The ASLP-IC compact lets audiologists and speech-language pathologists practice across member states under a single compact privilege. It covers both audiology (AuD, CCC-A) and speech-language pathology (SLP, CCC-SLP) — two credentials regulated together in many states.
The ASLP-IC is open to audiologists and SLPs holding an active, unencumbered license in a member state. The applicant declares one member state as their home state and pays a per-state privilege fee for additional member states.
Eligibility requires the appropriate doctoral degree (AuD for audiology) or master's degree (for SLP) from an accredited program, passage of the Praxis exam, completion of a clinical fellowship year (for SLP) or externship (for AuD), no current disciplinary action, and no disqualifying criminal history.
The ASLP-IC currently has 35+ member jurisdictions.
last_verified: 2026-05 · sourced from data/compacts.json
Applications go through the ASLP-IC Commission's portal. You verify your home state license, complete a background check, and request privileges in the member states where you want practice rights.
The compact privilege fee varies by state (typically $50-$200). Processing time varies as the compact is in active rollout; many states are now issuing privileges within a few business days. Confirm current fees and timing directly with the ASLP-IC. last_verified: 2026-05.
When your NPI lookup returns an AuD, SLP, CCC-SLP, CCC-A, or CF-SLP credential, TeleVerify auto-detects ASLP-IC eligibility and asks you to confirm your home state and member-state privileges. Once confirmed, sessions where the patient is in a privileged member state are tagged compliant_compact. Telehealth-specific rules within each state (consent, documentation, supervision for CFY-SLPs) still apply.