Yes — you can request extra time in Georgia via a late-fee extension process after missing the initial reporting deadline, but it’s not a free or indefinite extension and carries penalties.
Georgia requires attorneys to complete CLE by December 31 and report by January 31; if you miss that, you may pay a $100 late fee to extend compliance until September 30, and after that additional penalties (e.g. a further $150) apply. (CLE blog)
Details & Caveats
- Under Georgia procedures (as reported by CLE providers), missing the March 31 extended compliance date triggers a $100 late fee to extend your deadline until September 30.
- If you pass September 30 without compliance, an additional $150 fee is assessed.
- This extension mechanism appears to be part of the “late reporting / extension” path rather than a formal waiver provision.
- These rules are from secondary commentary (CLE blogs), not an official Georgia Bar rule text — I did not locate a primary source confirming an extension provision in the official Georgia CLE regulations.
- Because information is from providers rather than official Bar rules, you should verify with the Georgia Commission on Continuing Lawyer Competency or the State Bar of Georgia.
Key Takeaway
Georgia allows a late-fee extension past the January 31 reporting deadline (if you pay fees), but it’s not unrestricted — missing further deadlines increases penalties and the extension path has strict cutoffs.