Current recordkeeping summary
Keep a copy of the certificate of enrollment and your basic school records at home, including attendance notes, course lists, work samples, and high school records.
MS
Low regulationRecordkeeping is where many families either overcomplicate things or accidentally keep too little. This page separates what Mississippi appears to require from what is smart to keep for transfers, high school, college, and peace of mind.
Keep a copy of the certificate of enrollment and your basic school records at home, including attendance notes, course lists, work samples, and high school records.
The available sources reviewed here do not show a statewide homeschool hour or day minimum. HSLDA says Mississippi's 180-day public school requirement does not apply to home study programs.
No statewide standardized testing requirement appears in the available source set for Mississippi home study programs. Frequency: Not required statewide.
This site summarizes public source material and should be verified against current Mississippi agency guidance before a compliance deadline.
Free printables
Print these before you start: a state startup checklist, letter-of-intent template, attendance tracker, and high-school transcript template.
New homeschool families
A printable first-week checklist for choosing your pathway, handling notices or withdrawal, tracking deadlines, and setting up records.
Download PDF →
Notice or withdrawal paperwork
A parent-safe fill-in notice/withdrawal template with reminders to use official state forms when required.
Download PDF →
Recordkeeping
A simple school-year tracker for days, hours, holidays, field trips, and notes you can keep with your records.
Download PDF →
High school planning
A fill-in high-school transcript starter with course records, credit summary, and parent certification lines.
Download PDF →
These printables are general planning tools, not legal advice. Always verify the current rule on your state page and official source links before filing deadlines.
Keep a copy of the certificate of enrollment and your basic school records at home, including attendance notes, course lists, work samples, and high school records.
The available sources reviewed here do not show a statewide homeschool hour or day minimum. HSLDA says Mississippi's 180-day public school requirement does not apply to home study programs.
Usually yes. A simple folder with notice paperwork, attendance, curriculum, samples, and test/evaluation results makes transfers, high school planning, and future questions much easier.
Records are easier when you know which steps Mississippi expects first.
How to homeschool in MississippiLast verified: 2026-04-20. Last updated: 2026-04-20.