Yes — New Jersey’s CLE regime allows a few defined exemptions, such as for attorneys with 50+ years of licensure, those aged 75+, active military, VISTA/Peace Corps, and attorneys fully retired from practice.
Under the Supreme Court’s CLE rule (Rule 1:42 / BCLE Reg. 202:1), those categories are carved out from the 24-credit biennial requirement.
Details / Exceptions
- 50 years of practice: Attorneys admitted to practice law for 50 years or more in any jurisdiction are exempt from New Jersey’s CLE requirement.
- Age 75+: Attorneys who have reached age 75 are exempt, regardless of tenure.
- Active Duty Military / VISTA / Peace Corps: Attorneys serving full-time in the U.S. Armed Forces, VISTA, or Peace Corps may claim exemption.
- Fully retired attorneys: Those who are completely retired from the practice of law for the entire compliance period are exempt.
- Waivers / hardship: Even if none of the above apply, an attorney may petition for a waiver (full or partial) due to undue hardship or circumstances beyond control.
- No exemption for non-residency alone: Simply being located or practicing out of state does not automatically exempt one from NJ CLE.
Key Takeaway
New Jersey imposes mandatory CLE for most active attorneys, but it provides specific carve-outs for very senior attorneys, those 75 or over, active military service, full retirement, and hardship — these exemptions must be claimed under the Board’s rules.