In Colorado, CLE credit counts for attending accredited live or on-demand programs, teaching or presenting CLE, pro bono legal work, research and writing, committee work, mentoring, and law school or LLM courses (with limits).
To qualify, activities must meet the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel’s Regulation 103 standards and be properly accredited or approved.
Details
- Live or real-time programs (in person, webinars, teleconferences) earn standard credit.
- On-demand/homestudy programs accredited in Colorado qualify; if not pre-accredited, you may apply for individual credit (Form 7 or Form 1B) under “independent study.”
- Teaching: You may earn CLE for presenting accredited programs (5 hours per 50 minutes of teaching) or moderating (2 hours per 50 minutes) by submitting Form 5.
- Pro bono work: Up to 9 CLE hours per three-year compliance period for uncompensated representation or supervising a student in eligible pro bono matters (1 hour of CLE per 5 billable hours).
- Research & writing: You may claim 1 CLE hour for every 2 hours devoted to qualifying legal research or published writing, subject to approval.
- Committee research & writing: Qualifying committee work producing educational materials may earn credit (1 hour per 2 hours) via Form 6A.
- Mentoring (CAMP): Participation as mentor or mentee in the Colorado Attorney Mentoring Program (CAMP) can yield CLE credit (capped per Regulation 104).
- Graduate legal courses (LLM): May qualify under certain circumstances via Form 1C.
Key Takeaway
Colorado allows CLE credit not only for attending courses but also for teaching, pro bono service, publishing, committee work, mentoring, and law school courses—each with rules and form submissions under Regulation 103.