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What counts toward CLE requirements in Illinois?

In Illinois, CLE credit counts for approved educational programming (live, recorded, webinars), teaching or presenting CLE, writing legal or professional articles, committee or bar service, and in some cases pro bono legal work.

These credits must satisfy Supreme Court Rule 795 standards; teaching credit includes both presentation and preparation time under a defined formula.

Details

  • Rule 795 requires programs to have “significant intellectual, educational or practical content,” a qualified presenter, written materials, and proper learning environment.
  • Teaching credit: total credit = actual presentation time + 6× preparation time; but you cannot claim attendance for the segment you teach.
  • Credit from writing published articles or legal scholarship may be approved under Rule 795(d)(4)–(d)(9).
  • Committee work and bar or court presentations qualify if they meet the content and delivery criteria.
  • Out-of-state or technology-delivered CLE qualifies if accredited or previously approved, subject to Illinois rules.

Key Takeaway

In Illinois, CLE credit is earned through approved educational formats, teaching, writing, committee work, and out-of-state programs—each subject to Rule 795 accreditation, presentation, content, and reporting requirements.

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