It depends — some jurisdictions require CLE credits specifically in substance abuse or mental health topics, while others do not mandate them. Whether a substance abuse CLE credit is required is determined by your state’s CLE / MCLE rules.
Details:
- California: Attorneys must complete MCLE credits on “competence,” and one component of that is “prevention and detection” of substance use or mental or physical issues.
- Ohio: Its rules require a minimum number of “professional conduct” credits, which may include instruction on alcoholism, substance abuse, or mental health.
- South Carolina: Once every two reporting years, attorneys must complete one hour devoted exclusively to substance abuse, mental health, or stress management topics.
- Nevada: CLE regulations require at least one credit in substance abuse, addictive disorders, or mental health in each reporting period.
- Model Rule / ABA: The ABA’s Model Rule encourages jurisdictions to require at least one credit every three years in “mental health and substance use disorders.”
- In jurisdictions without such a mandate, substance abuse courses may count under ethics, professionalism, or general CLE — but they are not strictly required.
Key Takeaway
Some jurisdictions require substance abuse CLE credits as part of mandated topic requirements, but it is not universally required across all states; you must consult your state’s CLE or MCLE rules.