Yes — in California you can report CLE late, but you must pay a late compliance penalty and submit proof of compliance within a prescribed cure period after receiving a noncompliance notice. Failure to comply may lead to ineligibility to practice until reinstated.
Details:
- If you miss the MCLE reporting deadline, you will receive a Non-Compliance Notice giving you 60 days to comply.
- The late compliance penalty is $103 as of January 1, 2025.
- If you fail to comply within the 60-day cure period (i.e. submit proof and pay the penalty), you will be placed Not Eligible to Practice until you complete compliance, pay the $103 noncompliance fee, and pay a $308 reinstatement fee.
- The Bar audits attorneys’ MCLE compliance randomly. If selected, you must maintain certificates or other documentation of the CLE credits you reported.
- Note: The State Bar no longer tracks CLE hours; attorneys self-report via an online system, but must retain evidence.
Key Takeaway
Yes — California allows late CLE reporting under MCLE, but it triggers a penalty and requires curing noncompliance within the specified 60-day period; failure may result in suspension of your eligibility to practice until reinstatement conditions are met.