long?
Alabama generally requires two years (or the equivalent) of post-degree clinical practice conducted under an approved supervisor. During that time, you must accumulate at least 1,500 hours of direct client contact. A meaningful portion of those hours must involve work with couples and families, not solely individual clients. This emphasis reflects the core competency expected of a marriage and family therapist: the ability to assess and treat relational systems, not just individuals in isolation.
Most candidates complete these hours while holding a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Associate (LMFTA) credential, which authorizes you to practice under supervision in Alabama. If you are unsure how this associate-level credential fits into the broader picture, our guide on the difference between AMFT and LMFT explains the distinctions clearly.
Supervision Frequency and Ratio
Supervision itself must follow a structured schedule. At a minimum, you need one hour of individual, face-to-face supervision each week (or its approved equivalent) throughout the supervised practice period. Group supervision may supplement individual sessions in some circumstances, but it cannot fully replace them. Consistent, high-quality supervision is not just a regulatory checkbox; it is the mechanism through which you translate classroom theory into clinical skill.
Who Qualifies as an Approved Supervisor?
Not just any licensed professional can serve as your supervisor. Alabama recognizes the following categories of approved supervisors:
- AAMFT Approved Supervisors: Professionals who hold the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy's Approved Supervisor designation.
- Licensed MFT supervisors with additional training: LMFTs who have completed specific supervisor training that meets the board's standards.
- Other qualifying licensed professionals: In some cases, a licensed professional from a related discipline (such as a licensed professional counselor or psychologist) may serve as a supervisor if the Alabama Board of Examiners in Marriage and Family Therapy grants prior approval.
Before you begin accruing hours, confirm that your intended supervisor's credentials satisfy one of these categories. If they do not, the board may decline to count those hours toward licensure. When weighing your options, understanding the LMFT vs LPC distinction can help clarify which supervisors align with your career goals.
Document Every Hour From Day One
Alabama requires you to submit detailed supervision logs as part of your full LMFT application. These logs must account for the dates, types of sessions, supervisor information, and nature of the clinical work performed. Reconstructing this documentation after the fact is difficult and error-prone.
The strongest advice anyone can give you at this stage is simple: start a tracking system on your very first day of supervised practice. Use a spreadsheet, a dedicated tracking app, or whatever format works for you, but record each session and supervision meeting promptly. Have your supervisor review and sign off on logs at regular intervals, ideally monthly, rather than waiting until the end of the two-year period. Meticulous record-keeping protects you if questions arise during the application review and keeps your path to full licensure on schedule.