MT

Medium regulation

Homeschooling in Montana for military families

Military families need a homeschool plan that is legally clean and operationally realistic. In Montana, start with the state checklist, then build around portable records, flexible pacing, quick state-law checks after moves, and stable curriculum routines.

Plain-English note: this is a parent guide, not legal advice. Use the official source links at the bottom of the page before a deadline or filing decision.

Montana compliance baseline

  1. 1Check Montana's notice rule: Yes. Families notify the county superintendent each school fiscal year that the child is being homeschooled.
  2. 2Calendar the deadline: During each school fiscal year, which runs from July 1 through June 30. The HSLDA source suggests filing at the beginning of each school year.
  3. 3Build around required subjects: English language arts, Mathematics, Social studies, Science, Health, Arts, Career education
  4. 4Keep records that match the state summary: Keep attendance records for your homeschool and make them available to the county superintendent on request. Families should also keep a copy of the yearly notice and strong academic records, especially for high school, even though the available sources mainly speak to attendance.
  5. 5Plan for testing or evaluation if required: No statewide testing requirement is described in the available sources reviewed here.
  6. 6Use official source links before making a filing or deadline decision.

Operating model

portable records, flexible pacing, quick state-law checks after moves, and stable curriculum routines

Curriculum fit

Choose tools that reduce parent bottlenecks: clear lesson plans, independent work where appropriate, reusable family subjects, and simple recordkeeping.

Support options

Co-ops, umbrella schools, virtual options, sports, and dual enrollment vary by state. Current Montana notes: Yes, but it is optional. The available sources mainly describe Montana's direct parent-run homeschool path. The raw sources do not describe a separate virtual-school homeschool pathway. Families may use online materials privately, but public virtual enrollment would be a different arrangement from direct homeschooling.

Related homeschool guides for Montana

These internal links connect curriculum, schedule, special-needs, testing, and state-law pages so parents can move from a search question to the legal checklist without starting over.

Free printables

Download the homeschool starter kit

Print these before you start: a state startup checklist, letter-of-intent template, attendance tracker, and high-school transcript template.

View all downloads

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.

Frequently asked questions

Can military families homeschool in Montana?

Homeschooling is legal in Montana, but families need to file yearly notice and follow basic attendance, subject, and instruction-time rules.

What is the first legal step in Montana?

Yes. Families notify the county superintendent each school fiscal year that the child is being homeschooled.

What records should military families keep?

Keep attendance records for your homeschool and make them available to the county superintendent on request. Families should also keep a copy of the yearly notice and strong academic records, especially for high school, even though the available sources mainly speak to attendance.

Start with the Montana legal checklist

This guide is useful only if it sits on top of the actual Montana homeschool requirements. Review the state law hub before buying curriculum, changing schools, or setting deadlines.

Montana homeschool requirements