Yes — CLE and MCLE generally refer to the same concept, but MCLE specifically emphasizes that continuing legal education is mandatory (required) in a given jurisdiction. In other words, CLE is the general term for continuing legal education, and MCLE is CLE that is mandated by law or court rule in a jurisdiction.
Here is more detail:
| Term | Meaning / Scope | Key Distinction |
|---|---|---|
| CLE | Continuing Legal Education — any professional education for lawyers after admission | Broad, generic term; may be voluntary or required |
| MCLE | Mandatory (or Minimum) Continuing Legal Education — CLE that a jurisdiction requires | Involves compulsory credit, reporting, regulation, compliance |
Details & Examples
- Many state bar or supreme court rules require attorneys to complete a set number of CLE hours per period (e.g. per year or per multi-year cycle). That mandatory requirement is called “MCLE” in those jurisdictions.
- For example, in California, active State Bar licensees must complete 25 hours of “MCLE” every three years.
- In Texas, “MCLE” is defined as required continuing education under the State Bar rules; attorneys must complete 15 hours of accredited CLE per compliance year.
- Some CLE events (seminars, webinars, workshops) are accredited for MCLE credit, meaning they satisfy the mandatory requirement; other CLE-type activities not approved in that jurisdiction may not count toward MCLE.
- In jurisdictions without a mandatory requirement (if any), “CLE” might remain voluntary or optional for attorneys.
Key Takeaway
CLE is the general term for ongoing legal education for lawyers; MCLE is CLE that is legally required in a jurisdiction, with rules, credit, and compliance mechanisms attached.