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Do judges in New York have separate CLE requirements?

No — judges in New York do not have a separate CLE requirement; they comply under the same CLE rules that apply to attorneys.

Under New York’s CLE regulations, “attorneys, judges, in-house counsel” fall within the same continuing legal education program without distinct judicial-only mandatory credits.

Details

  • New York attorneys (including those serving as judges) must complete 24 credit hours of accredited CLE in each biennial reporting cycle, with at least 4 credits in ethics/professionalism, 1 credit in diversity/inclusion/elimination of bias, and 1 credit in cybersecurity, privacy & data protection.
  • The CLE rules define “the practice of law” to exclude judicial or quasi-judicial functions; yet the regulatory scheme still includes judges in the CLE participant class.
  • New York has a “Judicial Institute” that provides ongoing training and programs for judges, but that is not a parallel or separate CLE mandate—rather, it complements the shared CLE system.
  • Judges may be subject to specialized training mandates (for example, in bail laws) under administrative orders, but these do not constitute a fully separate continuing education credit system above the CLE mandate.

Key Takeaway

In New York, judges fulfill the same CLE obligations as attorneys; there is no distinct, separate judicial CLE system.

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