Male hands holding stylus pen writing on tablet on desk
advocacy issues

Occupational Therapy Licensure Compact

The Occupational Therapy Licensure Compact (OT compact) is a joint initiative of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) and the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT®). The OT compact is an interstate professional licensing compact for occupational therapy which will address licensure portability. This is a multi-year initiative which requires legislation to be passed in each state where the OT compact will apply.

Woman sitting at table with coffee shaking hands with man using laptop

Why the OT Licensure Compact matters

An interstate licensing compact would:

  • Allow licensed occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants to practice across state lines (e.g., telehealth) via a "compact privilege" which is equivalent to a license
  • Improve consumer access to occupational therapy
  • Enhance mobility of occupational therapy practitioners (e.g., spouses of relocating military families, staff of travel therapy companies)
  • Improve continuity of care
  • Address competition issues raised by the Federal Trade Commission and others
  • Preserve and strengthen the state licensure system
  • Enhance the exchange of licensure, investigatory, and disciplinary information between member states.

An interstate licensing compact would not change state occupational therapy practice acts or the scope of practice.

The Compact will take effect once enacted by ten states. The OT Compact Commission will then convene to establish rules and implement the data system in order to begin issuing compact privileges to practice occupational therapy.

For more information