In Hawaii, CLE credit counts for attending approved programs, teaching, writing scholarly legal articles, in-house courses, and out-of-state or alternate-format programs—so long as they satisfy HSBA standards under Rule 22.
These activities must be approved by the Hawaii State Bar or accepted jurisdictions and meet quality, content, and delivery requirements set in the CLE Regulations.
Details
- Active attorneys must complete at least 3 credit hours annually, including 1 hour of ethics every three years.
- Attending approved courses or activities (e.g. bar programs, webinars, in-house seminars) qualifies.
- Teaching or presenting CLE: credit may include preparation time (up to 2 hours prep per 50 minutes of teaching).
- Writing approved legal or scholarly articles: up to 2 credit hours per 1,500 published words, under CLE Regulation 3.
- In-house programs (firm, corporate, government) may qualify if they satisfy CLE standards and are approved.
- Alternate formats (recorded, online, teleconferences, DVD, self-study) count if previously approved under Regulation 4.
- Out-of-state courses: if offered by an approved jurisdiction, they can be claimed without prior HSBA approval. Otherwise, approval must be sought via application.
- Excess credits: up to 3 credit hours may carry forward one year.
Key Takeaway
Hawaii allows CLE credit from approved courses, teaching, writing, in-house programs, and alternate formats—including out-of-state credit—so long as the activity meets HSBA approval standards under Rule 22 and the CLE Regulations.