Yes — you can report CLE late in Delaware, because the CLE rules allow “curing” noncompliance by completing missing credits, submitting proof, and paying delinquency fees by specified deadlines. The rules impose graduated fees and possible administrative suspension if you miss those cure dates.
Details from Delaware’s official CLE rules (current and under amendment):
- Attorneys must complete required CLE credits by December 31 of their compliance year.
- The Commission sends a Notice of Noncompliance around January 15 to attorneys who did not comply on time.
- To cure noncompliance, an attorney must complete the missing credits, submit proof to the Commission, and pay a $150 delinquency fee by March 1 following the compliance year.
- If noncompliance is not cured by March 1, additional delinquency fees apply, and failure to cure by April 15 results in administrative suspension.
- Under new rules effective November 1, 2024, make-up plans are no longer allowed, and the enforcement structure is tightened — attorneys still face administrative suspension if noncompliance is not cured by April 15.
Key Takeaway
Yes — Delaware permits late CLE reporting via a cure process (completing missed credits, paying fees, submitting proof) with deadlines and escalating penalties; missing those cure deadlines may lead to administrative suspension under the rules.