If an attorney in Texas holds “inactive membership status” and is inactive for the entire MCLE compliance year, they are exempt from reporting or completing MCLE credits.
Reporting exemption is tied to membership status—not practice activity—and does not depend on whether the attorney provided legal services.
Details
- Rule 5.4 of the Texas MCLE Regulations states that an attorney who maintains inactive membership status for the full compliance year is exempt from MCLE requirements.
- MCLE exemptions also include “inactive status members” who have been inactive during the entire MCLE compliance year.
- Inactive attorneys must pay the reduced inactive membership dues.
- To resume active status, an attorney must submit a reinstatement request and report MCLE and other status requirements as required under the rules.
- Being inactive does not automatically excuse CLE unless the status covers the full compliance year; partial-year inactive status does not qualify.
Key Takeaway
In Texas, attorneys with full-year inactive membership status are exempt from CLE, but returning to active status requires fulfilling MCLE obligations and proper reinstatement procedures.