Placing a Tennessee law license on inactive status does not automatically excuse the CLE requirement.
Under Supreme Court Rule 21 § 2.03(h), an attorney must formally file a Request for Inactive Status with the CLE Commission to claim exemption—otherwise the CLE obligation continues.
Details
- Rule 21 § 2.03(h) specifically allows an attorney who is not practicing law to request inactive status and thereby claim exemption from CLE if the request is accepted.
- The CLE Commission’s FAQ states that placing a law license on inactive status under the Board of Professional Responsibility alone does not relieve the CLE duty; you must separately request inactive status with the CLE Commission.
- If inactive status is accepted by the CLE Commission, the attorney has no CLE reporting or credit obligations for that compliance year.
- When returning to active practice, the CLE obligations resume. An attorney whose license has been inactive for more than five years must petition for reinstatement under Rule 9, § 10.8(c).
Key Takeaway
In Tennessee, inactive attorneys must formally request CLE-inactive status; without doing so, the CLE duty remains in force, and reactivation restores the full CLE obligations.