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How to Find a Virtual Clinical Supervisor for LMHP Licensure in Nebraska

Shannon Heers 4 May, 2026
A therapist in Nebraska looking for LMHP supervision with a virtual clinical supervisor

How to Find a Virtual Clinical Supervisor for LMHP Licensure in Nebraska

By Shannon Heers

Becoming a Licensed Mental Health Practitioner (LMHP) in Nebraska is a meaningful and sometimes challenging journey. If you’re working in a private practice, agency, or hospital and you don’t have on-site supervision, securing the right virtual clinical supervisor is one of the most important steps you’ll take.

In this post, I’ll walk you through how to find a quality virtual supervisor, what to look for (especially in a Nebraska context), and practical tips for building a successful supervisory relationship. My hope is to offer clarity, encouragement, and concrete steps you can take today.

A therapist looking for LMHP licensure supervision with a virtual clinical supervisor licensed in Nebraska

Why Virtual Supervision Makes Sense (Especially When You Lack On-Site Support)

If your workplace doesn’t provide supervision, virtual supervision offers several advantages:

  • Access and flexibility: You can connect with a supervisor regardless of geographic distance (important in rural areas).
  • Wider supervisor pool: You can choose supervisors who specialize in your modalities or populations, not just those local to you.
  • Consistency and continuity: Even if you change jobs or move across Nebraska, you can maintain your supervisory relationship.
  • Cost and scheduling efficiency: Virtual sessions often reduce travel time and allow flexible scheduling outside of your workplace hours.

That said, an online format has to be done well, with professionalism, structure, and clarity. Let’s look at how you find the right supervisor.

Understand Nebraska’s LMHP Supervision Requirements First

Before you begin your search, you need to know what Nebraska requires, so you can vet supervisor candidates carefully.

  • To obtain LMHP licensure, you must accrue 3,000 hours of supervised mental health practice experience in Nebraska.
  • Of those hours, 1,500 must be in direct client contact (face-to-face or equivalent). 
  • You must meet with your supervisor at least 1 hour per week face-to-face (or via secure interactive visual imaging).
  • The supervisor must be “qualified” under Nebraska rules; for LMHP supervision, acceptable supervisors include LMHPs themselves (if they hold a valid license), LIMHPs, psychologists, or physicians.
  • It’s wise (though not always required) to develop a written supervision agreement that outlines responsibilities, expectations, modality, scheduling, confidentiality, etc.

When you speak with prospective supervisors, you can explicitly confirm they meet Nebraska’s criteria.

Clarify Your Needs and Preferences

Before you start reaching out and finding the right clinical supervisor, check in with yourself so you have a clear understanding of what you are looking for:

  • Do you want weekly, biweekly, or possibly more frequent check-ins?
  • Do you prefer one-on-one, group supervision, or a mix?
  • If you do trauma work, couples therapy, children, etc., you’ll want a supervisor who has expertise in those areas.
  • Do you want more directive feedback, reflective supervision, or a collaborative model?
  • What days/times work best for you? Evenings? Mornings?
  • Understand what you can afford (hourly rates, sliding scale, packages).

Having clarity in these areas will help you evaluate candidates more efficiently, because you’ll know what “ the right fit” means for you.

Create a List of Potential Clinical Supervisors Licensed in Nebraska

Here are places to look for virtual clinical supervisors in Nebraska or who have the ability to supervise in Nebraska:

  • State directory and licensure board: The Nebraska DHHS site provides information about mental health practitioner licensing and qualified supervisor rules.
  • Professional associations (e.g., Nebraska Counseling Association, Nebraska Mental Health Counseling associations)
  • Referrals from colleagues and peers (ask local therapists, former classmates, or professional groups)
  • Platforms or networks for supervision (some supervisory networks list supervisors by state)
  • Consider if your training faculty, internship supervisors, or former supervisors might be willing to supervise virtually across distance
  • Firelight Supervision offers virtual clinical supervision to LMHP candidates in Nebraska

Once you have a list of potential supervisors, move on to outreach.

Prepare Outreach Questions & Vet Carefully

When you contact a prospective supervisor via email, form, or phone, consider asking these questions:

Licensure and supervisory qualification

  • What credential do you hold now? (LMHP, LIMHP, psychologist, etc.)
  • How many years have you been providing supervision?
  • Do you comply with Nebraska’s supervision requirements (1 hour/week, etc.)?

Experience & specialty areas

  • What populations or modalities do you primarily supervise (trauma, couples, children, etc.)?
  • How many supervisees do you see at once?
  • Do you have experience supervising virtual clients?

Logistics

  • How often do you meet and for how long?
  • What platform(s) do you use (e.g., Zoom, Doxy, HIPAA-safe tool)?
  • How is scheduling handled: do you offer evening or flexible slots?
  • What is your cancellation/no-show policy?

Supervision process and expectations

  • Do you use a supervision agreement or contract?
  • What will be part of supervision? (Case review, live observation, video review, ethical discussion, clinical development)
  • What is your feedback style?
  • How will you document supervision hours and sign affidavits or reports?

Cost and payment

  • What is your hourly rate or package cost?
  • How is payment handled (monthly, in advance)?
  • Do you offer sliding scale or packages?

Based on how they respond will help you narrow your list to those who align best with your needs.

Develop a Written Supervision Agreement

Once you choose a supervisor, create a formal agreement (sometimes called a supervision contract). Some key components can include:

  • Meeting schedule, format (virtual, individual/group)
  • Roles and responsibilities (supervisor and supervisee)
  • Safeguards (confidentiality, data protection, emergency protocols)
  • Case review methods (audio/video, live observation, chart review)
  • Cancellation and rescheduling policies
  • Evaluation feedback plan and goals
  • Procedures for termination of supervision

Having a clear agreement helps prevent misunderstandings and fosters trust between both parties.

Manage Your Supervision Relationship Proactively

To make the most of supervision:

  • Come prepared! Bring your case notes, questions, goals, and reflections.
  • Be honest about what you need (feedback, challenges, ethical uncertainties).
  • Invite feedback regularly and ask for strengths + growth areas.
  • Track your hours diligently (both direct and indirect).
  • Use multiple modalities (case discussion, audio/video review, reading, role-play).
  • Reflect on your progress and adjust supervision needs over time.
  • Communicate openly about scheduling or conflicts.

As you move toward LMHP licensure, having a dependable supervision relationship is not just a requirement, it’s a professional support system.

Common Pitfalls & How to Avoid Them

Pitfall

How to Avoid

Supervisor doesn’t meet Nebraska’s requirements Ask upfront and verify their licensure status, ask for license number
Poor communication or mismatch in style Use a trial/discovery session first to sense the fit
No written agreement leading to confusion Always draft a supervision contract early
Letting hours slip or not tracking properly Use a log or spreadsheet; commit to consistency
Passive supervision (no feedback) Ask for specific feedback, request case critiques, and negotiate a more active process

Finding the right virtual clinical supervisor can feel overwhelming, especially when supervision isn’t provided by your employer or if you’re in solo private practice. But you do not need to settle. With clarity about Nebraska rules, intentional vetting, trial conversations, and a proactive attitude, you can build a supervision relationship that guides you safely, supports your growth, and helps you cross the licensure finish line with confidence.

You are not alone in this process. Many therapists have walked this path before you. Take it step by step, with care for your well-being, for your clients, and for your professional integrity.

How We Can Help

If you’re ready to take the next step, Firelight Supervision would love to support you. We offer free 20-minute phone consultations to help you find a supervisor fit that aligns with your goals, modalities, schedule, and licensure path. Schedule your free consultation today and let’s start building your supervision foundation!

Author Bio

Owner of Firelight SupervisionShannon Heers is a psychotherapist, approved clinical supervisor, guest blogger, and the owner of a group psychotherapy practice in the Denver area. Shannon helps adults in professional careers manage anxiety, depression, work-life balance, and grief and loss. Follow Firelight Supervision on Instagram and Facebook.

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Shannon Heers

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