Low-regulation state
Texas Homeschool Laws and Requirements
A practical starting point for notice, portfolio, assessment, teacher qualification, and curriculum planning in Texas.
Quick summary
Texas has very minimal homeschool requirements. Homeschools are treated as private schools. Parents must use a written curriculum covering basic subjects in a visual format. No notification, testing, or portfolio required. Texas is one of the most homeschool-friendly states.
Last reviewed 2025-01-01. This page is a planning aid, not legal advice.
Compliance checklist
- ✓Texas does not require routine homeschool notice in this quick-reference data, but keep your own start date records.
- ✓Keep simple attendance, reading, work samples, and purchase records even if a portfolio is not routinely submitted.
- ✓Use parent checklists or periodic reviews to document progress even when standardized assessment is not required.
- ✓Review teacher qualification language: None required.
- ✓Verify current rules with the official state source before filing, buying, or making legal decisions.
Curriculum fit for Texas
Texas families have more flexibility, so the curriculum decision can focus heavily on child fit, budget, worldview, parent workload, and consistency. Keep basic records anyway so transitions stay easy.
See curriculum picks for Texas →FAQ
Do I need to notify anyone to homeschool in Texas?
Texas does not require routine notice in this quick-reference data, but families should still keep basic records and verify current law before starting.
Does Texas require a homeschool portfolio or assessment?
Texas portfolio required: no. Assessment required: no. Requirements can change, so verify before relying on this summary.
What curriculum works best for Texas homeschool families?
Texas families have more flexibility, so the curriculum decision can focus heavily on child fit, budget, worldview, parent workload, and consistency. Keep basic records anyway so transitions stay easy.