Yes — judges in South Carolina have a separate judicial continuing legal education requirement (Rule 504), distinct from the CLE requirement for attorneys (Rule 408).
Judicial members must complete at least 15 hours of approved judicial education each year, with a substance abuse / mental health credit required every two years.
Details
- Rule 504 (SCACR) defines “judge” broadly (Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, circuit court, family court, probate judges, masters-in-equity) and requires 15 hours annually.
- Excess judicial credit beyond 15 hours may be carried forward, but only within limits (no more than three succeeding reporting periods).
- Once every two reporting years, judges must take one hour exclusively on substance abuse / mental health / stress management.
- Magistrates and municipal judges have their own separate CLE rules under Rule 510 (e.g. 18 hours for magistrates, 14 hours for municipal judges, including ethics and civil/criminal hour allocations).
- The attorney CLE rule, Rule 408, requires 14 CLE hours for bar members, including 2 in ethics; judicial members are not subject to Rule 408’s CLE regime while under Rule 504.
Key Takeaway
In South Carolina, judges must satisfy a distinct judicial education mandate (15 hours annually under Rule 504) separate from the attorney CLE requirement, and lower court judges (magistrates, municipal) have further special CLE rules under Rule 510.