Home Educating an Anxious Child or After School Avoidance (EBSA) in the UK
Quick answer Many families turn to home education when a child becomes too anxious to attend...

Not every home-educating family wants to build the whole thing themselves. If you are working, if your child is doing GCSEs, or if you have pulled a child out of school and simply need someone to take the teaching off your hands, an online school can be the calmest option there is. It is also the most expensive, so it is worth understanding exactly what you are paying for and whether you need the full package or just part of it. This guide compares the main UK online schools, then covers the lower-cost routes most families actually start with.
When you home educate in the UK you are legally responsible for providing a suitable, full-time education (Education Act 1996, section 7), but you decide how. That can mean teaching your child yourself, using free and paid resources, hiring a tutor, or enrolling them in an online school that provides the lot. An online school gives you:
The trade-off is cost and flexibility. A full-time live school costs thousands a year and runs to a timetable; a self-paced distance school costs far less and lets your child work when they like, but puts more of the day-to-day structure back on you. Neither is “better”, they suit different families.
Starting home education? You do not have to work it out from scratch.
Everything in one place, written for the law as it stands in 2026: the legal foundation, ready-to-send deregistration and local-authority letters, printable weekly and term planners, a curriculum guide by subject, and record-keeping logs. The letters and planners, done for you.
Get the System for £49 →These are the best known online schools serving home-educating families in the UK. Fees are the latest we could verify and are shown as a starting point only, because every school prices by stage and, in some cases, by subject.
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.
| School | Ages | Style | Qualifications | From (per year)* | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wolsey Hall Oxford | 4–18 | Self-paced, personal tutor | IGCSE, A-level | ~£1,200 (priced per subject) | Flexibility and budget |
| King’s InterHigh | 7–19 | Live + recorded lessons | IGCSE, A-level, IB Diploma | ~£4,000 | Full-time British school feel |
| Minerva Virtual Academy | ~11–18 | Live lessons + mentoring | IGCSE, A-level | ~£8,830 | Pastoral support and structure |
| Cambridge Home School Online | 5–18 | Live small-group lessons | IGCSE, A-level | ~£10,950 (Primary £6,099) | Academic rigour |
| Oxford Home Schooling | ~11–18 | Self-paced distance courses | IGCSE, A-level | ~£15/month core | Single subjects, distance study |
| Nisai Virtual Academy | ~11–16 | Live online lessons | GCSE and functional skills | On application | SEND and inclusion, LA-arranged places |
*Starting fees are indicative and change yearly. Exams, materials and deposits can be extra. Confirm current fees with each school.
A long-established distance-learning college (founded in 1894) covering ages 4 to 18. Study is self-paced with a personal tutor rather than live timetabled lessons, and you pay per subject, which keeps costs down and makes it easy to do just one or two subjects alongside other home education. It is one of the most affordable and flexible options, and popular with families who travel or want a part-time approach. Fees are priced per subject and start from roughly £1,200 a year depending on the subjects you choose, plus a £95 registration fee. Wolsey Hall fees →
One of the original online schools (founded 2005) and part of the Inspired Education group, King’s InterHigh runs a full timetable of live and recorded lessons for ages 7 to 19, all the way to A-level and the International Baccalaureate. It is a registered independent school offering Pearson Edexcel and Cambridge International qualifications, and it feels the closest to a traditional British school online, with a form group and pastoral structure. Fees start from around £4,000 a year and rise to roughly £7,000 for GCSE and A-level years, more for the IB. King’s InterHigh fees →
A DfE-accredited online school for secondary and sixth-form ages, built around live lessons plus one-to-one mentoring and a strong emphasis on wellbeing and flexibility. It is a premium option: the annual plan is around £8,830 (including a deposit), with termly and monthly plans available, and exams are charged separately. Families tend to choose it for the pastoral support and the mentor relationship rather than the lowest price. Minerva fees →
An independent online school teaching in small live classes from around age 7 through to A-level, with a notably academic, exam-focused approach and a good record of progression to competitive universities. Fees are around £10,950 a year (Primary Prep £6,099), among the highest here. If your priority is academic rigour and small class sizes, it is worth a look. CHS fees →
A self-paced distance-learning provider for roughly ages 11 to 18, priced pay-as-you-go rather than as a full-time school. A core subscription is around £14.99 a month for online access to the materials, and you then pay only for what you use (roughly £10 per fifteen-minute tutorial and £25 to £30 to mark a mock exam paper). Like Wolsey Hall, it suits families who want to cover one or two subjects to exam level without committing to a full timetable or full-time fees. Oxford Home Schooling pricing →
Nisai runs live online lessons with a strong focus on inclusion and pupils with additional needs, and often works through schools and local authorities as well as directly with families. If your child has SEND, anxiety or an EHCP, or if your local authority is involved, it is worth asking whether a Nisai place can be arranged. Direct fees are on application.
A note on Academy 21 and similar: some online providers (such as Academy 21) mainly deliver alternative provision commissioned by schools and local authorities rather than places bought directly by parents. If your child is on a school roll or has an EHCP, ask the school or LA whether they will fund online provision before paying yourself.
Most families do not start with a full-time online school, and many never need one. It is worth being honest about the ladder of options, cheapest first:
Whichever route you choose, the same revision and workbook staples come up again and again. They are cheap, they map to the exam specs, and they work alongside any school or tutor:
Browse home-ed workbooks on Amazon →
Work through these in order and the shortlist usually picks itself:
Anywhere from around £15 a month to £11,000 a year, depending on the model. Self-paced options are cheapest: Oxford Home Schooling is about £14.99 a month for core materials, and Wolsey Hall Oxford is priced per subject from roughly £1,200 a year. Full-time live schools cost more: King’s InterHigh from about £4,000, Minerva Virtual Academy around £8,830, and Cambridge Home School Online around £10,950. Exam fees are usually extra. Always confirm current fees on the school’s own site.
In practice yes. Your child is not on a physical school roll, so you remain the person legally responsible for their education under section 7 of the Education Act 1996, and you are electively home educating using an online school as your chosen method. The school provides the teaching, but the legal duty stays with you.
No. There is no state funding for elective home education in England, so online school fees are paid by the family, unless a child has an EHCP or a local-authority arrangement that specifically funds online provision. Always check with your LA before assuming any funding.
Yes. Most online schools enter their students for IGCSEs and A-levels directly, and universities accept home-educated and online-schooled applicants through UCAS on the same basis as anyone else. The qualifications are identical; only the setting is different.
There is no single answer, but schools that lead with pastoral care, small classes and mentoring, such as Minerva Virtual Academy and Nisai, are often a better fit than a large full-time timetable. If your child has an EHCP, ask your local authority whether provision can be arranged or funded before paying privately.
If you want the whole of secondary taken off your hands, with live teaching and exams sorted, King’s InterHigh is the established full-time choice and Minerva the more pastoral, premium one. If you want flexibility and a far smaller bill, Wolsey Hall Oxford and Oxford Home Schooling let you buy exactly the subjects you need and nothing more. And if you are only just starting out, do not feel you have to spend thousands: a solid plan, a few good workbooks and a tutor for the tricky subjects gets a lot of families exactly where they want to be. Whatever you choose, confirm this year’s fees before you commit, and start with the basics of getting home education set up properly.
Real talk from real UK mums. Ask questions, share advice, find local groups near you.
Join the Community →Ready to make a start, the calm way?
Everything in one place, written for the law as it stands in 2026: the legal foundation, ready-to-send deregistration and local-authority letters, printable weekly and term planners, a curriculum guide by subject, and record-keeping logs. The letters and planners, done for you.
Get the System for £49 →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.