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Florida homeschool laws for 2026: notify your county superintendent, complete annual evaluations, and access the FES voucher ($8,000+/yr). Requirements, deadlines & local co-ops.
Florida homeschool law overview
What you need to know to start homeschooling in Florida
Everything about home education in Florida lives under Florida Statute 1002.41. This is the law you'll want to bookmark. It defines home education, spells out the notification process, and covers evaluation requirements. If anyone ever questions the legality of what you're doing, this is your reference.
Florida recognizes two main paths for educating your child outside of traditional school: the home education program (Section 1002.41) and enrollment in a private tutoring program. This guide focuses on the home education path, which is what the vast majority of homeschool families in Florida use.
This is the only mandatory step to legally begin homeschooling in Florida. You must send a written notice of intent to your county school district superintendent within 30 days of starting your homeschool program.
The notice needs to include:
That's it. No curriculum approval. No teaching credentials. No standardized test scores upfront. Just a simple letter saying, "Hey, we're homeschooling now."
Most counties accept this via mail or email. Some have a specific form on their website. I'd recommend checking your county's school district website first, but a straightforward letter works just fine. Keep a copy for your records (always keep copies of everything).
If you're withdrawing your child from a public school, you'll also want to formally withdraw them from the school. This is a separate step from the superintendent notification. Go to the school, fill out their withdrawal form, and make sure they note "home education" as the reason. Don't just stop showing up. You want a clean paper trail.
Florida law requires you to maintain a portfolio of records and materials. Think of this as your evidence that education is actually happening. The statute says it should include a log of educational activities and be "made contemporaneously with the instruction." In plain English: keep track of what you do as you go.
What should go in your portfolio:
You are required to preserve this portfolio for two years. After two years, you can toss it. But honestly, I keep everything in a binder per school year. It takes five minutes a week to file things, and it gives you peace of mind if you ever need to show it.
Nobody is going to come knocking on your door asking to see your portfolio out of the blue. The portfolio is primarily for the annual evaluation and for your own records.
Here's something that surprises a lot of new homeschool parents: Florida does not specify required subjects for home education programs. The statute simply says the parent must provide "a sequentially progressive instruction" to the student. That's intentionally broad.
That said, common sense applies. Your evaluator (if you go the certified teacher route) is going to want to see that your child is learning to read, write, and do math. Beyond that, you have enormous freedom. Many families cover the basics and then let their child's interests drive a big portion of the curriculum.
If you plan to have your child attend a Florida college or university, be aware that they'll need to meet admission requirements, which typically include four years of English, four of math (through Algebra II at minimum), three of natural science, three of social science, and two of a foreign language. Plan your high school years accordingly.
Need a letter of intent?
Generate a free, customized letter that meets Florida's requirements.
Annual evaluation and assessment options
Every year, you must have your child evaluated. Florida gives you several options for how to do this, which is one of the things that makes the state so flexible.
This is the most common choice. You find a Florida-certified teacher (they don't have to be currently teaching in a school), show them your portfolio, and they write a brief evaluation stating that your child is making satisfactory academic progress. Many homeschool groups maintain lists of evaluators who do this for a small fee, usually $25 to $75.
Your child takes a nationally normed standardized test and scores at or above the 23rd percentile. That's it. Not the 50th. Not the 80th. The 23rd percentile. Common tests families use include the Iowa Assessments, the Stanford Achievement Test, the CAT (California Achievement Test), or the PSAT/SAT for older students. You can administer many of these at home.
A licensed or certified psychologist evaluates your child and determines they're making adequate progress. This is less common but useful for families with children who have learning differences that make standardized testing a poor fit.
Any other method agreed upon by you and the superintendent. This is a catch-all provision. In practice, most families use Option 1 or Option 2.
The evaluation must be filed with your county superintendent by the end of each school year. If your child does not demonstrate adequate progress, the superintendent will put you on a year of probation. You'll have a year to bring things up to standard. If the child still isn't showing progress after the probation year, you may be required to enroll them in a public or private school. But let me be real: this almost never happens. The bar is reasonable, and if you're putting in genuine effort, your child will clear it.
Vouchers, scholarships, and tax credits
Florida's Family Empowerment Scholarship for Educational Options (FES-EO) is one of the most generous school choice programs in the country, and homeschool families can access it.
As of 2025-2026, the scholarship provides approximately $8,000 or more per student per year. The exact amount varies slightly based on the funding formula, but it has been increasing. This money goes into a personalized spending account that you can use for approved educational expenses.
As of the 2023-2024 school year, Florida expanded the FES to universal eligibility. That means every Florida student is eligible regardless of family income. Whether your household income is $40,000 or $400,000, your child can qualify.
Applications go through Step Up For Students (stepupforstudents.org), which is the nonprofit scholarship funding organization that administers the program. The application window typically opens in February for the following school year, but there are rolling acceptance periods. Apply early because funding can be allocated on a first-come, first-served basis in some situations.
One important note: if you accept the FES, your child must take a nationally normed standardized test each year. This is separate from the home education evaluation requirement. The results are reported to Step Up For Students. There is no minimum score requirement for the test, but you do have to take it.
I cannot overstate how much the FES changes the economics of homeschooling. $8,000 per child per year covers a lot of curriculum, co-op fees, extracurricular activities, and tutoring. If you're homeschooling in Florida and haven't looked into this, do it today.
Florida Virtual School is a free, state-funded online school that any Florida resident can access. While FLVS offers full-time enrollment, many homeschool families use it as a supplement. You can cherry-pick individual courses without enrolling full-time.
This is incredibly useful for subjects where you want a structured course with a real teacher. Maybe your teenager wants AP Chemistry and you don't feel equipped to teach it. Sign them up for that one class through FLVS. It's free, it's accredited, and it comes with a teacher who grades the work.
FLVS Flex (the part-time option) lets students work at their own pace, which fits naturally into a homeschool schedule. They also offer some courses that are instructor-led with set deadlines, which can be good for kids who need more external accountability.
Keep in mind that FLVS courses will appear on an official transcript, which can be helpful for college admissions. Many homeschool families use a mix of parent-taught courses and FLVS to build a strong high school transcript.
More resources for your homeschool journey
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Common questions about homeschooling in Florida