New Hampshire

New Hampshire homeschool laws & record-keeping (2026)

Low regulation Last verified June 2026 against primary sources

Send a one-time notice within five days of starting to the state, a district, or a nonpublic school. Keep a portfolio for two years and do a yearly evaluation that you keep, not submit.

Regulation level
Low
Notice or filing
One-time notice within 5 days of starting.

Common questions about homeschooling in New Hampshire

Do I have to notify the state to homeschool in New Hampshire?

One-time notice within 5 days of starting.

How many days or hours do I have to homeschool in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire does not set a specific number of homeschool days or hours.

Is standardized testing required in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire sets no grade-specific standardized-testing requirement for homeschoolers. Check the overview above for any annual assessment your state or district expects.

What records do I need to keep in New Hampshire?

Keep attendance or a daily log, the subjects you teach, and samples of work. Even where New Hampshire requires little, good records help with transfers, college admissions, and peace of mind.

How Homeschoolio helps in New Hampshire

Homeschoolio logs your day in seconds, tracks your days and hours, and generates the actual records and filings New Hampshire expects, as review-ready PDFs built from data you already logged. Everything works offline, and your records are always yours to export.

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Helpful guides

Homeschoolio helps you keep records. It isn't legal advice. Homeschool requirements vary by district and change over time, so always verify your state and district's current rules.