Bartender License — What You Need in Every State
Most states don’t issue a traditional “bartender license.” What they do require — in many cases by law — is an alcohol server certification or responsible beverage service permit. Here’s what bartending requires in every state.
Do You Need a Bartender License?
The term “bartender license” is widely used but rarely the accurate legal term. In practice, what most states require for bartending is one of these three things:
- An alcohol server certification or responsible beverage service permit — a state-issued credential proving you’ve completed approved training (Louisiana, California, Washington, Wisconsin, Arizona, Oregon, and others require this by law)
- A voluntary server training certificate — not legally required but industry-standard and provides liability protection (Texas, Pennsylvania, and most other states)
- Nothing beyond the minimum age — a small number of states have no training requirement and no minimum certification, though employers often impose their own
In no U.S. state is there a “bartender license” that functions like a professional license (the way a medical license or contractor’s license works). Bartending is not a licensed profession in the traditional sense. What exists is server certification — training that may be required by law or employer policy.
Bartender License Requirements by State
| State | Certification / Permit | Mandatory? | Min. Age |
|---|---|---|---|
| Louisiana | ATC Responsible Vendor Permit (bar card) | Yes | 18 |
| California | ABC RBS Certification | Yes (21 to bartend) | 21 |
| Texas | TABC Certification | Voluntary | 18 |
| Florida | DBPR License (on-premises only) | No | 18 |
| New York | None required by state | No | 18 |
| Illinois | Varies by municipality | Varies | 21 (most cities) |
| Washington | MAST Permit | Yes | 18 |
| Arizona | Title 4 Certification | Yes | 19 |
| Pennsylvania | RAMP Server Training | Voluntary | 18 |
| Wisconsin | Responsible Beverage Server Training | Yes | 18 |
| Nevada | None required by state | No | 21 |
| All others | TIPS, ServSafe Alcohol, or employer-required | Varies | 18–21 |
How to Get a Bartender License (by State Type)
States with mandatory certification (Louisiana, California, Wisconsin, Arizona, Washington)
In mandatory states, the process is: find an approved provider, complete the course online or in person, pass the exam, and receive your certification. You cannot legally start work in an alcohol-serving role without it. Louisiana requires completion before the first shift. California requires it within 60 days of hire.
States with voluntary certification (Texas, Pennsylvania, most others)
Complete a course from an accredited provider (TABC in Texas, RAMP in Pennsylvania, TIPS or ServSafe in most other states). It’s not legally required but most employers will ask for it, and it provides significant protection if you ever face a dram shop claim.
States with no state certification program
Check with your employer. Many bars and restaurants in New York, Florida, and other no-mandate states require their own internal training or ask for a recognized voluntary certification like ServSafe Alcohol or TIPS before you start.
How to Get a Bartender License Online
For states with approved online training programs, the process takes a single session. Enroll with an approved provider (in Louisiana, that’s ABSEC), complete the coursework at your own pace — usually 2–4 hours — pass the final exam, and download your certificate immediately. No scheduling, no classroom, no commute.
Most states with mandatory programs maintain a list of approved online providers on their state alcohol control board’s website. Louisiana’s ATC maintains its approved vendor list at atc.louisiana.gov.
Bartender License Cost
Costs vary by state and provider. Common price ranges: Louisiana ATC Responsible Vendor course (ABSEC): $20; California RBS certification: $20–$35; Texas TABC: $20–$40; Washington MAST: $15–$30; Arizona Title 4: $20–$50. Online courses are typically cheaper than in-person classroom options.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a national bartender license?
Can I get a bartender license online?
How long does it take to get a bartender license?
Does a bartender license transfer between states?
Do I need a bartender license to work private events?
Working in Louisiana?
Louisiana requires a Responsible Vendor permit before you can legally bartend. ABSEC is ATC-approved. Complete the course online in about 2 hours — your bar card is ready the moment you pass.