How to Write a Home Education Philosophy (and Respond to the Local Authority)
Quick answer If your local authority makes contact, you can respond with a short written statement,...

In England, your child is not of compulsory school age until the term after they turn five, so reception at four is not compulsory. Compulsory school age ends on the last Friday in June in the school year they turn sixteen. After that they must stay in some education or training until eighteen, but that does not have to be school.
Parents ask this at both ends of the journey. At the start: “Do I really have to send my four year old to school?” And later: “When can my child actually leave, or stop?” Both are answered by the same idea, compulsory school age, and it is worth getting the dates right because a surprising amount of worry comes from not knowing them.
Not at four. A child in England can start reception in the September after they turn four, but starting reception is a choice, not a legal duty. The legal duty begins at compulsory school age, and under section 8 of the Education Act 1996 a child reaches it on the first “prescribed day” on or after their fifth birthday.
There are three prescribed days in the year: 31 December, 31 March and 31 August (set by the Education (Start of Compulsory School Age) Order 1998). In plain terms, your child becomes of compulsory school age at the start of the term after their fifth birthday:
Everything you need before you begin home educating in the UK: your legal rights, a deregistration letter template, and a calm first-week plan. Free printable.
No spam. Unsubscribe in one click. We never share your email.
Until that day arrives, there is no legal requirement for your child to be in school or to be receiving a formal education at home. Many families who plan to home educate simply never send their child to school, and there is nothing to “deregister” because the child was never enrolled. Our guide to home educating a child who has never been to school covers that route.
If your child was born in the summer (roughly April to August), you can ask to delay their reception start by a year, so they begin in the September after they turn five rather than four. This is a request to the admissions authority rather than an automatic right, and the GOV.UK guidance on school starting age explains how to make the case. It is a separate question from home education, but useful to know if school is part of your plan.
Compulsory school age ends on the last Friday in June in the school year in which your child turns sixteen (set by the Education (School Leaving Date) Order 1997). From that date, your legal duty to secure a suitable education, and any question of school attendance, comes to an end.
Sixteen is no longer the end of the road. In England, young people must stay in some form of education or training until they are eighteen. Crucially, this does not have to mean school. As GOV.UK sets out on when you can leave school, the participation duty can be met by staying in full-time education (including sixth form or college), starting an apprenticeship or traineeship, or spending 20 hours or more a week working or volunteering while in part-time education or training. Continuing to educate at home, working towards qualifications, counts as education for these purposes, so home-educating families are not forced back into school at sixteen.
You can home educate throughout compulsory school age and beyond. A few reassuring points:
The dates above are for England. The other nations differ, so if you are outside England, check your own nation’s guidance:
Related home education guides
Working out the timing? Get the whole legal picture in one place.
A plain-English legal foundation, ready-to-send deregistration and local-authority letters, planners and a curriculum guide, all current for 2026, so you know exactly where you stand at every stage.
Get the System for £49 →Real talk from real UK mums. Ask questions, share advice, find local groups near you.
Join the Community →Found this helpful? Take the next step ↓
Your legal rights, a deregistration letter template, and a calm first-week plan.
Download it free →Everything to start home educating in the UK — the legal startup kit, deregistration and LA letters, curriculum options and a weekly planner, in one system.
Get it - £49 →Pop in your email and we will send the starter checklist straight away: the legal basics, how to deregister, and a calm first week. Plus one short email a week with new guides, free tools, and what is changing in the law. No spam, ever.
Free forever · Unsubscribe in one click · We never share your email
Everything you need before you begin home educating in the UK: your legal rights, a deregistration letter template, and a calm first-week plan. Free printable.
Join 2,400+ UK mums on The Mellow Post. Unsubscribe any time.