How to Deregister a Child With SEND or an EHCP to Home Educate (UK)
Quick answer In England, if your child attends a mainstream school you can deregister them to...
Home educating in the UK is not funded by the state, and it does not exempt you from Universal Credit work-related requirements, which depend on your youngest child’s age. Child Benefit and disability or carer benefits continue as normal. Home-educated children cannot usually get free school meals. Costs range from almost nothing to a few thousand pounds a year.
If you are thinking about home educating in the UK, one of the first practical worries is money. There is a lot of confusion online, and some of it is simply wrong. This guide sets out the real position for England as it stands in 2026, flags where Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland differ, and points you to the live official pages so you can always check the current figures. Benefit rates and thresholds change, so where a number could go out of date we send you to GOV.UK rather than quoting something we cannot stand behind.
The single most important thing to understand is that the state provides a school place, and if you choose not to use it, the financial responsibility for your child’s education sits with you. That does not mean home education has to be expensive, but it does mean there is no automatic pot of money attached to it.
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No. There is no automatic funding for elective home education in England. The local authority has no legal duty to fund it, and no obligation to provide resources, tuition or exam entries. The Department for Education’s statutory guidance is clear that parents who choose to educate at home take on the financial responsibility for doing so, because a state-funded school place is already available to them. You can read the guidance in full at Elective home education (GOV.UK).
What local authorities do have is a discretionary power to help in some circumstances. Some authorities will, for example, contribute towards examination fees or offer access to certain resources or exam venues, but this is entirely at their discretion and practice varies enormously from one area to the next. You should not plan your finances around receiving anything. If you want to know what your own council offers, ask them directly and get the answer in writing, but treat any help as a bonus rather than an entitlement.
Home-educated children also do not attract the pupil premium, because that funding follows a child who is on a school roll. For an independent overview written for home educators, Ed Yourself is a well-regarded reference.
This is the point families most often misunderstand, so it is worth being precise. Choosing to home educate does not exempt you from Universal Credit work-related requirements. Your conditionality, meaning what you are expected to do in return for your payment, depends primarily on the age of your youngest child, not on whether that child is in school or educated at home. Home educators are held to exactly the same rules as families whose children attend school.
According to Universal Credit if you have children (GOV.UK), if you are the main carer (and a lone parent is automatically the main carer), the position tapers by the age of your youngest child. As currently set out on that page:
These expectations can be reduced to reflect your individual circumstances, health, or caring responsibilities, and they are agreed with your work coach in your Claimant Commitment. But the trigger is your child’s age, not their educational setting. The idea that home educating removes the requirement to look for work is a myth. The only things that genuinely change your requirements are the standard ones that apply to anyone: for example, being a carer in receipt of Carer’s Allowance, or having a health condition that limits your capability for work. For the general rules, see Universal Credit (GOV.UK). Home educators’ organisations such as Ed Yourself make the same point: home educating does not remove the work expectation.
A separate but related point: for a 16 to 19 year old, Universal Credit can continue to include the child element if the young person counts as a qualifying young person in approved education, and home education meeting the required criteria is treated as approved for these purposes. Always check your own claim details, because the rules for young people are technical.
Child Benefit is not affected by home educating. It is paid for a child normally up to age 16, and can continue for a “qualifying young person” aged 16 to 19 who is in approved, full-time, non-advanced education. Crucially, Child Benefit when your child turns 16 (GOV.UK) lists home education among the qualifying types of non-advanced education. “Full-time” here means more than an average of 12 hours a week of supervised study or course-related work, with fewer hours allowed where an illness or disability makes that appropriate.
You must tell HMRC that your 16 to 19 year old is continuing in education, otherwise the payments stop automatically on the 31 August on or after their 16th birthday. Only the person claiming the Child Benefit can do this. See Extend Child Benefit for your 16 to 19 year old (GOV.UK).
There was a real and significant change here, and it is worth getting right. Until September 2025, for Child Benefit to continue post-16 on the basis of home education, that home education generally had to have started before the child turned 16, unless it was recognised as appropriate within an education, health and care (EHC) plan. In other words, a young person who was at school up to 16 and then began home education afterwards could struggle to qualify.
From 1 September 2025, that requirement was removed. The change was made by The Child Benefit (Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2025, which omitted the relevant paragraphs of regulation 3 of the Child Benefit (General) Regulations 2006. The effect is that home education can now qualify a 16 to 19 year old for Child Benefit even if that home education began after they turned 16, without the previous need for an EHC plan to bridge the gap. The amendment also relaxed the full-time condition where a young person cannot meet the usual hours because of illness or disability. This expansion is summarised by Ed Yourself, who note some nuance in how “approval” is treated where home education starts after 16, so if your situation is post-16 home education started after school, it is worth reading their page and confirming with HMRC. The direction of travel, though, is clear: post-16 home educators are better off under the new rules than the old ones.
We will be honest rather than optimistic here. Home-educated children are generally not eligible for free school meals. Eligibility, as set out at Apply for free school meals (GOV.UK), depends on a child attending a school (or certain other settings), and a child educated at home is by definition not doing so. This is confirmed consistently across local authority guidance and in the House of Commons Library briefing on free school meals in England.
The one situation to be aware of is that if a home-educated child later takes up a school place, or attends a setting that qualifies, the usual eligibility rules would then apply. But there is no route to free school meals purely on the basis of being home educated, and you should budget on that basis.
Good news, and an important reassurance for families who came to home education because of a child’s additional needs. Disability Living Allowance (DLA) for children, Personal Independence Payment (PIP), and Carer’s Allowance are all assessed on the basis of need and care provided, not on school attendance. Deciding to home educate does not affect entitlement to any of them.
None of these turns on whether the child is in school, so home educating neither creates nor removes entitlement. Some home educating parents note it can be worth mentioning home education in a disability benefit application, because it helps explain the level of care and supervision a child needs, but that is about evidencing need, not about eligibility depending on schooling.
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Get the System for £49 →There is no official UK figure for what home education costs, and anyone quoting a precise national average is guessing. The honest answer is that it varies enormously depending on how you do it.
At the lower end, home education can be done very cheaply. Libraries are free, and there is a huge amount of high-quality free material online, from the BBC and educational charities to open curricula and community groups. Many families spend very little beyond ordinary household costs. Our guide to free home education resources UK families love is a good place to start.
At the higher end, costs climb quickly once you buy in structured curricula, pay for classes and clubs, hire tutors for specific subjects, and enter your child for formal qualifications. A rough sense of scale, rather than a precise figure, is that a family buying materials and some paid activities might spend anywhere from a few hundred pounds to a couple of thousand pounds a year, and more if using regular private tutoring.
The one clearly unavoidable cost if your child sits qualifications is exam entry. Because home-educated young people sit GCSEs and IGCSEs as private candidates, they must find an exam centre that accepts private candidates and pay that centre’s per-subject fee, which covers both the awarding body’s charge and the centre’s administration and venue costs. These fees are real and vary by centre and subject, with sciences and languages (which have practical or speaking components) typically costing more. Practical guidance for private candidates is available from the awarding bodies, for example Pearson’s private candidates page. Because pricing differs so much between centres, the sensible approach is to contact two or three private-candidate exam centres in your area well ahead of the entry deadlines and compare their per-subject fees. Our guide to home education exams and finding an exam centre walks through this in detail.
Universal Credit, Child Benefit, DLA, PIP and Carer’s Allowance are administered on largely the same basis across the UK, so the benefit points above apply broadly in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland too, though Scotland has some additional devolved support (for example the Scottish Child Payment) that is worth checking separately. Education law and free school meal policy, however, are devolved, so the detail on home education itself, local authority practice, and free school meals can differ. If you are outside England, check your own nation’s guidance for the education-specific points.
Home education is a choice the state respects but does not pay for. Your Child Benefit and any disability or carer benefits carry on as normal, and the September 2025 change made things easier for post-16 home educators claiming Child Benefit. But do not expect funding, free school meals, or any softening of your Universal Credit work requirements, which follow your youngest child’s age regardless of how they are educated. Budget realistically, treat any local authority help as a bonus, and always confirm current rates on the live GOV.UK pages before making decisions.
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