TN

Medium regulation

Tennessee homeschool requirements

Use this page as the parent-friendly requirements hub for Tennessee. It pulls the core legal fields into one checklist-style view so families can see what matters before they choose curriculum or withdraw from school.

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.

Legal status

Homeschooling is legal in Tennessee, but the rules depend on which pathway a family uses. The state recognizes independent home schools and church-related umbrella programs, and families may also educate at home through an approved accredited online school that is treated as a private school rather than a statutory home school.

Regulation level

Medium: Tennessee has multiple at-home education pathways. Independent home schools require annual notice to the local school district, a parent-teacher with at least a high school diploma or approved equivalency, and TCAP testing in grades 5, 7, and 9. Church-related umbrella programs do not use the district intent form, but the umbrella school handles its own record-keeping and testing requirements. Accredited online schools are private schools, not Tennessee home schools.

Compulsory school age

6-17

Notice or enrollment requirement

Yes for independent home schools. Tennessee says parents must submit an Intent to Home School form to the school district and renew it before each school year. For church-related umbrella schools, the state says that form is not required, though proof of enrollment may be needed when withdrawing from public school. Accredited online school enrollment follows private-school rules rather than the home-school form. Notify: For independent home schools, the local school district where the family resides. For church-related umbrella programs, the district intent form is not required, but families withdrawing from public school may need to show proof of umbrella-school enrollment to the local district.. Deadline: For independent home schools, before the start of each school year. If a child is leaving public school midyear, Tennessee says the child may be withdrawn to independent home school at any point during the school year, and notice should be given when home instruction begins.

Required subjects

No specific subject list is stated in the current summary.

Hours or days

The available Tennessee Department of Education page confirms that requirements vary by pathway and links to an attendance calendar template, but the source bundle used here does not clearly quote one single statewide hour or day requirement in accessible text. Families should verify the current attendance requirement for their chosen pathway with the district or umbrella school.

Testing or evaluation

Yes for some pathways. Tennessee says independent home school students must take the TCAP assessment in grades 5, 7, and 9. The state also says church-related umbrella schools are responsible for testing requirements for their students. Accredited online schools follow private-school rules. Frequency: For independent home schools, at grades 5, 7, and 9. For umbrella students, testing depends on the enrolled school program.

Records parents should keep

Record-keeping depends on the pathway. Independent home school families should keep copies of each Intent to Home School filing, attendance records, course lists, work samples, test records, and high school transcripts. Tennessee says church-related umbrella schools are responsible for student record-keeping and testing requirements for students enrolled through that option.

Teacher qualifications

Independent home school parents or guardians must have a high school diploma or a state-approved high school equivalency credential. For church-related umbrella programs, Tennessee says parent-teachers are subject to the umbrella school's requirements, and parents teaching grades 9-12 may be required to have at least a high school diploma or approved equivalency.

Curriculum freedom

Moderate. The available sources do not show a statewide subject list on the Tennessee Department of Education page used here, but families do not appear to use a single state-mandated curriculum. Practical freedom is broader in independent home schools and depends more heavily on the umbrella school in church-related programs.

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

Is homeschooling legal in Tennessee?

Homeschooling is legal in Tennessee, but the rules depend on which pathway a family uses. The state recognizes independent home schools and church-related umbrella programs, and families may also educate at home through an approved accredited online school that is treated as a private school rather than a statutory home school.

Do Tennessee homeschool parents have to notify the state?

Yes for independent home schools. Tennessee says parents must submit an Intent to Home School form to the school district and renew it before each school year. For church-related umbrella schools, the state says that form is not required, though proof of enrollment may be needed when withdrawing from public school. Accredited online school enrollment follows private-school rules rather than the home-school form.

What subjects are required in Tennessee?

No specific subject list is stated in the current summary.

Does Tennessee require homeschool testing?

Yes for some pathways. Tennessee says independent home school students must take the TCAP assessment in grades 5, 7, and 9. The state also says church-related umbrella schools are responsible for testing requirements for their students. Accredited online schools follow private-school rules.

Start with the full state checklist

If you are new to homeschooling in Tennessee, read the step-by-step startup guide before handling forms or curriculum decisions.

How to homeschool in Tennessee