1 hour ago, snickerd3 said: from IDPR website
Question: I am licensed as a Professional Engineer in another US jurisdiction and want to be licensed in Illinois. Answer: Illinois does not offer Comity or Reciprocity licensure. You must meet Illinois requirements for licensure at the time you were originally licensed. Submit the current application for licensure as a Professional Engineer by Endorsement (available on the Department’s website), the fee of $100 payable to IDFPR, and request your NCEES Record to be transmitted to the Illinois jurisdiction. See experience and foreign applicant requirements on page 1. If you do not submit an NCEES Record, you must submit the following: Official transcript(s) showing the conferral date to the Department The required years of acceptable professional engineering experience, properly completed on the Department VE-PNG form. Certification from the US jurisdiction where you passed the FE and PE exams as well as your original jurisdiction of licensure and the current jurisdiction of licensure. The certification(s) must be completed on the Department CT-ENG form or submitted electronically through the NCEES Verification process and must originate from the licensing jurisdiction(s). The certification(s) must contain the exam score information and the exam date. The Department does not accept NCEES score reports as meeting the requirements for certification.
The application has similar wording, but on the application itself they have three licesnure methods, "Examination," "Acceptance of Examination," and "Endorsement of License." I was leaning towards Endorsement of License, but they talk about accepting test verification from other states, so I wasn't sure. I guess "Acceptance of Examination" is if you took it early in another state and don't have the license yet you could have your scores sent there?