CLE Courses — Continuing Legal Education for Federal Attorneys

FederalLawyer.com offers a comprehensive continuing legal education (CLE) platform designed specifically for attorneys practicing in federal courts. Browse courses taught by experienced federal practitioners, earn CLE credits, and stay current on developments in federal law, procedure, and practice.

Why Choose Our CLE Programs

  • Federal-Focused Content — All courses are tailored to federal law practice, covering topics from circuit-specific procedures to evolving federal regulations
  • Expert Instructors — Courses taught by experienced federal practitioners, former federal judges, and agency officials
  • Flexible Formats — Available in live webinar, on-demand, and hybrid formats to fit your schedule
  • Credit Tracking — Automatic credit tracking and completion certificates for your records

Course Categories

  • Federal Criminal Defense — Sentencing guidelines, plea negotiations, trial strategy, and post-conviction practice
  • Civil Litigation & Procedure — Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, discovery, motions practice, and trial preparation
  • Immigration Law — Removal defense, asylum, employment-based immigration, and immigration court practice
  • Appellate Practice — Brief writing, oral argument techniques, and circuit-specific procedures
  • Ethics & Professional Responsibility — Federal court ethics rules, conflicts of interest, and professional conduct
  • Tax Law — IRS disputes, Tax Court practice, and federal tax controversies
  • Bankruptcy — Chapter 7, 11, and 13 proceedings in federal bankruptcy courts
  • Securities & Financial Regulation — SEC enforcement, compliance, and regulatory defense
  • Intellectual Property — Patent, trademark, and copyright litigation in federal courts

For CLE Providers

Are you a CLE provider? Partner with FederalLawyer.com to reach thousands of federal attorneys seeking continuing education credits. List your courses on our platform to expand your audience and connect with practitioners across all federal circuits.