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Homeschooling in the UK: Rules, Cost and How to Start (2026)

12 July 2026 · 6 min read · By Heather
✓ Fact-checked 12 July 2026
Homeschooling in the UK: Rules, Cost and How to Start (2026)
Quick answer

Homeschooling is completely legal in the UK and you do not need anyone’s permission, teaching qualifications, or a special licence. In UK law it is called home education: you take responsibility for your child’s education under section 7 of the Education Act 1996, deregister them from school with one letter if they currently attend, and educate them in whatever way suits your child. There is no national curriculum requirement, no set hours, and no exams you must sit. It costs as little or as much as you choose.

Last reviewed 12 July 2026. England-focused, with the differences for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland flagged where they matter. General information, not legal advice.

If you have been searching “homeschooling UK”, here is the first thing worth knowing: in British law and in most British communities, it is called home education (officially, “elective home education”). Homeschooling is the American word for the same thing, and plenty of UK families use both. Whatever you call it, this guide covers what it actually is, whether it is legal, what it costs, and how to start, with links to the deeper guides for each step.

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Is homeschooling legal in the UK?

Yes, completely, and it always has been. The law in England and Wales is section 7 of the Education Act 1996, which says a parent must ensure their child receives an efficient, full-time education suitable to their age, ability and aptitude, “either by regular attendance at school or otherwise“. Those two words, “or otherwise”, are homeschooling. Education is compulsory; school is not.

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You do not need to apply, register in advance, or be approved. You do not need teaching qualifications, and you do not need to be an expert in every subject. Your job is to make sure a suitable education happens, not to personally deliver every lesson like a trained teacher. Our guide to starting home education in the UK walks through the whole process step by step.

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The nations differ slightly. In Scotland, you need the council’s consent to withdraw a child from a state school (though not if they have never attended one). Wales works like England for deregistration. Northern Ireland is the lightest-touch of all. Each link covers the exact rules for that nation.

How do you start homeschooling in the UK?

If your child is at a mainstream school in England, you write one letter to the headteacher stating that you are withdrawing them to educate them at home. The school must remove them from the roll and inform the local authority. You do not need permission, and the school cannot refuse. We publish the exact deregistration letter template free, with the current legal references.

There are exceptions where you must involve the local authority first: children at special schools, children under a School Attendance Order, and certain safeguarding situations. If your child has an EHCP at a mainstream school, you can still deregister in the normal way; see our guide to deregistering a child with SEND or an EHCP.

If your child has never been to school, there is nothing to deregister. You simply do not apply for a place, and let the council know you are home educating if they ask.

What are the rules once you are homeschooling?

How much does homeschooling cost in the UK?

Anywhere from almost nothing to several thousand pounds a year, depending entirely on how you do it. Libraries, free museums and free online resources can carry most of a primary education; costs climb when you add paid curricula, tutors, exam entries (roughly £150 to £500 per GCSE subject as a private candidate) or a full online school. There is no state funding for home education, and benefits like Universal Credit do not change. We have broken down the real cost of homeschooling in the UK, and our free cost calculator works out a realistic budget for your family.

The questions every new homeschooler asks

Socialisation? Home-educated children socialise through home-ed groups, sports, clubs and ordinary friendships, often across a wider age range than a classroom. Finding your local home-ed community.

GCSEs and university? Fully available. Home-educated teenagers sit the same GCSEs and A-levels as everyone else and apply to university through UCAS like anyone else. How home-educated children get to university.

What if it does not work out? You can apply for a school place again at any time through in-year admissions. Going back to school after home educating.

Homeschooling in the UK: FAQ

Is homeschooling the same as home education?

Yes. Homeschooling is the American term; UK law and councils say home education or elective home education. They mean the same thing: parents taking responsibility for their child’s education instead of a school. Most UK home-ed groups and official guidance use “home education”.

Do I need qualifications to homeschool my child in the UK?

No. There is no qualification requirement of any kind. The law requires the education to be suitable to your child’s age, ability and aptitude, not that you personally hold a degree or teaching certificate. Many families use tutors, online resources or group classes for subjects they are less confident in.

Do homeschooled children in the UK have to take exams?

No exams are compulsory, including SATs. Most families choose to take GCSEs or IGCSEs eventually because they open doors to college and university, and home-educated students sit them as private candidates at registered exam centres, paying a per-subject fee.

Can the council stop me from homeschooling?

Not if you are providing a suitable education. The local authority can make informal enquiries and, only if it appears no suitable education is happening, can it eventually issue a School Attendance Order. For families providing a genuine education and responding to enquiries with a short written summary, this is rare.

How many hours a day is homeschooling in the UK?

The law sets no hours. “Full-time” education does not mean replicating a 9-to-3 school day: one-to-one learning is far more efficient, and many families find two to three focused hours a day, plus reading, projects and real-world learning, more than matches a school week.

Where to go next

Start with the step-by-step starting guide, budget honestly with the cost breakdown, and if you are still weighing it up, read the honest home education vs school comparison. Every guide on this site is written by a home-educating parent and checked against the actual law.

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By Heather

Heather is the founder of Darling Mellow and a home-educating mum of two, with CPD training in child development. She writes practical, honest guides for UK home-educating families, each one fact-checked against current law and official GOV.UK guidance. Darling Mellow is the resource she wished she had when she started.

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