Yes — Georgia imposes a separate judicial education requirement for judges in addition to, or instead of, standard CLE for attorneys.
Under Georgia Regulation 616-1-1-.05, judges must complete 18 hours of approved continuing judicial education every 2 years.
At the same time, full-time judges who are no longer permitted to practice law may request exemption from the State Bar’s CLE obligations, under State Bar Rule 8-102(b).
Judicial education is administered via the Institute of Continuing Judicial Education (ICJE), which partners with the Georgia Judicial Branch and legal education institutions to provide and accredit judicial training.
For part-time judges who remain active members of the bar, the standard 18-hour CLE requirement every 2 years (with ethics, professionalism, trial components) continues to apply unless a judicial exemption is claimed.
Key Takeaway: Judges in Georgia must satisfy a distinct 18-hour judicial education obligation every 2 years; full-time judges may seek exemption from attorney CLE under rule, but part-time judges generally remain under normal CLE rules with possible judicial credit overlap.