No — North Dakota does allow reporting after the deadline, but only under a formal cure procedure after receiving a 60-day notice, and you must pay a late filing fee (either $25 or $75 depending on timing) along with completing the missing credits.
The rules provide a 60-day compliance window after notice, during which late reports are accepted with reduced fees; after that period only higher fees apply or suspension may follow.
Details — North Dakota’s rule framework (Rule 4 of N.D. Rules for CLE)
- Attorneys must complete CLE by June 30 of their three-year reporting period and file a Report of Compliance by July 30 (or July 31 depending on version).
- If the report is not filed or is deficient, the Commission issues a 60-day notice requiring compliance or proof within that window.
- Reports filed during that 60-day period must include a $25 late filing fee (in addition to the normal filing fee).
- If you file after the 60-day cure window (but before the end of an extension period), you must pay a $75 late filing fee.
- If compliance is not achieved within that extended period, the Commission may suspend your license until you cure the deficiency and pay all fees.
- The Commission may also waive strict compliance or extend deadlines for extreme hardship on showing good cause.
Key Takeaway
In North Dakota, you may report CLE late only under a cure period after notice — with a $25 or $75 late fee depending on when you file — but failure to comply after that window may lead to suspension unless relief is granted.