Yes — New Jersey permits late CLE reporting under a “grace period” framework, but you’ll incur a $150 late compliance fee and you must meet the obligation during that grace time to avoid administrative ineligibility.
The Board on Continuing Legal Education’s regulations allow a single grace period after the compliance deadline, during which credits earned count toward the prior period and the late fee is assessed.
Details & Conditions:
- New Jersey attorneys are required to complete 24 CLE credits every two years, including required ethics/professionalism and diversity credits.
- If you fail to comply by the deadline, the Board issues a noncompliance notice and provides a grace period in which you can earn the missing credits. Credits earned during the grace period count only toward the prior compliance term, not the current one.
- Those reporting late will be assessed a $50 late compliance fee.
- If you still do not comply after the grace period, you may be placed on the CLE ineligible list and become administratively ineligible to practice law in New Jersey until you satisfy the requirements.
- The rules allow one grace period only per reporting cycle; extensions or other relief may be granted for good cause (undue hardship) under Reg. 202.
Key Takeaway
Yes — New Jersey allows late CLE reporting via a grace period, but you’ll pay a $150 late fee and must comply within that window or risk losing eligibility to practice until cured.