South Dakota CPA (Certified Public Accountant) Continuing Education Requirements

At a Glance
120
Contact Hours
3 yr
Renewal Cycle
Yes
Online Allowed
No
Carry-Over
South Dakota CPAs must earn 120 hours of CPE over a rolling three-year period (July 1 to June 30) with a 20-hour annual minimum. South Dakota is notable for having no ethics requirement. License renewal is by August 1 annually.
Disclaimer: This information is for reference purposes only. Requirements are set by the South Dakota Board of Accountancy and may change. Always verify current requirements directly with the board.

Requirements Overview

South Dakota requires 120 hours of CPE across a rolling three-year reporting period from July 1 to June 30, with at least 20 hours earned each year. What sets South Dakota apart from nearly every other state is the absence of a mandatory ethics requirement — there are no required ethics hours at all.

Behavioral and motivational courses are limited to 24 hours per reporting period for public accountants. Published material credit is capped at 50% of required hours, and college or university instruction is limited to 60 hours per reporting period. Self-study and nano learning courses must come from NASBA-approved providers.

Nonresident certificate holders who meet CPE requirements in their principal place of business state are considered compliant with South Dakota. However, if that state has no CPE requirement, the nonresident must comply with South Dakota's standards. Partial credits are accepted in 0.2 and 0.5 increments. License renewal is due August 1 annually.

Exemptions

How You Can Complete Your CE

💻
Online / Self-Study
Allowed, no limit
🏫
In-Person / Live
Allowed

Provider Requirements

South Dakota accepts CPE credits for programs offered by National Registry (NASBA) sponsors. Self-study and nano learning courses must be from a NASBA approved provider.

Tips for South Dakota CPAs

Sources

Verified March 26, 2026 · Primary source · Official state board

CPA Requirements in Nearby States

Other Professions in South Dakota