Home Ed

Home Educating a Child With ADHD in the UK: The Law and How to Make It Work

10 July 2026 · 4 min read · By Heather
✓ Fact-checked 9 July 2026
Home Educating a Child With ADHD in the UK: The Law and How to Make It Work
Quick answer

You have the right to home educate a child with ADHD, with or without a diagnosis. If they are at a mainstream school, even with an EHCP, you deregister the same way as any child. The real gift of home education for an ADHD learner is flexibility: short focused bursts, movement built in, hands-on learning, and lessons shaped around when your child can actually concentrate rather than a fixed timetable.

School and ADHD are often a difficult match. Sitting still for hours, holding focus through a lesson that has lost you, being told off for the very things your brain is wired to do. A lot of ADHD children arrive home exhausted and defeated, and a lot of families discover that home education fits them far better. Here is how to make it work, starting with the law.

The Complete UK Home Education Starter System

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 →

You do not need a diagnosis to home educate

Your right to educate your child at home applies whether they have a formal ADHD diagnosis, are on a waiting list, or have no diagnosis at all. It applies equally to children with special educational needs, with or without an EHCP. You do not need anyone’s permission based on your child’s needs.

Free Download

The Home Ed Starter Checklist

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.

Deregistering a child with ADHD

The process is the same as for any child, and depends only on the type of school. From a mainstream school, even with an EHCP, you deregister by writing to the head teacher, with no extra meetings or permission needed. From a special school, the local authority must consent first. Our step-by-step guide to deregistering from school covers it, and if your child has an EHCP, our guide to deregistering a child with SEND or an EHCP has the detail.

Free Tool
📚 Home Ed Cost CalculatorCompare school vs home ed costs →

Home educating an ADHD learner

This is where it gets good. Away from a classroom of thirty, you can build learning around how your child’s attention actually works.

Short, focused bursts. Ten or fifteen minutes of real concentration is worth more than an hour of drifting. Break work into small chunks with proper breaks between, and stop while it is still going well rather than pushing to a meltdown.

Build in movement. This is not a distraction from learning, it is often what makes learning possible. Movement helps many ADHD children regulate and refocus, so let them stand, fidget, bounce or pace, take a lap of the garden between tasks, or turn maths into counting steps. A body that is allowed to move frees up a mind to think.

Related home education guides

Make it hands-on and interesting. ADHD attention follows interest, so lean into it. Practical, active, project-based learning tends to land far better than worksheets, and a topic your child genuinely cares about can carry a lot of skills along with it. Our overview of home education approaches and styles can help you find the fit.

Reduce the load. A calm, low-clutter space, one instruction at a time, and visual reminders of what comes next all take pressure off a working memory that is already busy. Predictable rhythms help, even loose ones.

Protect their sense of themselves. Many ADHD children arrive from school having heard mostly what is wrong with them. Home education is a chance to flip that, catching what they do well and letting them feel capable again. That matters as much as any subject.

Deschool first if you need to

If your child left school worn down, do not rush into lessons. A stretch of low pressure to recover and reset often has to come before any learning sticks. Our guide to deschooling before you begin explains why, and it is especially true for children who have had a hard time.

Support you can still access

The ADHD Foundation is a well-established UK charity with guidance for families. Any EHCP-linked provision continues after you deregister, your local authority’s SEND Local Offer lists services in your area, and there are active home-ed SEND communities full of parents who understand. If your child is also highly able, our guide to home educating a gifted or twice-exceptional child may help, since ADHD and high ability often go together. And if you are just starting, our complete guide to starting home education covers the first steps.

Last reviewed 9 July 2026. General information for England, not legal or medical advice. Anything to do with diagnosis or medication is a matter for your GP or specialist. For ADHD support see the ADHD Foundation; for SEND legal advice see IPSEA. Confirm your own position with your local authority.

Free to join

Join the Conversation

Real talk from real UK mums. Ask questions, share advice, find local groups near you.

Join the Community →
2 verified members
The Complete UK Home Education Starter System

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 ↓

FREE DOWNLOAD

Home Ed Starter Checklist

Your legal rights, a deregistration letter template, and a calm first-week plan.

Download it free →
MOST POPULAR

The Complete UK Home-Ed Starter System

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 →
H
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.

More about Heather →
Free download

Get the free Home Ed Starter Checklist

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

We value your privacy We use cookies to improve your experience, analyse site traffic, and show you relevant content. Essential cookies are always active. You can choose to accept or reject optional cookies. Privacy Policy · Cookie Policy
Free: 4 instant home-ed tools, from deregistration letters to a benefits checker Explore the tools →