Yes — New Mexico allows certain exemptions and waivers from CLE or credit requirements under specific conditions (e.g. military service), but it does not broadly exempt categories like age or public office.
Details / Exceptions
- Fee or credit exemptions or waivers must comply with Rule 18-202 NMRA, and properly documented U.S. military active duty is a recognized exemption.
- New attorneys are not required to fulfill CLE in their admission year; their CLE obligations begin in their first full year.
- Inactive attorneys (those not practicing) may not be subject to full CLE credit obligations when reactivating under defined terms.
- Reactivating attorneys must satisfy CLE credit obligations for the year of inactivity and the active year, subject to Rule 24-102(D).
- All requests for exemptions or waivers beyond military duty must be processed under the formal rule procedures (Rule 18-202).
Key Takeaway
New Mexico does not grant sweeping exemptions; it offers narrowly defined waivers (especially for military service), and tailors obligations for new admittees and reactivating attorneys under strict rule provisions.