ASL Interpreting: States Requiring ASL Interpreter Licensure
by: Lisa Hendrickson, CI; and Susan Swancey, EIPA 3.6 – NIR Coordinators
While there is not a national requirement for licensure for American Sign Language Interpreters practicing in the United States, many individual states have the requirement for licensure, and/or other unique provisions. Please see the list below for the requirements for each state, and a link to access more information.
Since State laws/requirements surrounding the practice of ASL Interpreting are ever-evolving, please check the link(s) for the state you intend to work in, to ensure that the information below is currently accurate.
STATE
LICENSURE REQUIRED? (YES/NO)
LINK TO STATE LICENSURE REQUIREMENTS, INSTRUCTIONS FOR OBTAINING LICENSURE
Alabama
Yes (or permit)
Connecticut
No (yearly registration required
Georgia
Yes (license requirement for K-12 educational interpreters only)
Idaho
Yes
Illinois
Yes
Michigan
No (Michigan certification card required)
Nevada
No (registration required)
Oregon
Yes
Pennsylvania
No (registration required)
Rhode Island
Yes
South Dakota
Yes
Texas
No (BEI exam required)
Wyoming
No (permit required for K-12 educational interpreters only)
References
“State-by-State Regulations”. https://rid.org/programs/gap/state-by-state-regulations/. RID, Inc., 2024,
If you are an interpreter in the Southeast Florida area, interested in freelance work and have availability days, nights, or weekends, we have a variety of assignments throughout the community (medical appointments, evening/overnight hospital shifts, day/evening college classes, school districts, legal, etc.). Please visit our website and submit our New Interpreter Questionnaire:
https://interpreterresource.com/freelance-interpreters/new-interpreter-questionnaire/