What are the requirements to apply for the QME test?

What Are the Requirements to Apply for the California QME Examination? Before you can sit for the Qualified Medical Evaluator (QME) Competency Examination, the Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) requires…

What Are the Requirements to Apply for the California QME Examination?

Before you can sit for the Qualified Medical Evaluator (QME) Competency Examination, the Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) requires that you meet five baseline criteria. These prerequisites ensure that only active, competent clinicians enter the state’s medical-legal system.

1. Hold an Active, Unrestricted California License

You must possess a current California license in one of the recognized professions: MD, DO, DC, DDS/DMD, DPM, PhD/PsyD, LAc, or OD. The Medical Board (or corresponding board) must not have you on probation, suspension, or any form of practice restriction.

2. Spend At Least One-Third of Your Time in Direct Patient Care

The DWC wants practicing clinicians, not purely forensic file reviewers. When you file your application, you attest that at least 33⅓ percent of your professional hours involve direct patient interaction, not counting on-call time.

3. Complete a 12-Hour DWC-Approved Medical-Legal Course

This coursework covers workers’-comp statutes, the AMA Guides (5th ed.), apportionment rules, report formatting, and ethics. Completion certificates—dated within the past 24 months—must accompany your application.

4. Submit QME Application (Form 102) and Fees on Time

  • Application fee: $250 (non-refundable)
  • Examination fee: $125 per sitting

Your packet must arrive by the application deadline, usually about six weeks before the exam date. Late or incomplete submissions are rejected.

5. Disclose Conflicts and Felony Convictions

You must answer background-history questions regarding felony convictions, license discipline, and financial relationships with workers’-comp insurers or law firms. A “yes” answer does not automatically disqualify you, but failing to disclose will.

Optional but Advantageous: Specialty Codes and Office Locations

On Form 102 you may request multiple specialty codes (e.g., Orthopedic Surgery and Hand Surgery) and list up to 10 examination offices. Accurate specialty and geographic data increase your chance of panel selection once certified.

Quick Checklist

  • Active CA license in good standing
  • ≥ 1/3 time in clinical care
  • 12-hour medical-legal course certificate
  • Completed Form 102 + $375 in fees
  • Truthful conflict-of-interest disclosure

Meeting these requirements lets you sit for the twice-yearly QME Competency Exam and, upon passing, join the state’s panel system. For the official application packet and current filing deadlines, visit the DWC’s “How to Become a QME” page.