Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology Interstate Compact (ASLP-IC)

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.

Who can apply

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.

Member states

The ASLP-IC currently has 35+ member jurisdictions.

Members: Alaska, Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Maine, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, North Carolina, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, West Virginia, Wyoming.

last_verified: 2026-05 · sourced from data/compacts.json

How to apply

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.

Apply via ASLP-IC →

Fees and processing time

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.

How TeleVerify uses the ASLP-IC

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.

Frequently asked questions

Are audiology and SLP combined under one compact?
Yes — the ASLP-IC is the single compact covering both professions. A licensee in one or both credentials applies through the same Commission, though privileges and fees are tracked per credential.
Can a CF-SLP (Clinical Fellow) hold a compact privilege?
This varies by state. Many member states require full licensure (not provisional CFY) before issuing a privilege; some allow privileges with state-specific CFY supervision requirements. Check ASLP-IC member-state rules.
How is the ASLP-IC different from PSYPACT?
They cover entirely different professions. PSYPACT covers doctoral-level psychologists; ASLP-IC covers audiologists and SLPs. A practitioner with dual credentials would enroll separately in each.
Does the ASLP-IC apply to school-based SLPs?
Yes — the compact privilege grants practice rights in the privileged state regardless of setting. However, school-based credentials issued by state education departments are separate from licensure-board credentials; the compact only covers licensure-board credentials.
How does TeleVerify know I have a privilege?
You confirm in your provider profile which member states you've activated privileges in. We attest the list at signup and on every profile update.
Is California an ASLP-IC member?
No. California, Massachusetts, New York, and several other states are not currently ASLP-IC members. Check aslpcompact.com for the latest map.
What's the difference between the AuD privilege and the SLP privilege?
They are tracked separately under the same compact. An audiologist holds an audiology privilege; an SLP holds an SLP privilege. Each privilege is granted by, and verifiable through, the member-state board for that credential.
⚖️ Reference information — not legal advice. Always confirm current requirements with your compliance officer, state licensing board, or a telehealth attorney before relying on this for clinical or business decisions.

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