Maine Physical Therapy CE Requirements (2026): No Mandatory CE Hours
Requirements Overview
Unlike most states, Maine imposes no mandatory continuing education (CE) hours, no renewal-cycle CE total, and no required topics — such as ethics or jurisprudence — for licensed Physical Therapists or Physical Therapist Assistants. This is confirmed directly by the Board's own FAQ page, not inferred from statutory silence.
What Maine PTs and PTAs do have is a simple annual renewal, due every March 31, with a $25 renewal fee ($50 late fee after the deadline). There is no CE audit, no carry-over policy, and no approved-provider list, because none of that machinery is needed when no CE is mandated.
Maine's licensing statute contains general boilerplate about the board's authority to "license and renew upon documentation of continuing education activities," shared across many Maine licensing boards — but the Board's PT-specific FAQ answer overrides that general text for this profession.
Maine CE Rules & Limits
Details specific to Maine that generic CE guides tend to miss:
- Maine is a no-CE state for both Physical Therapists and Physical Therapist Assistants: the official Board of Physical Therapy FAQ states plainly, 'Maine Law does not require continuing education for this profession.' This is the board's own direct statement, not an inference.
- The Board of Physical Therapy home page (https://www.maine.gov/pfr/professionallicensing/professions/board-physical-therapy) contains generic boilerplate language common to many Maine OPOR board pages describing the board's general powers: 'to license and renew upon documentation of continuing education activities.' This is standard statutory template language about the board's general authority (mirrored on other Maine licensing-board pages) and is contradicted by the board's own PT-specific FAQ answer, which is more specific and directly on-point. The FAQ answer is treated as authoritative for this profession; the homepage boilerplate is not used as a claim source.
- Both PT and PTA licenses renew annually (not biennially) on March 31, with a flat $25 annual renewal fee (late fee $50 after expiration). Some third-party CE-vendor marketing pages (not used as sources here) incorrectly describe a biennial/even-year renewal cycle for Maine PT licenses; the official Maine OPOR licensing page contradicts this and states an annual March 31 renewal.
- The board has published a 'Recommended Guideline for the Practice of Dry Needling by Licensed Physical Therapist' and referenced a 2018 'Report on Dry Needling and Continuing Education Requirements,' but the report PDF link returned a 404 at fetch time and no dry-needling-specific CE hour mandate was found on any live official page searched (board home, FAQ, licensing). Not included as a mandatory topic because it could not be verified from a live official source; flagged here for awareness only, not fabricated as a requirement.
- The Maine Physical Therapy Licensure Compact (interstate compact) takes effect January 1, 2026 per the board home page; this concerns multistate licensure privileges, not CE requirements, and does not change the no-CE-required conclusion.
Provider Requirements
Not applicable — Maine does not require or approve CE for PT/PTA license renewal.
Tips for Maine PTs
- Don't buy CE packages marketed as "required for Maine PT renewal" — no CE is required by the Board, so verify any vendor claim against the Board's own FAQ before paying for a course.
- Mark March 31 every year as your renewal deadline; Maine renews annually (not biennially), and a late renewal triggers a $50 fee.
- Watch your email for the Board's renewal reminder, sent at least 30 days before expiration — keep your contact information current with the Board so you don't miss it.
- Even without a state mandate, keep informal records of any courses you take (e.g., dry needling training) since employers, malpractice insurers, or the interstate PT Licensure Compact (effective January 1, 2026) may still expect proof of ongoing competence.
- Rules can change — before assuming this policy still holds at your next renewal, check the Board's FAQ page directly, since Maine is only one of a small number of states with no PT CE requirement.
Sources
Each figure on this page is taken directly from the Maine State Board of Examiners in Physical Therapy's official rules and continuing-education sources and recorded with the exact source excerpt. Last verified Jul 2026. Read how we compile and verify this data.