You report CLE credits in New Jersey by self-certifying compliance on your Annual Attorney Registration & Billing (after your compliance deadline), rather than by submitting all course attendance details.
New Jersey’s CLE system is self-reporting: you keep certificates for audit, but your registration filing is your compliance report.
Overview of New Jersey CLE Reporting
Attorneys must complete 24 CLE credits every two years, including 5 credits in ethics/professionalism, of which at least 2 must address diversity, inclusion, and elimination of bias.
At least 12 of the credits must be from live or interactive programming; up to 12 may be alternative verifiable learning formats.
Attorneys are placed into one of two compliance groups based on their birth month (Group 1 or Group 2), which determines the year they must complete CLE and when they report compliance.
Upon registering and paying bar dues in the year following your compliance deadline, you must certify whether you met CLE (or pay noncompliance fees).
If selected for audit, you will need to produce certificates and attendance logs covering your CLE activity for that compliance period.
Steps to Report CLE in New Jersey
- Complete your 24 required CLE credits (meeting specialty rules) by December 31 of your compliance year.
- Retain certificates and records of attendance for at least three years.
- During the attorney registration and billing process in the year after your compliance deadline, certify that you have satisfied the CLE requirements.
- If you are not yet compliant, indicate that in your registration and pay any noncompliance fees; you may be placed on the CLE Ineligible List until you make it up.
- If audited, submit your certificates and supporting materials to the Board on Continuing Legal Education.
- If you earned credits through Sprout Education, confirm that those events qualify under NJ CLE rules and maintain your supporting certificates—our reporting support is only as effective as the NJ rules permit.
Key Takeaway: In New Jersey, CLE reporting is done by certification during your annual registration, not by routine course-by-course reporting. You must complete 24 credits biennially, keep certificates, and self-certify in your registration filing—with backup documentation for any audit.