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Frequently Asked Questions - Annual Attorney Registration and Payment

    Q. Am I exempt from payment by virtue of being prohibited from private practice?

    No. Exemptions from payment are narrowly defined; all conditions must be met. Lawyers who cannot claim the retired exemption from payment include, but are not limited to, judges, prosecutors, public defenders, and other government lawyers.

    Q. Am I exempt from payment by virtue of being exempt from pro bono counsel assignment?

    No. Exemptions from payment are unrelated to exemptions from pro bono counsel assignment.

    Q. I am prohibited from private practice. Am I exempt from paying into the Lawyers’ Fund for Client Protection?

    No. Exemptions from payment are narrowly defined; all conditions must be met. Lawyers who cannot claim the retired exemption from payment include, but are not limited to, judges, prosecutors, public defenders, and other government lawyers.

    Q. Although my firm has an office in New Jersey, I practice only in another state. How do I answer the attorney registration question about whether or not I engage in the practice of New Jersey law?

    You should answer "No." If you should practice at all in New Jersey during the year, you have an obligation to return to the website and answer this question "Yes" and then complete the questions about your practice and attorney accounts that will follow regarding your practice and bank accounts.

    Q. Does the military exemption from paying into the Lawyers’ Fund for Client Protection include other government service, such as foreign service?

    No. Military exemption is expressly limited to "full-time active duty with the Armed Forces, AmeriCorps, or Peace Corps."

    Q. Must I continue to respond to the annual billing even though I've been granted one of the inactive exemptions from payment for attorney registration (retired or military)?

    Yes. All attorneys are required to file an annual registration, even those who have been granted an exemption from payment. This keeps the Court informed about your current status and provides attorneys an opportunity to

    1. make changes and/or remit payment if they no longer qualify for the exemption,
    2. respond to other portions of the registration, and
    3. update their mailing or email addresses.

    Please access the Online Registration and Payment Center to respond.

    You have an ongoing duty to immediately inform the Fund if you no longer qualify for the exemption previously granted (such as no longer in military or if you come out of retired status), and to keep your address current with the Fund. You can access the Online Registration and Payment Center to activate your license or to update your mailing or email address.

    Q. What must I do if I want to engage in the private practice of law in New Jersey?

    In order to engage in private practice in New Jersey, you must

    1. pay the annual assessment;
    2. complete the attorney annual registration statement and keep the data current throughout the year;
    3. fulfill the requirements of R. 1:21-6, including trust and business accounts in an approved New Jersey financial institution;
    4. keep trust accounts IOLTA-compliant (R.1:28A) ; and
    5. maintain required levels of malpractice insurance under Court Rules if practicing in a P.A., P.C., L.L.P., or L.L.C.

    Q. How do I officially change my name?

    Attorneys who change their names after admission to practice must file a name change affidavit with the Supreme Court through its Board of Bar Examiners.

    Q. Why are New Jersey attorneys required to represent indigent defendants for free when assigned those cases by the court?

    In Madden v. Delran, 126 N.J. 591 (1992), the Supreme Court reaffirmed the bar's duty to represent indigent defendants without pay where the Legislature has made no provision for the Public Defender to represent defendants who are entitled to counsel. The Court recognized that it was placing a burden on the bar that should be more generally shared by the public at large. The Court said: "We realize it is the bar that is bearing the burden . . . . We trust the bar understands the strong policy considerations that have persuaded us. As has so often been the case, it is the bar that makes the system work, often without compensation." 126 N.J. at 614.

    Q. Why am I getting an error that says "Error: JavaScript needs to be enabled in order for your browser to maintain a session." on the attorney registration website?

    Javascript must be enabled in order to maintain your login session and for you to use the site. Follow the instructions specific to your browser to enable Javascript at https://enable-javascript.com.

    Q. Why am I getting an error that says "HPDIA0200W Login failed. The User ID or Password is invalid." when logging in to the attorney registration website?

    You are receiving this message because either your User ID or Password is invalid.

    • If you are logging in for the first time, please check to make sure your User ID is your Attorney ID and you are using the temporary password provided on your billing card.
    • If you have already logged in and completed your registration, please make sure you are using your new password to login.
    • If you completed the registration process but did not click the activation link within the activation email, please click the link and then try logging in again.
    • If you completed the registration process but did not receive an activation email and click the activation link to complete your registration, please follow these instructions in "Why am I not receiving my activation email to complete the attorney registration process?"

    Note: Please make sure you did not save the temporary password in the password field. Internet Explorer may have prompted you to save the password the first time you logged in. Make sure you clear out any saved password and re-type your new password.

    Q. The information that is printed in the attorney registration portion no longer applies because I am no longer engaged in the private practice of law in New Jersey. What must I do?

    Answer the question on the attorney registration portion "No." This will remove your practice information from active records.

    Q. Why am I getting an error that says "Error: JavaScript needs to be enabled in order for your browser to maintain a session." on the attorney registration website?

    Javascript must be enabled in order to maintain your login session and for you to use the site. Follow the instructions specific to your browser to enable Javascript at https://enable-javascript.com.

    Q. I don't practice law in New Jersey and I don't want to pay the fees. I want to be placed in inactive status on the attorney registration. What are my options?

    There is no "inactive status" in New Jersey. Please review the exemptions from payment. If you do not meet the standards to claim a payment exemption, and do not pay the required fees, you will be declared ineligible and not in good standing in New Jersey.

    Alternatively, you may formally resign from the New Jersey Bar as noted in the answer to "How do I resign without prejudice from the New Jersey Bar?" on this page.

    Q. I am an attorney, admitted in New Jersey, but I practice law and have a bono fide office in another state. My firm does not have an office in New Jersey. Am I required to do pro bono cases?

    No, you are exempt from mandatory pro bono. You should request exemption code 90 on the annual pro bono questionnaire that is part of the online annual attorney registration.

    Q. I recently lost my job with a law firm and have not yet found another law job. Am I required to do pro bono cases?

    No, while you are not practicing law you are exempt from mandatory pro bono. You should request exemption code 86 on the annual pro bono questionnaire that is part of the online annual attorney registration. When you obtain new legal employment, you are required to update your online attorney registration.

    Q. I am an attorney who practices law by being placed by a temporary employment agency in law firms or corporations. Am I eligible to claim an exemption from pro bono?

    No. The Supreme Court has determined that attorneys who practice law through temporary employment agencies are eligible to receive pro bono assignments. However, the Court has further determined that an assignment should only be made during a time that these attorneys are actively practicing law in New Jersey.

    Q. I am an attorney who occasionally works for a local law firm. I am not formally affiliated with that firm, but only work on an as needed basis. Am I eligible to claim an exemption from pro bono?

    No. The Supreme Court has determined that attorneys who work on a per diem basis are eligible to receive pro bono assignments. However, the Court has further determined that an assignment should only be made during a time that these attorneys are actively practicing law in New Jersey.

    Q. I am an attorney with a bona fide office in another state, but will occasionally appear in the Federal court system in New Jersey. I have no cases in the New Jersey State courts. Am I eligible for an exemption under exemption code 90?

    Yes. Practicing in a Federal court in New Jersey does not count as practicing in New Jersey, since Federal courts are a separate jurisdiction.

    Q. I am an attorney, admitted in New Jersey and I am employed as an in-house counsel with my primary office in New Jersey. I do not engage in private practice. Am I required to do pro bono cases?

    Yes. The Supreme Court has determined that attorneys who are in-house counsel with offices in New Jersey and who are in good standing are eligible to receive pro bono assignments, because their work constitutes practicing law.

    Q. How are attorneys chosen for pro bono assignment?

    Pro bono cases are assigned from a computer list each county maintains of all the attorneys eligible for pro bono assignment in that county. Cases are assigned strictly in order of the list. At the top of the list are attorneys who have had no pro bono assignments, in alphabetical order.

    Q. How do I reactivate my law license if I no longer qualify for the exemption from payment into the Lawyers’ Fund for Client Protection that was previously granted?

    Go to the Online Registration and Payment Center to update your registration information and pay the current year's fee.

    Q. Must all New Jersey attorneys complete pro bono assignments?

    No, certain attorneys, such as most full-time government attorneys, are exempt from mandatory pro bono service. Each year, the director of the Administrative Office of the Courts issues a list of all the categories of attorneys who are exempt. To be exempt, the attorney must request the exemption on the annual pro bono questionnaire which is part of the online annual attorney registration. If an attorney fails to request an exemption on the pro bono questionnaire, he or she will be assigned a case when his or her name rises to the top of the list.

    Q. I am completely retired from the practice of law. Am I required to do pro bono cases?

    No, you are exempt from mandatory pro bono. You should request exemption code 86 on the annual pro bono questionnaire that is part of the online annual attorney registration.

    Q. What if the assigned attorney has no previous experience in the type of case he or she is assigned?

    The Supreme Court addressed this issue in Madden v. Delran, 126 N.J. at 607-08. It recognized that frequently attorneys who have no experience in the substantive area of the law involved in the pro bono case will be called upon. As the Court said: "Real estate attorneys, corporate counsel, experts in commercial leases, all have been assigned to represent indigent defendants charged with simple assault, driving while intoxicated; all were required not only to learn how to defend those cases but to find out where the courthouse is." 126 N.J. at 607. If, however, the trial judge is convinced that the assigned counsel will provide ineffective assistance of counsel, the judge should direct the assigned counsel to obtain a substitute. 126 N.J. at 608.

    Q. What types of cases are assigned as pro bono cases?

    Most mandatory pro bono cases fall within three categories: violation of domestic violence restraining orders; municipal appeals; and parole revocation hearings.

    Q. How many hours of pro bono service a year must an attorney provide?

    Attorneys are not required to do a certain number of hours per year. Rather, attorneys are required to complete an assigned pro bono case, no matter how many hours that may require. Further, there is no requirement that an attorney complete a certain number of pro bono cases a year. Attorneys are called upon whenever their name reaches the top of the list. For example, depending on the county, an attorney may be required to complete two cases a year or one case every two years.

    Q. Am I exempt from payment by virtue of being exempt from pro bono counsel assignment?

    No. Exemptions from payment are unrelated to exemptions from pro bono counsel assignment.

    Q. I am an attorney who maintains a bona fide law office in New Jersey. However, I have not represented a private client out of that office for more than a year. Am I required to do pro bono cases?

    Yes. The Supreme Court has determined that any attorney who maintains a bona fide law office in New Jersey, regardless of the amount of activity out of that office, is eligible to receive assignments.

    Q. I am an attorney with a bona fide office in another state, but will occasionally appear in the Federal court system in New Jersey. I have no cases in the New Jersey State courts. Am I eligible for an exemption under exemption code 90?

    Yes. Practicing in a Federal court in New Jersey does not count as practicing in New Jersey, since Federal courts are a separate jurisdiction.

    Q. I am an attorney who occasionally works for a local law firm. I am not formally affiliated with that firm, but only work on an as needed basis. Am I eligible to claim an exemption from pro bono?

    No. The Supreme Court has determined that attorneys who work on a per diem basis are eligible to receive pro bono assignments. However, the Court has further determined that an assignment should only be made during a time that these attorneys are actively practicing law in New Jersey.

    Q. I am an attorney who practices law by being placed by a temporary employment agency in law firms or corporations. Am I eligible to claim an exemption from pro bono?

    No. The Supreme Court has determined that attorneys who practice law through temporary employment agencies are eligible to receive pro bono assignments. However, the Court has further determined that an assignment should only be made during a time that these attorneys are actively practicing law in New Jersey.

    Q. Why am I getting an error that says "Error: JavaScript needs to be enabled in order for your browser to maintain a session." on the attorney registration website?

    Javascript must be enabled in order to maintain your login session and for you to use the site. Follow the instructions specific to your browser to enable Javascript at https://enable-javascript.com.

    Q. Why am I getting an error that says "Error: JavaScript needs to be enabled in order for your browser to maintain a session." on the attorney registration website?

    Javascript must be enabled in order to maintain your login session and for you to use the site. Follow the instructions specific to your browser to enable Javascript at https://enable-javascript.com.

    Q. Why am I getting an error that says "HPDIA0200W Login failed. The User ID or Password is invalid." when logging in to the attorney registration website?

    You are receiving this message because either your User ID or Password is invalid.

    • If you are logging in for the first time, please check to make sure your User ID is your Attorney ID and you are using the temporary password provided on your billing card.
    • If you have already logged in and completed your registration, please make sure you are using your new password to login.
    • If you completed the registration process but did not click the activation link within the activation email, please click the link and then try logging in again.
    • If you completed the registration process but did not receive an activation email and click the activation link to complete your registration, please follow these instructions in "Why am I not receiving my activation email to complete the attorney registration process?"

    Note: Please make sure you did not save the temporary password in the password field. Internet Explorer may have prompted you to save the password the first time you logged in. Make sure you clear out any saved password and re-type your new password.

    Q. Why am I not receiving my activation email to complete the attorney registration process?

    Check to make sure that your activation email is not getting categorized as "Spam" or "Junk Mail" by your email client. It is advised that you add  to your allowed senders list within your email client. The activation email can be requested again by clicking the "Request Activation Email" on the login screen.

    Q. I cannot find an answer to my security question for the attorney registration website. How do I contact you?

    If you cannot find an answer, please contact [email] and we will be happy to assist you.

    Q. Attorney Registration & Payment Center Instructions/Tutorial