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How to become a licensed court reporter in Nevada. Speed test: 200-225 wpm four-voice Q&A video, 10 minutes, at 97.5% accuracy; 3 hours to transcribe. Total initial fees: $350. Verified 2026-03-21. Data verified 2026-03-21. Source: LicenseMap (getlicensemap.com).
Court Reporter — CVR/RPR/RMR
Most information on this page has been verified.
86% of data points are verified against official sources. 5 fields based on preliminary research. We recommend confirming details with your state's licensing authority. See sources below · Report incorrect data
Yes
License Required
No
NCRA Required
Required
Speed Test
Required
State Exam
15 hrs
CE Hours
$350
Total Initial Fees
Stenography Program & Accreditation
VerifiedStenography Program
Program Required
Minimum Speed
200-225 wpm four-voice Q&A at 97.5% accuracy (10 minutes)
Program Type
Associate degree or certificate in court reporting from community college or vocational school
Accreditation
Community college or vocational school court reporting program
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.
Certification Requirements
VerifiedNCRA Certification Not Required
National Court Reporters Association
NCRA Certifications
RPR accepted; state also requires Nevada written test
State Certification
Nevada CCR — issued by the Certified Court Reporters Board; requires RPR plus Nevada written test
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
200-225 wpm four-voice Q&A video, 10 minutes, at 97.5% accuracy; 3 hours to transcribe
Written Exam
Written Knowledge Exam Required
State Exam Required
State-Specific Exam
Nevada written test administered quarterly (January, April, July, October); $150 testing fee; RPR skills accepted
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.
State Licensing Requirements
VerifiedState License Required
State License Title
Certified Court Reporter
Additional Notes
Nevada uses a distinctive exam format: 10-minute four-voice video Q&A at 200-225 wpm with 97.5% accuracy.
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
Not specifically regulated by state certification
CART Services
CART services may be provided by CCR holders
Realtime Reporting
Realtime reporting available
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 | $150 |
License Fee | $200 |
Renewal Fee | $200 (annual); $100 late fee if paid May 16-June 30; $125 reinstatement fee if suspended |
Total Initial Fees $150 testing fee plus $200 original certificate issuance fee | $350 |
Renewal & CE Requirements
VerifiedAnnual (expires June 30; due May 15)
Renewal Period
15 hrs
CE Hours Required
$200 (annual); $100 late fee if paid May 16-June 30; $125 reinstatement fee if suspended
Renewal Fee
CE Details
15 hours of continuing education every two years; must include at least 2 hours reviewing Nevada statutes, regulations, and rules
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
No
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.
Nevada's skills exam uses a 10-minute four-voice video format with 3 hours to transcribe, at a 97.5% accuracy threshold. The state requires 2 of the 15 CE hours to specifically cover Nevada statutes and regulations.
Nevada uses a distinctive exam format: 10-minute four-voice video Q&A at 200-225 wpm with 97.5% accuracy.
3 hours allowed to transcribe the skills test.
Written test offered quarterly.
15 CE hours every two years with at least 2 hours on Nevada law.
Annual renewal fee of $200 due May 15; $100 late fee applies.
Certificate expires June 30; failure to pay by June 30 results in suspension.
Explore requirements for other professional licenses in Nevada.
How this state compares to 50 others for this profession
Timeline
#1 of 51
Salary
#31 of 51
Cost
#22 of 51
Processing
#1 of 51
Based on May 2024 Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS data for Court Reporters and Simultaneous Captioners (SOC 27-3092)
Entry Level
$49,460
25th percentile
Median
$57,720
-14% vs. national avg ($67,310)Experienced
$74,570
75th percentile
Wage Distribution (Annual)
Source: BLS OEWS – Court Reporters and Simultaneous Captioners (May 2024)
National employment projections for 2024-2034
Projected Growth
+4.9%
Average GrowthNew Jobs
+1,000
over 10 years
Annual Openings
2,200
per year (avg.)
20,300 currently employed nationwide (2024)
Source: BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034 (September 2025)
Government fees and exam costs to obtain your initial license
Note: These are government licensing fees only. Education/training program costs (tuition, books, etc.) are not included as they vary widely by institution.
Estimated total: 108–226 weeks
Timeline estimated from licensing requirements on this page.
Source: Nevada Certified Court Reporters Board — Licensing Requirements
Written tests offered quarterly: January, April, July, October
Estimated processing time
Source: Nevada Certified Court Reporters Board — Licensing Requirements
Study materials for the RPR certification exam.
Browse Study Guides on Amazon →As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
Nevada requires certification for court reporters. Speed test: 200-225 wpm four-voice Q&A video, 10 minutes, at 97.5% accuracy; 3 hours to transcribe. All licensing is managed through the Nevada Certified Court Reporters Board.
Requirements vary by state. Always verify current requirements with your state licensing authority.