No — Florida does not provide for open-ended late CLE reporting; if you fail to timely certify, you are considered a delinquent member and may be prohibited from practicing until reinstated. The Florida Bar’s CLE rules treat noncompliance as a disciplinary matter, not a simple late reporting exception.
Details:
- Under Rule 6-10 of the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar, failure to fulfill the CLE requirement within your compliance period renders you a delinquent member.
- A delinquent attorney must apply for reinstatement and show good cause for their delinquency.
- Attorneys delinquent for fewer than five years are eligible for reinstatement, but must submit a petition and pay a reinstatement fee (currently $150) along with demonstrating compliance with CLE.
- Reporting credits online in Florida is required via the Bar’s member portal, but that presumes you are not delinquent.
Key Takeaway
Florida does not permit simple late reporting of CLE beyond your compliance period — noncompliance leads to delinquency status, and you must petition for reinstatement and show cause to regain eligibility to practice.