Yes — Illinois allows late reporting of CLE (MCLE) under a structured grace period and extension process, subject to prescribed late fees. The delay does not excuse compliance obligations, but the grace provisions are baked into Illinois’s MCLE rules.
Details — Illinois MCLE Late Reporting Rules:
- Under Rule 796, if a transcript does not reflect compliance by June 30, an attorney who neither requested a grace period extension nor reported an out-of-state exemption by July 31 is automatically granted a 61-day grace period extension beyond the reporting deadline, with a mandatory $250 late fee.
- During the grace period, the attorney has until October 31 to earn and report the required credits, and until November 30 to confirm the transcript and pay the late fee.
- Failure to report compliance or exemption and pay the late fee by the grace period deadline leads to referral to the ARDC, which may remove the attorney from the Master Roll (i.e. suspend effective practice status).
- The $250 late fee is nonwaivable under the Court’s Rule 796(d)(1).
- For newly admitted attorneys, similar grace period and late fee rules apply in their NAA reporting period.
Key Takeaway
Yes — Illinois provides a defined late reporting mechanism (grace period to October/November) with fixed late fees, but missing those cure deadlines can lead to removal from the Master Roll until you remedy the deficiency.