New Jersey Physical Therapy CE Requirements (2026): 30 Hours Every 2 Years
Requirements Overview
The New Jersey State Board of Physical Therapy Examiners requires every licensed PT and PTA to log 30 credits of continuing education for each biennial license renewal, with all licenses expiring January 31 of even-numbered years regardless of when they were first issued.
Four of those 30 credits are fixed: a 1.5-credit Jurisprudence Assessment Module (NJ JAM) taken through the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy, plus a 2.5-credit professional ethics course. Up to 10 credits may come from distance-learning formats such as video, audio, computer media, Internet, journal, or correspondence courses ending in an exam; live, synchronous webinars don't count against that cap.
Licensees who first become licensed partway through a cycle get relief: those licensed in the cycle's first year need only 15 credits, while those licensed in the second year are fully exempt from CE at their first renewal. New Jersey has no carry-over provision, so excess credits earned in one cycle don't apply to the next.
Mandatory Topics
| Topic | Hours | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jurisprudence Assessment Module (NJ JAM) | 1.5 | Every renewal | Licensees must complete a 1.5-credit Jurisprudence Assessment Module (NJ JAM, offered via the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy) as part of the 4-credit jurisprudence-and-ethics requirement. Only a Board-approved JAM satisfies this specific piece; any other jurisprudence course counts only toward the remaining 26 general credits. Licensees who already completed a JAM for initial licensure do not need to repeat it at their first renewal (but still owe the 2.5-credit ethics course). |
| Professional ethics course | 2.5 | Every renewal | Minimum 2.5 credits of an ethics course (distance learning or live) required every biennial renewal period, combining with the 1.5-credit JAM to satisfy the 4-credit jurisprudence-and-professional-ethics requirement of N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.2(a). Required even for first-year licensees who are exempt from the JAM repeat. |
First Renewal vs. Standard Renewal
Exemptions
- Second Year Initial Licensure Exemption — A licensee whose initial license is issued during the second year of a biennial renewal period (Feb 1 of an odd year through Jan 31 of the following even year) is fully exempt from all continuing education credits for that first renewal.Full CE requirements resume at the licensee's next (second) renewal, which is a standard 30-credit period.
- First Year Reduced Requirement — A licensee whose initial license is issued during the first year of a biennial renewal period must complete only 15 of the 30 credits for that first renewal, rather than the full 30.Still must complete the 2.5-credit ethics course.Does not need to repeat the Jurisprudence Assessment Module (JAM) if one was already completed for initial licensure.
How You Can Complete Your CE
New Jersey CE Rules & Limits
Details specific to New Jersey that generic CE guides tend to miss:
- NJ measures CE in 'credits,' not 'hours,' but one credit is defined as 60 minutes of instructional time (N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.2(c)) -- functionally identical to a standard contact hour -- so total hours (30) is recorded directly with no unit conversion needed.
- No carry-over provision was found in any source: N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.1(a) requires the 30 credits to be earned 'during the preceding biennial period,' and 9.2(d) explicitly bars CE completed to cure a prior-period deficiency from counting toward the current period's requirement. Treated as carry_over:false.
- Distance learning / self-study is a single combined bucket capped at 10 of the 30 credits, covering videotape, audiotape, computer media, Internet, journal, or correspondence courses/programs/seminars (each requiring a final exam); there is no separate additional self-study cap beyond this shared 10-credit bucket (N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.3(d)(1)).
- Live webinars with real-time, synchronous instructor-learner interaction are explicitly NOT counted as distance learning -- they are treated as live 'contact courses' and do not count against the 10-credit distance-learning cap (FAQ, 'Are live webinars considered distance-learning courses?').
- CE ordered by the Board as a disciplinary or remedial measure, or to cure a prior-period CE deficiency, does not count toward the mandatory 30-credit requirement for the current renewal (N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.2(d)).
- Numerous fixed-value credit pathways exist beyond ordinary coursework, all counted toward the general 26 (non-jurisprudence/ethics) credits: clinical specialty certification/recertification by the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties = 15 credits/period; APTA-approved residency or fellowship completion = 15 credits/period; FSBPT Practice Review Tool (PRT) option = 3 credits/period; providing clinical instruction to a student = 1 credit per 40 hours, max 4 credits/period; initial or recertification CPR course = 2 credits; authoring a published journal article = 3 credits/article; writing a textbook chapter = 3 credits/chapter, max 10; editing a published textbook = 5 credits/book, max 10; presenting a new CE course = 2 credits/hour up to 10, repeat presentations = 1 credit/hour up to 10; practice-management courses = 1 credit/hour (N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.3(b),(d),(e),(f),(g),(h)).
- Audit: the Board conducts random audits; licensees must retain CE attendance/completion documentation for at least 4 years following the license renewal (N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.4(a)), and have 14 days from receipt of an audit letter to submit documentation (FAQ).
- PTAs (physical therapist assistants) are subject to the identical 30-credit, 4-credit jurisprudence-and-ethics, first-/second-year-licensee, and distance-learning rules as PTs under N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.2/9.3 -- no PT/PTA distinction was found in the CE requirements themselves.
- The official NJ Consumer Affairs regulations page for this board (njconsumeraffairs.gov/pt/pages/regulations.aspx) directs the public to the state's official LexisNexis-hosted Administrative Code (a paywalled/portal-gated source) for the authoritative current text, and separately links to Justia's unofficial mirror; this evidence instead cites the Cornell Legal Information Institute's free mirror of N.J.A.C. 13:39A-9.2/9.3/9.4 for exact regulatory quotations, cross-checked against the Board's own FAQ and Continuing Education pages, which quote the same rule text directly.
Provider Requirements
The Board publishes a biennial list of Board-approved CE courses and sponsors (current list: Feb 1, 2026 - Jan 31, 2028) on njconsumeraffairs.gov/pt. Certain sources are pre-approved by rule without individual course review: courses sponsored by APTA or APTANJ (one credit per hour), accredited post-graduate DPT coursework and related academic coursework (15 credits per course credit awarded), and the FSBPT Jurisprudence Assessment Module / Practice Review Tool. Courses not on the Board's pre-approved list are NOT submitted for advance approval by licensees; they may only be submitted for the Board's review and credit determination if the licensee is selected for a random CE audit.
Tips for New Jersey PTs
- Budget your 4 mandatory credits early: complete the 1.5-credit NJ JAM (via FSBPT) plus a separate 2.5-credit ethics course — a jurisprudence course from another provider only counts toward your general 26 credits, not the mandatory JAM requirement.
- If this is your first renewal, check which half of the cycle you were licensed in: licensed February 1 of the even year through January 31 of the odd year, you owe 15 credits; licensed in the following year, you owe zero.
- Cap distance-learning coursework (video, audio, Internet, journal, correspondence) at 10 of your 30 credits, and make sure each course ends with an exam — live webinars with real-time interaction don't count against this cap.
- Don't count on carrying extra credits into your next cycle — New Jersey requires all 30 credits to be earned within the specific biennial period being renewed, with no carry-over allowed.
- Keep certificates and attendance records for at least 4 years after renewal in case you're selected for the Board's random CE audit, and only submit non-pre-approved courses for review if you're actually audited.
Sources
Each figure on this page is taken directly from the New Jersey State Board of Physical Therapy Examiners'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.