Homeschooling in Texas

A practical starting point for Texas families: what to file, what to track, and what state funding (if any) you can use.

At a glance

Laws & requirements
No Notification

No notice required. Operate as a private school covering required subjects.

ESA & funding
Limited / Targeted

Texas Education Savings Account (SB 2) phasing universal. Approx. ~$10,000+ private / $2,000 homeschool per student.

In-depth guides

Getting started in Texas

A high-level checklist tailored to Texas’s rules. Specifics like form numbers and deadlines live in the in-depth state laws guide above.

  1. 1

    Decide your homeschooling approach

    Pick the structure that fits your family — independent homeschool, an umbrella school or co-op, or a public charter that supports home-based learning. Your choice affects which rules apply to you.

  2. 2

    Begin homeschooling

    No notice or registration is required to start. Withdraw your child from public school in writing if they were previously enrolled, and you can begin instruction immediately.

  3. 3

    Choose curriculum and plan your year

    Choose curriculum that fits your child's grade level and any required subjects, then sketch a year-long plan you can adjust as you go.

  4. 4

    Check eligibility for Texas Education Savings Account (SB 2)

    Texas offers a limited or income-targeted program. Review the program's eligibility rules and award timing before counting on the funds for your school year.

Frequently asked

Do I need to notify the state to homeschool in Texas?

No. The state does not require notice, registration, or filing to start homeschooling. You can begin as soon as your child is withdrawn from any public-school enrollment.

Does Texas require homeschool standardized testing?

No standardized testing or evaluation is required by the state. Some families choose to test for their own benchmarking.

Can homeschool families in Texas access ESA or scholarship funding?

Texas offers Texas Education Savings Account (SB 2) (Phasing universal). Universal at full implementation. Income and disability priorities apply during initial enrollment.

How do I withdraw my child from public school in Texas?

Send a written withdrawal letter to the school's principal or registrar. Keep a dated copy. Once you have filed any state-required notice, your child is considered a homeschooler and the public school no longer needs to mark them absent.

Related states

Other states with similar regulation and a comparable funding posture.

Ready to start?

Numa keeps Texas compliance on autopilot.

  • Pre-filled forms for your state's notice and reporting
  • Attendance, portfolio, and assessment tracking by grade
  • Curriculum planning that matches state requirements
Get started in Texas