Direct testing answer
Yes. Vermont requires an annual assessment showing the student has made progress in the minimum course of study.
VT
Medium regulationTesting rules are one of the fastest ways parents get confused. This page gives the direct Vermont answer first, then explains what to keep and where to verify it.
Yes. Vermont requires an annual assessment showing the student has made progress in the minimum course of study.
Annually.
Keep copies of your enrollment notice, the Agency of Education response, attendance-style records, course plans, work samples, and each year’s assessment results.
Usually annually before the school year begins, or within 10 business days of starting a new home study program after the school year has begun.
Verify the current official guidance and keep a copy of any test report, evaluator letter, portfolio review, or submission receipt.
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
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.
Yes. Vermont requires an annual assessment showing the student has made progress in the minimum course of study.
Annually.
Keep copies of your enrollment notice, the Agency of Education response, attendance-style records, course plans, work samples, and each year’s assessment results.
This guide is useful only if it sits on top of the actual Vermont homeschool requirements. Review the state law hub before buying curriculum, changing schools, or setting deadlines.
Vermont homeschool requirementsLast verified: 2026-04-20. Last updated: 2026-04-20.