How early can I report CLE credits in Maryland?
Maryland does not currently require attorneys to complete or report CLE credits. Mandatory MCLE has not been adopted.
Maryland does not currently require attorneys to complete or report CLE credits. Mandatory MCLE has not been adopted.
You do not report CLE credits in Michigan because the state does not currently mandate continuing legal education or CLE reporting.
Michigan attorneys are not required by rule to certify CLE, though CLE may be useful for multi-state compliance or professional development.
Michigan is one of the states without a mandatory CLE requirement for attorneys. Some specialty areas (e.g. indigent defense) require CLE under specific statutory or administrative schemes, with reporting via the Michigan Indigent Defense Commission (MIDC) using CE Broker.
In Oregon, you cannot formally “report” your CLE compliance until after your reporting period ends. Credits must be earned by April 30, and you have until May 31 to submit your report.
During the year, credits you earn are recorded (by providers to your transcript), but your own submission (certification) only becomes available after April 30.
You report CLE credits in Oklahoma by submitting an Annual Report of Compliance to the Oklahoma MCLE Commission by February 15, after completing your required credits during the prior calendar year.
Most attorneys do not self-report because approved providers must report your attendance within 30 days; you only need to report if credits are missing or you claim an exemption.
Key Takeaway: In Oklahoma, you don’t usually self-report because providers handle attendance submissions. Only attorneys with missing credit or claiming exemption must file a Report of Compliance by February 15. Sprout Education ensures attendance is accurately recorded where permitted, but you must verify your transcript and file when needed.
CLE reporting in Kansas is handled primarily by providers, not attorneys. Providers must electronically report attendance within 30 days of the program via the Kansas CLE attendance portal; attorneys review and confirm via the annual transcript notice.
Key Takeaway: In Kansas, reporting is provider-driven via an online attendance portal; attorneys rely on the annual transcript notice to confirm compliance.
In Kansas, you can have your CLE credits reported as soon as a provider submits attendance — providers generally have up to 30 days to report them after the course.
You do not need to wait until June 30 (the compliance deadline) to begin having credits posted; the reporting process is continuous throughout the compliance period.
Rhode Island attorneys must complete 10 CLE credit hours each year, including 2 hours in ethics and 1 hour in diversity, equity & inclusion (DEI) (effective for reporting years starting July 1, 2025).
The CLE year runs July 1 through June 30, with credit reporting due June 30.
Details
• Minimum total: 10 credit hours per reporting year.
• Ethics: At least 2 of those 10 hours must cover ethics or
Nevada attorneys report CLE via an Affirmation of Attendance submitted through the State Bar’s online transcript/dashboard system after completing credits by December 31. Providers must also report attendance for accredited programs within 30 days of completion.
Key Takeaway: Nevada’s CLE reporting is done electronically via a state portal: providers must submit attendance within 30 days, and attorneys submit a final affirmation of attendance via their transcript by the deadline (with limited late reporting allowed under fee).
CLE is required on either an annual or biennial basis, depending on the state. Some jurisdictions require attorneys to complete CLE hours every year, while others set a two-year reporting cycle.
Key Takeaway: CLE reporting frequency is not uniform—some states require annual compliance, others biennial, and a few triennial. Attorneys must follow the rules of their licensing state(s).
Attorneys in New Mexico submit a Certificate of Compliance attached to their annual State Bar membership renewal, listing all CLE activities and attaching certificates for non-Bar-sponsored events. Providers or the Bar often report attendance directly, but the formal reporting is via that compliance certificate.
Key Takeaway: In New Mexico, CLE reporting is done via a Certificate of Compliance submitted during your bar renewal—with attachments for non-Bar sponsored courses—and providers also submit attendance to the Bar.
Wyoming attorneys must self-report CLE credits via their Member Portal or by submitting an Application for CLE Credit; sponsors do not report attendance on an attorney’s behalf. Reporting is annual—credits must be earned by December 31 and submitted by January 15 each year.
Key Takeaway: In Wyoming, CLE reporting is self-driven—attorneys submit credit claims (not sponsors), must do so by January 15 for past year compliance, and track ethics, carryover, and self-study limits accordingly.
No — you generally cannot share a CLE subscription with a colleague unless the provider’s terms explicitly permit it.
CLE providers and bar regulators almost always require that each user/licensee have a distinct, individual account so attendance verification, certificates, and credit tracking remain accurate.
Details:
– CLE providers typically verify attendance through unique user logins, activity tracking, and certificates tied to
In Tennessee, CLE credits begin being recorded as soon as providers submit attendance (within 30 days of the course). However, you cannot formally certify your CLE compliance until after the calendar year ends (December 31) — the reporting deadline is March 31 of the following year.
Key Takeaway
You can start having CLE credits entered into your record right after completing courses (via provider reporting), but your formal CLE compliance reporting can only occur after December 31, with a March 31 deadline for submission.
Oklahoma does not explicitly provide a “grace period” beyond its reporting deadline of February 15. Attorneys must earn CLE by December 31 and file their report by February 15 to avoid late fees.
Key Takeaway: Oklahoma’s timeline requires CLE by December 31 and reporting by February 15 — there is no additional grace window built in, and late-filing triggers fixed charges and a show-cause process.
Arizona attorneys must complete 15 CLE credit hours each year, including 3 hours in ethics.
The educational cycle runs July 1 through June 30, and attorneys must file an affidavit of compliance by September 15.
Idaho attorneys must complete 30 accredited CLE credit hours every three years, including at least 3 hours in ethics.
At least 15 credits must be earned through live webinar or in-person courses, and no more than 15 hours may come from self-study or on-demand online programs.
Idaho attorneys must complete 30 CLE hours every 3 years — at least 15 must be live (in-person or interactive webinars) and at least 3 must be in ethics, with the remaining 15 allowed through self-study or on-demand programs.
Yes — New Jersey requires that at least half of an attorney’s CLE credits in each compliance period be earned “live” (in-person or synchronous interactive formats).
The rule ensures that 50% of the 24 credit-hour biennial requirement comes from live instruction as defined by the Board.
Details
The grace period for CLE reporting in Washington runs until February 1 after the December 31 deadline. Attorneys must complete credits by December 31, but they have until February 1 to certify compliance before late fees or suspension apply.
Key Takeaway: Washington attorneys effectively get one extra month to certify CLE compliance, but missing February 1 risks penalties.
Illinois attorneys are required to complete 30 CLE credit hours every two years, including at least 6 hours in professional responsibility (PR).
Those 6 PR hours must include at least 1 hour in diversity/inclusion and 1 hour in mental health/substance abuse.
Minnesota attorneys report CLE attendance either online via OASIS or by filing a paper Affidavit of CLE Compliance form. The reporting deadline is August 31 following the end of their three-year reporting period.
Key Takeaway: Minnesota attorneys report CLE via the OASIS portal (or by paper affidavit with fee) by August 31 after their three-year compliance period.