🌲 Homeschooling in Ohio

Ohio has clear homeschool requirements — annual notification, instructional hour minimums, a broad required subject list, and an annual assessment. Here is everything Ohio families need to know to homeschool legally in 2026.

Ohio Homeschool Requirements (2026)

Ohio is a moderately regulated homeschool state. The requirements are consistent and predictable year to year — file an annual notification, meet instructional hour minimums, cover required subjects, and complete an annual assessment. Once you understand the framework, compliance is straightforward.

📋 Step 1 — Annual Notification to Superintendent

📚 Required Subjects

Ohio has one of the longer required subject lists among US states. You choose the curriculum, materials, and teaching methods for each subject. PE, art, and health can be fulfilled through daily activities, community classes, and co-ops — not everything needs to be formal seated instruction.

📅 Instructional Hour Requirements

📊 Annual Assessment (Required)

Ohio Annual Assessment Options

📃 Standardized Test

Administer a nationally normed achievement test. Results are submitted to the district superintendent. Popular options include the Iowa Test, Stanford 10, and the CAT.

👨‍🏫 Licensed Teacher Review

An Ohio-licensed teacher evaluates your child's educational progress and submits a written report to the district superintendent. Many families prefer this for its flexibility.

📁 Portfolio Review

Submit a portfolio of the student's work to the superintendent for review, demonstrating adequate educational progress across required subjects.

📁 Record-Keeping

⚠️ Always verify current requirements with the Ohio Department of Education (education.ohio.gov) or HSLDA (hslda.org). Laws can change and this page is for general reference only. Christian Home Educators of Ohio (cheohome.org) is an excellent Ohio-specific resource.

Withdrawing from Public School in Ohio

If your child is currently enrolled in an Ohio public school, notify the school in writing that you are withdrawing your child to homeschool. Once withdrawn, file your annual notification with the local superintendent within 30 days of beginning to homeschool. Keep copies of all correspondence.

How Lumi Helps Ohio Homeschool Families

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Core Required Subjects Covered
Language Arts, Math, Science, Social Studies, and Health — Ohio's core academic requirements — plus Coding, Art, Music, US History, and more across 16+ total subjects.
Instructional Hour Logging
Every Lumi session is timestamped automatically. Use the session logs to track progress toward Ohio's 900–1,000 annual instructional hour requirement.
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Printable Report Cards
Auto-generated report cards by subject and grading period — useful documentation for Ohio's annual assessment and your records file.
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Lesson Activity Logs
Complete timestamped lesson records by subject — perfect for Ohio's portfolio assessment option submitted to the superintendent.
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Printable Workbooks
Six grade-level standards-aligned workbooks. Print pages as portfolio work samples demonstrating progress across Ohio's required subjects.
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Flat Family Price
$39.99/month for all your kids. Up to 8 learner profiles on one account. Ohio families never pay per child.

Frequently Asked Questions — Homeschooling in Ohio

Do I need to notify my school district before homeschooling in Ohio?
Yes. Ohio requires you to file a written notification of intent with your local school district superintendent before beginning to homeschool, or within 30 days of starting. You must re-file this notification every year. The notification includes basic information about your child and assurance that required subjects will be taught.
How many hours per year does Ohio require for homeschooling?
Ohio requires 900 instructional hours per year for grades 1 through 6, and 1,000 hours per year for grades 7 through 12. There is no minimum daily hour requirement — you distribute hours across the year however works best for your family. Lumi's session logs help you track cumulative hours automatically.
What annual assessment options does Ohio allow?
Ohio allows three options: (1) a nationally normed standardized test submitted to the district, (2) an evaluation by an Ohio-licensed teacher with a written report submitted to the district, or (3) a portfolio of student work submitted to the superintendent. You can choose a different method each year.
Does the teaching parent need a teaching license in Ohio?
No teaching license is required. Ohio requires the teaching parent to have a high school diploma or GED. If the parent does not meet this requirement, instruction must be supervised by an Ohio-licensed teacher. No college degree or teaching certification beyond a diploma is needed.
Can my Ohio homeschooled child participate in public school activities?
Ohio law (ORC 3321.04) allows homeschool students to participate in extracurricular activities at their local public school, including sports and clubs. Contact your local school district for specific eligibility requirements and enrollment timelines, as procedures vary by district.
What is the best homeschool curriculum app for Ohio families?
Lumi Academy covers Ohio's core academic requirements — Language Arts, Math, Science, Social Studies, and Health — with automatic session logging for hour tracking, printable report cards, and timestamped lesson logs for the portfolio assessment option. Full K–8 curriculum on any device for up to 8 kids at a flat family price.

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