There are over 700 CACREP-accredited counseling programs in the United States. Many offer online or hybrid formats. They vary wildly in cost ($20,000–$75,000+), clinical placement support, NBCC pass rates, and how seriously they take the supervision requirements that CACREP's 2024 Standards tighten starting July 1, 2026.
Most students pick a program based on what shows up in Google ads, which school has the most polished admissions page, or which one called them back fastest. That's how you end up in a $65,000 online program with no practicum support and a 60% NCE pass rate.
This guide gives you the actual framework.
Start With CACREP Accreditation — But Don't Stop There
CACREP accreditation is the baseline, not the finish line. A CACREP-accredited program that does everything else poorly is still a bad program. But starting with non-CACREP programs when you need the NCC or multi-state licensure portability is a mistake that costs years and money to fix.
Why CACREP accreditation matters in 2026
Since January 1, 2024, NBCC requires CACREP graduation for the NCC (National Certified Counselor) credential. The equivalency review pathway for non-CACREP graduates closed. See our full breakdown in CACREP 2026 Changes: What Counseling Students Need to Know.
Beyond the NCC, CACREP matters for:
- State licensure portability — CACREP graduates typically face fewer barriers when applying for licensure in states other than where they trained
- Employer preference — VA facilities, hospital systems, and some community mental health organizations specify CACREP in job postings
- Streamlined state board pathways — several states give CACREP graduates reduced supervised hours requirements or waived equivalency reviews
Before you evaluate any program: Verify its CACREP accreditation status directly at cacrep.org. Search for your specific program specialty (Clinical Mental Health Counseling, School Counseling, etc.) — not just the university name. Accreditation is program-specific. A university can have CACREP accreditation for School Counseling but not for Clinical Mental Health Counseling.
How to verify CACREP accreditation status
Go to cacrep.org → Find an Accredited Program. Search by institution name and specialty area. Look for:
- Current accreditation status (not "applied" or "candidacy")
- No pending reviews or conditional status — these indicate unresolved compliance concerns
- Accreditation under the correct Standards — programs should be transitioning to the 2024 Standards ahead of the July 1, 2026 deadline
Do not rely on program websites, admissions materials, or enrollment counselors for accreditation status. Marketing pages lag reality. Check the primary source.
Evaluate Practicum and Internship Support Seriously
This is where most online programs fall short — and where students get burned most badly.
CACREP requires a minimum of 100 hours for practicum and 600 hours for internship (700 total clinical hours). Finding a qualified clinical placement that meets your program's site requirements, your state's supervision standards, and your own schedule is harder than it sounds — especially when you're doing it remotely.
Questions to ask every program
Practicum & Internship Support Checklist
The honest reality: Clinical placement is the bottleneck that extends graduation timelines. Students who enter programs without asking about practicum support are the ones who spend two semesters waiting for a site while paying tuition. Practicum placement quality separates good online programs from expensive ones.
NBCC Pass Rates: The Data Point Programs Don't Volunteer
NCE pass rates are the closest thing to an outcome metric that exists for counseling programs. They're imperfect — pass rates reflect student preparation, program curriculum quality, and the demographic profile of who the program admits. But they're real data, and programs that refuse to share them usually have rates they'd rather not advertise.
What to look for
- Ask for first-time pass rates, not cumulative pass rates that include retakes. First-time rates are the honest signal of how well the program prepared students.
- National NCE first-time pass rates hover around 75–80%. Programs with strong outcomes publish rates above 80–85%.
- Programs that won't share pass rates when asked directly should be treated with significant skepticism.
- Disaggregate by program — a university with strong undergraduate pass rates in an unrelated field does not predict counseling program outcomes.
CPCE pass rates are not a proxy for NCE readiness. The CPCE is a program-exit exam administered during graduate school — it has no licensure value and is not administered by NBCC. Programs sometimes tout high CPCE performance as a quality signal. It's not the same metric. Ask for NCE pass rates specifically. See our NCE vs. CPCE vs. NCMHCE comparison for the full breakdown.
Program Format Comparison: Fully Online vs. Hybrid vs. Low-Residency
The format distinction matters less than it used to — but it still matters, especially post-2026.
| Factor | Fully Online | Hybrid | Low-Residency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coursework delivery | 100% remote, often asynchronous | Mix of online + scheduled on-campus | Online + brief intensive residencies (1–2×/yr) |
| Geographic flexibility | High | Medium — campus proximity required | High except during residencies |
| Schedule flexibility | High (asynchronous coursework) | Lower (set class times) | High between residencies |
| Peer networking | Limited unless structured | Moderate | Concentrated during residencies |
| Clinical supervision (post-2026) | Synchronous video or in-person (per program) | On-campus or synchronous video | Synchronous video or in-person intensive |
| Supervision flexibility | High — often Zoom-based | Varies by program | Concentrated during residency |
| Travel costs | None | Regular commuting costs | Periodic travel + lodging |
| Typical tuition range | $30,000–$75,000+ | $20,000–$50,000 | $25,000–$55,000 |
The post-2026 supervision reality
Under CACREP's 2024 Standards (effective July 1, 2026), all three formats must provide real-time supervision for practicum and internship. Synchronous video satisfies the requirement — so the practical difference between "fully online" and "hybrid" supervision is narrowing.
What the format distinction now turns on is coursework delivery and community — not supervision itself. If your priority is schedule flexibility and geographic freedom, fully online is still the better choice. If you want regular in-person peer interaction embedded in the program, hybrid is worth the proximity constraint. If you want intensive immersive experiences without the ongoing commute, low-residency fits.
State Licensure Considerations
This is the most commonly misunderstood dimension of program selection.
Online degrees are not the issue — non-CACREP degrees are
State licensure boards evaluate graduates based on what their program required — coursework content, clinical hours, supervision standards — not whether it was delivered online. An online degree from a CACREP-accredited program is treated identically to an on-campus degree from the same accreditor in most states.
The licensure risk is not "online." It is:
- Graduating from a non-CACREP program in a state that requires CACREP for LPC licensure
- Clinical hours that don't meet your target state's category requirements (some states require specific ratios of direct/indirect hours)
- Supervision that doesn't meet your state board's supervisor credential requirements
- Enrolling in a program accredited only in one state when you plan to practice in another
Check your target state board directly
State Licensure Verification Steps
The NCC accelerates multi-state practice. The NCC credential (National Certified Counselor) is accepted for licensure portability in many states and has become the default credential for counselors who move across state lines. Since January 2024, it requires CACREP graduation. If multi-state practice is in your plans, choose CACREP and pursue the NCC post-graduation.
Get the free program evaluation worksheet
A fillable checklist: accreditation verification, practicum questions to ask, pass rate benchmarks, and state licensure checkboxes. One page, print-ready.
Cost, Financial Aid, and Return on Investment
Counseling master's degrees are expensive relative to counselor compensation in many states. This is the uncomfortable math that programs don't put in their marketing materials.
The cost range
Online counseling master's programs range from approximately $20,000 at regional state universities to $75,000+ at large national for-profit or private online programs. The tuition premium at the high end does not correlate reliably with clinical placement quality or NBCC pass rates — it correlates with marketing budget and brand recognition.
The compensation context
Entry-level counselor salaries in most states range from $42,000–$55,000 depending on setting. Private practice income can grow significantly with licensure, specialization, and caseload — but that takes years to develop. A $65,000 master's degree financed with federal loans has a very different 10-year financial profile than a $28,000 state university degree.
What higher cost does not guarantee
- Better clinical placement support (regional programs often have stronger local site networks)
- Higher NCE pass rates (not correlated with tuition cost)
- Better faculty access (many large online programs use adjunct faculty exclusively)
- Faster completion (placement timelines drive this more than program structure)
Ask specifically about financial aid and loan caps. Graduate PLUS loan limits are high — programs are not incentivized to encourage you to borrow less. Ask: what percentage of students graduate with debt? What is the median debt at graduation? Some programs publish this in their Consumer Information disclosures. If they won't share it, request it from the financial aid office directly.
Timeline: How Long Does an Online Counseling Master's Take?
| Phase | Typical Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Didactic coursework | 18–24 months | Varies by credit load and program structure |
| Practicum site search | 1–4 months | Highly variable — programs with strong placement support compress this |
| Practicum (100 hours) | 1 semester (~4 months) | Typically 5–8 client hours/week + supervision |
| Internship site transition | 1–3 months | Sometimes continuous with practicum site |
| Internship (600 hours) | 2–3 semesters (~8–12 months) | At ~15–20 hrs/week part-time; faster if full-time placement |
| Total (typical) | 2.5–3.5 years | Placement delays are the primary extension variable |
The practical advice: placement timelines drive graduation timelines more than credit hours do. A program that takes an extra semester to complete because of placement delays costs money and delays your ability to accrue post-degree supervised hours for licensure. Ask specifically about median time-to-completion, not just the credit hour count.
Red Flags in Online Counseling Programs
These are the signals that should end your evaluation of a program — or at minimum trigger deep scrutiny before you apply.
🚩 Red Flags to Walk Away From
- No CACREP accreditation, or accreditation under review. Check cacrep.org directly. "We are in the process of seeking accreditation" means you will graduate without it.
- No practicum placement support. "Students are responsible for finding their own clinical sites" is not standard — it is a failure of program infrastructure.
- Refuses to share NCE pass rates. Programs with good outcomes publish them. Programs with rates below 65% hide them.
- Can't explain post-July 2026 supervision delivery. Under CACREP 2024 Standards, clinical supervision must be real-time. If an admissions counselor can't explain how the program will comply, the program hasn't figured it out.
- Aggressive enrollment pressure with vague answers. "You should enroll now — this cohort is almost full" combined with non-answers to direct questions about accreditation or pass rates is a pattern, not a coincidence.
- Extremely fast completion timelines. "Complete your master's in 18 months" can be real — but verify that clinical hour requirements aren't being compressed in ways that don't meet CACREP standards.
- Faculty who are primarily adjuncts with no listed research or specialization. Programs where every course is taught by a different adjunct have no intellectual core — curriculum coherence suffers.
Questions to Ask During the Admissions Process
The admissions process is the one time programs are motivated to answer your questions. Use it. These are the questions that distinguish prepared programs from underperforming ones:
- What is your first-time NCE pass rate for the last three graduating cohorts?
- What is your median time-to-graduation, accounting for practicum and internship placement delays?
- How does the program support students who are struggling to find a practicum site in their geographic area?
- Is your program currently accredited under the CACREP 2016 or 2024 Standards?
- How will individual and group clinical supervision be delivered after July 1, 2026?
- What percentage of faculty are full-time versus adjunct?
- What is the average faculty-to-student ratio in supervision groups?
- What percentage of students who enter the program graduate within four years?
Programs that can't answer these questions fluently have not been asked them enough. Take that as data.
CounselForge Helps You Succeed Regardless of Program
Track your CACREP clinical hours by category, practice with AI client simulations to build clinical skills before practicum, and prep for the NCE, CPCE, or NCMHCE — all in one platform. It works with any CACREP program, at any school.
Start Free Trial →The Complete Program Evaluation Checklist
Before You Apply
CounselForge: Works With Any Program You Choose
CounselForge is built for counseling students in the trenches of clinical training — regardless of which program you're in.
Once you're enrolled, the platform supports:
- Clinical hour tracking — log direct client contact, indirect hours, and supervision sessions by CACREP category. The hour log captures supervision modality (in-person vs. video), supervisor credentials, and site information — the data CACREP programs need for accreditation documentation
- AI client simulations — 10 distinct clinical personas to practice with before practicum, so your first real client session isn't also your first simulated one. Helps build the clinical reasoning that the NCMHCE tests and that practicum supervisors evaluate
- Exam prep — 80 practice questions across all 8 CACREP content areas and 120 flashcards for the NCE, CPCE, and NCMHCE. See our Counseling Exam Prep Guide for evidence-based study timelines
- Assessment tools — structured self-assessment tied to CACREP competency domains, to track your clinical development across the program
The tool is program-agnostic by design. Your program will tell you what hours to accumulate. CounselForge helps you track them accurately, document them in the format CACREP auditors expect, and build clinical skills in parallel.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my online counseling program need to be CACREP accredited?
If you're pursuing the NCC credential or planning to practice in multiple states, yes. CACREP has been required for NCC since January 2024. Many state boards also give preference to CACREP graduates. If you're certain about a single-state practice and your target state doesn't require CACREP — check first, then decide. Most students should default to CACREP.
How long does an online counseling master's take?
2.5–3.5 years is typical. Coursework takes 18–24 months. Practicum (100 hours) and internship (600 hours) take another 12–18 months depending on how quickly you find placements and how many hours per week you can commit. Placement delays are the primary driver of graduation timeline variance — ask about median completion time, not just credit hours.
What are red flags in an online counseling program?
No CACREP accreditation, no practicum placement support, refusal to share NCE pass rates, inability to explain post-2026 supervision delivery, and high-pressure enrollment tactics with vague accreditation answers. Any one of these warrants scrutiny. Multiple together means walk away.
Will some states not accept my online counseling degree?
State boards evaluate programs on what they require — not online vs. on-campus delivery. A CACREP-accredited online degree is treated identically to a CACREP on-campus degree in most states. The risk is non-CACREP programs or programs whose clinical requirements don't match your target state's licensure standards — not online delivery itself.
How do I verify a program's CACREP accreditation?
Go to cacrep.org → Find an Accredited Program. Search by institution and specialty area. Confirm the program is currently accredited — not in candidacy, not under review, not conditionally accredited. Do not rely on program websites or admissions materials. Check the primary source.
What NBCC pass rate should I look for?
Ask for first-time NCE pass rates. National averages are around 75–80%. Strong programs publish rates above 80–85%. Programs that won't share pass rates should be treated with significant skepticism. Ask specifically for first-time rates — cumulative rates that include retakes inflate the number.
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