In Oklahoma, attorneys satisfy CLE requirements by completing approved CLE programs or equivalent approved alternatives that conform to MCLEC rules.
Each active or senior Oklahoma Bar member must earn 12 approved CLE credits per calendar year, including at least 2 hours in legal ethics.
Qualifying CLE activities
- Attendance at MCLEC-approved CLE programs (live, webinar, webcast, teleconference, video replay, on-demand) — programs must meet course approval standards and verification requirements.
- Teaching or presenting approved CLE programs — credit may be earned for presentation plus preparation. Teaching in law schools or legal assistant programs qualifies under special rates.
- Enrollment in or auditing courses at ABA-accredited law schools — credit is awarded via multipliers (3× credit hours for regular courses, 3× for auditing)
- In-house CLE programs offered by an employer, if the program is open to outsiders and meets all MCLEC standards, with advance approval required.
Limits, carryover & special rules
- All credit hours beyond the 12 minimum may be carried forward one year (i.e. into the next calendar year) when timely reported.
- No limit on the number of credits that may be earned via distance learning (online, on-demand) formats; since January 2019 all required 12 credits may come from approved distance learning.
- Teaching credit is generous: one hour of instruction may yield 6 CLE credits if accompanied by thorough, high-quality written materials.
- Ethics/professionalism credits must be earned in discrete blocks focusing on professional responsibility, legal ethics, malpractice prevention, or mental health/substance use.
- Verification and attendance rules: programs must provide written materials and independent verification (affidavit alone is insufficient).
Key Takeaway: In Oklahoma, attorneys may count approved live, distance, teaching, in-house, and law-school courses toward the 12-hour CLE requirement—provided at least 2 are ethics—and may carry over extra credit one year, subject to MCLEC verification and approval rules.