Yes — under South Carolina’s CLE rules, certain attorneys are exempt from the 14-hour requirement, subject to conditions and certification.
The exemptions are spelled out in SCACR Rule 408 and CLE Commission Regulations.
Details / Exceptions
- Certified specialists who meet the CLE requirements for their specialty are exempt — although they must still include ethics and substance abuse credits.
- Attorneys at least 60 years old with 30 or more years of admission may apply for exemption from the CLE requirement.
- Inactive members, retired members, and military members are exempt from the standard CLE requirement.
- Judicial members subject to their own judicial CLE rules are exempt from the standard CLE requirements.
- Federal judges and federal administrative law judges are exempt.
- Newly admitted attorneys are exempt during the reporting year of admission (but must still satisfy an “Essentials” course unless otherwise exempt).
- The CLE Commission may waive or modify requirements in extraordinary hardship or extenuating circumstances.
Key Takeaway
South Carolina provides a range of targeted exemptions (senior lawyers, retired/inactive, specialists, judiciary, military, new admits) — but those exemptions must be claimed via formal application or certification under Rule 408.