Home Ed

Home Education and Term-Time Holidays: No Fines, No Term Dates (UK)

12 July 2026 · 4 min read · By Heather
✓ Fact-checked 12 July 2026
Home Education and Term-Time Holidays: No Fines, No Term Dates (UK)
Quick answer

Home-educated children have no term dates, no attendance register and no headteacher to ask, so term-time holiday fines simply do not apply: penalty notices are for unauthorised absence from a school a child is registered at. Home-educating families can travel in June or September when everything is quieter and cheaper, and the trip itself can be part of the education. The one caveat: your duty to provide a suitable, full-time education continues year-round, so travel works alongside learning, not instead of it.

Last reviewed 12 July 2026. England-focused. General information, not legal advice.

Every summer the same story does the rounds: parents fined for taking the kids to Spain in the last week of term, headlines about prosecutions, and a family holiday that costs double in August what it did in June. Home-educating families read those stories with a quiet cup of tea, because almost none of it applies to them. Here is exactly how term-time holidays work when you home educate, including the honest caveats.

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 →

The fines system, and who it applies to

In England, term-time holiday fines are issued for unauthorised absence from a school the child is registered at. Under the national framework, a penalty notice must be considered once a child has 10 sessions (usually five school days) of unauthorised absence in a rolling ten-week period. The fine is £80 per parent, per child if paid within 21 days, rising to £160 after that; a second offence is charged at a flat £160; and by the third, councils move to prosecution under section 444 of the Education Act 1996, where fines can reach £2,500. The House of Commons Library keeps a plain-English summary of the term-time holiday rules.

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.

Every part of that machinery, the register, the authorised absence request, the headteacher’s discretion, the penalty notice, hangs off school registration. A home-educated child is not on a school roll, so there is no register to be absent from, no permission to seek and no fine to issue.

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

What that freedom actually looks like

The honest caveats

Three things to keep straight, because freedom is not the same as no responsibilities:

Extended travel and worldschooling

Some home-educating families take this further: a term following the Romans around Italy, a winter in Portugal, months of slow travel. That can be a wonderful education, and UK home-ed law does not stop you travelling. For long stints abroad, be aware that if you actually move away, English education law stops applying and the rules of wherever you are may take over, so keep a UK base and records if you intend to stay within the English system. For the everyday version, a fortnight in the sun in June, none of that complexity applies.

Term-time holidays and home education: FAQ

Can home-educated children go on holiday during term time?

Yes. Term dates, attendance registers and holiday fines only apply to children registered at a school. A home-educated child has no school roll, so the family can travel whenever suits them, provided a suitable education continues across the year as a whole.

Can you be fined for taking a home-educated child on holiday?

No. Term-time holiday penalty notices are issued for unauthorised absence from a school the child is registered at. With no school registration there is no unauthorised absence, so the fines framework does not apply to home-educated children.

Is it cheaper to go on holiday if you home educate?

Usually, yes. Travel prices peak in school holidays, so families who can travel in term time routinely pay less for the same trip and enjoy quieter venues. It is one of the practical perks of home educating, though not a sensible reason on its own to deregister a child.

Do holidays count as home education?

Travel can absolutely form part of a suitable education: history, geography, languages, nature and independence all happen on the road. Holidays are also allowed to just be holidays, as they are for schooled children. The duty is that your child’s education is suitable and full-time across the year, not that every day is a lesson.

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 →