North Dakota Occupational Licensing
Licenses
65
of 102 lower-income occupations
Burden Rank
48th
for average burdens 1st is worst
Combined Rank
22nd
for number of licenses x average burdens 1st is worst
How North Dakota Compares in 2022
Percent Licensed of 102 Occupations
MIN
25%MAX
75%Average Days Lost to education and experience
Average Fees
Changes Since 2017
- No licenses created or removed
- Fees changed most often and usually decreased; days lost to education and experience decreased for barber, cosmetologist and shampooer but rose for head coach for high school sports and pharmacy technician
- Burden rank worsened 1 spot and combined rank worsened 2 spots despite reductions in days lost to education and experience because other states made bigger improvements
2022 Licensing Burdens in Detail
Note: Direct entry midwives are not permitted to practice without a higher-level license.
Data Notes: 2022 data collected between February 3, 2020, and March 18, 2022. Fees include charges for application review and license issuance; exams; background checks, credit reports and fingerprinting; recovery fund contributions; third-party certification; and certain fees for training courses. Calendar days lost were estimated based on required education and experience; except for amounts smaller than one day, days lost are rounded to whole days and thus may not reflect very small changes between 2017 and 2022. Appendix A details methods for estimating days lost and calculating burden ranks. Complete data, including revised 2017 data, are available at https://ij.org/report/license-to-work-3/ltw3-data/.