No — California does not require attorneys to attend any specific number of CLE hours in a physical, in-person classroom setting.
The State Bar’s MCLE (Minimum Continuing Legal Education) rules require that at least half of all hours be “participatory,” but that includes live webcasts and other interactive formats, not solely in-person instruction.
Details
- California attorneys must complete 25 MCLE credit hours every three years.
- At least 12.5 hours must be in participatory format (live, interactive instruction—such as live webcasts or in-person courses)
- Up to 12.5 hours may be earned via self-study (non-interactive, recorded material)
- The rules define participatory credit to include live instruction (including online with interaction), not exclusively in physical classrooms
- Providers hosting live or interactive online programs must record attendance and comply with provider responsibilities per MCLE rules
Key Takeaway
California mandates a participatory credit minimum (i.e. live or interactive formats) but does not require a set number of classroom-only in-person hours.