In Minnesota, CLE “counts” when it is approved by the Minnesota State Board of Continuing Legal Education under the Rules of the Board of CLE.
Attorneys must earn 45 CLE credit hours every three years, including required hours in ethics, elimination of bias, and mental health/substance use.
Qualifying CLE activities
- Attendance at Board-approved live seminars, webinars, or other real-time programs.
- Approved on-demand or recorded courses (subject to Board rules, including sponsor accessibility during approval period).
- Teaching an approved live CLE program (credit covers both preparation and presentation time).
- University or college courses directly related to legal practice (non-law school), with Board approval (up to limits).
- Pro bono legal representation: one hour of credit per six hours of qualifying pro bono service (with a cap per reporting period).
- Certain “law office management” courses (e.g. mentoring, technology, staff development), subject to a limit per reporting period.
Rules, limits & requirements
- Ethics / Professional Responsibility: at least 3 hours per reporting period must be in ethics.
- Elimination of Bias: at least 2 hours per period must be in elimination of bias programming.
- Mental Health / Substance Use: at least 1 hour per period must address these topics.
- On-demand credit cap changes: for on-demand courses viewed and reported after January 1, 2024, there is no limit on how many hours may be reported, subject to Board approval.
- Pro bono cap: no more than 6 hours per reporting period may be claimed for pro bono legal service.
- Law office management courses are capped (i.e. they can’t dominate your CLE).
- Retroactive or special approval: courses not preapproved may be submitted for retroactive credit with Board approval (following rules).
- Reporting: attorneys submit CLE compliance via OASIS or paper affidavit by August 31 following the reporting period. Late filing fees apply.
- No carryover: credits in excess of 45 in one period cannot be carried into the next period.
Key Takeaway: In Minnesota, approved live programs, on-demand courses, teaching, academic courses, pro bono service, and limited law office management training all can count toward the 45-hour requirement — subject to ethics, bias, and mental health hour minimums, pro bono and management caps, and reporting rules.