Yes — in Maine you can report CLE “late” via a built-in grace period that allows you to cure deficiencies after the reporting deadline. That grace period ends on the last business day of February of the year following the compliance period.
Here’s the official Maine framework:
- Under Bar Rule 5(l)(1), attorneys deficient after December 31 are considered noncompliant but are granted an automatic grace period until the close of business on the last business day of February of the next year.
- Credits earned during that grace period count toward compliance for the prior year, and any excess may be used toward the following year’s requirement.
- If after that grace period you’re still deficient, you’ll be subject to a noncompliance fee and possible administrative suspension per Maine Bar Rules 4(g) & 4(h).
- Separate from late reporting, Maine also imposes late fees for untimely submission of program accreditation applications, sponsor reporting, or attorney certificate submissions.
Key Takeaway
Yes — Maine allows CLE credits to be reported late through a grace period until late February, during which you can cure deficiencies; beyond that period, noncompliance penalties and suspension risk apply.