Home Educating a Child With Dyslexia in the UK: A Practical Guide
Quick answer You can home educate a child with dyslexia, with or without a formal diagnosis....

Many families turn to home education when a child becomes too anxious to attend school, now often called emotionally based school avoidance (EBSA). You have every right to home educate, and for some children it is the thing that lets them recover. But it is a big decision worth making with eyes open: the school and local authority may have duties to support your child while they are still on roll, and deregistering ends those. Take advice, breathe, and choose the path that genuinely fits your child.
When a child stops being able to go to school through anxiety, it is one of the most frightening things a parent can face. The tears, the tummy aches that are completely real, the child at the door who simply cannot make their body go in. If that is where you are, please know two things: it is not naughtiness, and you are not failing. This is worth understanding carefully before you decide anything.
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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 →Emotionally based school avoidance, or EBSA, is the term now used for a child who cannot attend school because of overwhelming anxiety, fear or distress. It is different from choosing not to go. The child often desperately wants to be able to attend and cannot, and the physical signs of panic are genuine. It is especially common in autistic children, those with SEND, and children with a demand-avoidant profile.
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This is the honest part that many quick answers skip. Home education is a real and valid choice, but it is not the only one, and once you deregister, the school and local authority are no longer responsible for your child’s education. So it is worth knowing what support exists while your child is still on the school roll:
None of this is to talk you out of home education. It is so that if you do choose it, you choose it as the best option, not the only one you felt was left. Organisations like IPSEA and your local SENDIASS give free, specific advice on exactly this, and it is genuinely worth a conversation before you decide.
For plenty of anxious children, it is, and the relief when the daily battle stops can be profound. If you decide to go ahead, you deregister in writing, as our guide to deregistering from school explains (a special school needs the local authority’s consent first).
Related home education guides
Then, crucially, do not rebuild school at home. A child recovering from school-related anxiety usually needs a long, genuine stretch of no pressure first, to let their nervous system settle and to relearn that learning can feel safe. This is deschooling, and for an anxious child it matters more than anything on a curriculum. Our guide to deschooling before you begin explains how, and it can take longer than you expect, which is completely normal.
From there, go gently: low demands, following their interests, rebuilding confidence in tiny steps, and letting connection come before content. Our overview of home education approaches and styles can help, and because school anxiety and autism so often travel together, our guide to home educating an autistic child may speak to your situation too.
This is hard on parents, and you cannot pour from an empty cup. For understanding and community, Not Fine in School is a UK peer-support network built specifically for families in exactly this position, and organisations like Family Action and YoungMinds offer guidance on child anxiety. You are far from alone in this, even though it can feel that way at 8:40 in the morning.
If you are ready to begin, our complete guide to starting home education covers the practical first steps, and our guide to returning to school later is a reminder that whatever you choose now, no door is closed for good.
Last reviewed 9 July 2026. General information for England, not legal, medical or mental-health advice. If your child is struggling, speak to your GP. For free SEND and school-attendance advice see IPSEA and your local SENDIASS; for peer support see Not Fine in School. Duties on schools and local authorities are complex and worth specific advice before you deregister.
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