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Court Reporter — CVR/RPR/RMR
Total cost: $265
Some details on this page are not yet confirmed against an official source. See sources below or contact the licensing board to verify.
Yes
License Required
No
NCRA Required
Required
Speed Test
Required
State Exam
0 hrs
CE Hours
$265
Total Initial Fees
Stenography Program & Accreditation
VerifiedStenography Program
Not Required
Minimum Speed
200 wpm four-voice dictation at 97.5% accuracy (10 minutes); effective January 1, 2025, accuracy lowered to 95%
Program Type
Multiple pathways: recognized California court reporting school certificate, one year experience in verbatim judicial records, NCRA certificate, California hearing reporter exam, or valid CSR from another state
Accreditation
Recognized California court reporting school or equivalent pathway
Court reporters must complete a court reporting or stenography program from an NCRA-approved or regionally accredited institution. Programs typically require 2-4 years and include intensive stenographic machine shorthand training, legal terminology, medical terminology, and transcript production. Graduates must demonstrate minimum speed proficiency, typically 225 wpm for literary material.
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Certification Requirements
VerifiedNCRA Certification Not Required
National Court Reporters Association
NCRA Certifications
NCRA Certificate of Proficiency or Certificate of Merit accepted as one eligibility pathway for examination
State Certification
California CSR — issued by the Court Reporters Board of California under the Department of Consumer Affairs
Realtime Certification N/A
Realtime Reporting
The NCRA (National Court Reporters Association) offers three levels of certification: RPR (Registered Professional Reporter) as the baseline, RMR (Registered Merit Reporter) for advanced proficiency at 260 wpm, and RDR (Registered Diplomate Reporter) as the highest distinction at 280 wpm. Many states require or accept NCRA RPR certification as the qualifying credential for state licensure.
Examination Requirements
VerifiedSkills Test Required
Stenographic Speed Test
Speed Requirements
200 wpm four-voice dictation, 10 minutes, at 95% accuracy (changed from 97.5% effective January 1, 2025)
Written Exam
No Written Exam
State Exam Required
State-Specific Exam
California administers its own three-part licensing exam; RPR or NVRA exam may substitute; exams offered three times yearly
Additional Requirements
Court reporter examinations typically include a stenographic skills test at 225 wpm for literary dictation, 200 wpm for jury charge, and 180 wpm for two-voice testimony. A written knowledge exam covers legal terminology, court procedures, transcript production standards, and professional ethics. Some states administer their own exams while others accept the NCRA RPR examination.
Overall licensing difficulty: 8/100
Study recommendation: 1–2 weeks of focused review is usually sufficient
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Court Reporter Exam Prep
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Difficulty rating based on education, exam, and experience requirements. Individual experience may vary.
Study Materials & Exam Prep — RPR Exam
Prepare for your RPR Exam with Mometrix study guides, flashcards, and practice tests.
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Study materials for the RPR certification exam.
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State Licensing Requirements
VerifiedState License Required
State License Title
Certified Shorthand Reporter
Additional Notes
California has its own unique exam: 200 wpm four-voice dictation for 10 minutes.
Approximately 30 states require licensure or certification for court reporters. States that do not require licensure include Alaska, Arkansas, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Even in non-licensing states, NCRA certification may be required by courts or employers.
Practice Scope & Services
VerifiedOfficial Proceedings
Authorized
Depositions
Authorized
Captioning
Broadcast captioning not specifically regulated under CSR license
CART Services
CART services may be provided by CSR holders
Realtime Reporting
Realtime reporting available for court proceedings and depositions
Court reporters provide verbatim transcription services in official court proceedings, depositions, arbitrations, and hearings. Additional services include CART (Communication Access Realtime Translation) for deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals, realtime reporting with instant text display, and broadcast captioning for television and live events. Freelance reporters also provide deposition services for law firms.
| Fee | Amount |
|---|---|
Application Fee | $40 |
License Fee | $225 |
Renewal Fee | $225 |
Total Initial Fees Includes $40 application fee plus $25 per exam section, plus $225 initial license fee; fingerprinting fee additional | $265 |
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Renewal & CE Requirements
VerifiedAnnual
Renewal Period
0 hrs
CE Hours Required
$225
Renewal Fee
CE Details
No state-mandated continuing education hours for CSR renewal; renewal requires conviction certification form and fee
Regulatory Board
Court reporter licenses must be renewed on schedule with the state licensing authority. Most states require continuing education hours in court reporting technology, stenographic skills, legal procedures, transcript production, and professional ethics. Requirements typically range from 10-30 hours per renewal cycle.
Out-of-State Reciprocity
VerifiedEndorsement Available
Yes
Comity Available
Yes
Reciprocity Requirements
Most states that license court reporters offer reciprocity or endorsement for certified reporters from other states. Requirements typically include verification of current certification, passage of the NCRA RPR exam or equivalent skills test, meeting education requirements, and completing a background check. Some states may require a state-specific jurisprudence exam.
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California's exam is distinctive: it uses a four-voice format at 200 wpm for 10 minutes, rather than the three-leg RPR format. The accuracy threshold was recently reduced from 97.5% to 95% effective January 1, 2025.
California has its own unique exam: 200 wpm four-voice dictation for 10 minutes.
Effective January 1, 2025, accuracy requirement lowered from 97.5% to 95%.
Five eligibility pathways exist including experience, school completion, NCRA certification, or out-of-state license.
Annual license renewal fee of $225.
Contraction errors are not penalized on the California exam.
Court reporting firms must also register with the Board effective 2023.
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Court Reporter Schools in California
Compare approved training programs, costs, and requirements.
Moving to California? Use our free Transfer Tool to see what you need →
Already licensed elsewhere? See how to transfer your Court Reporter license to California →
California requires certification for court reporters. Speed test: 200 wpm four-voice dictation, 10 minutes, at 95% accuracy (changed from 97.5% effective January 1, 2025). All licensing is managed through the Court Reporters Board of California.
Requirements vary by state. Always verify current requirements with your state licensing authority.