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Arizona Homeschool Requirements

Everything you need to know about homeschooling in Arizona. File a one-time notarized affidavit, teach 5 subjects, and you are done - or tap into the nation's most generous universal ESA program for ~$7,000-8,000/year. Updated for the 2025-2026 school year.

Low Regulation
Ages 6-16 Compulsory
2 Compliance Paths

Overview

Arizona is one of the most homeschool-friendly states in the nation, offering two completely separate paths for educating at home. The Traditional Homeschool path requires just a one-time notarized affidavit - no annual renewals. The Empowerment Scholarship Account (ESA) path provides approximately $7,000-8,000 per year in funding for every Arizona student, making it the most generous universal school choice program in the country.

Under both paths, Arizona requires instruction in five subjects and imposes no standardized testing, no minimum hours or days, no curriculum approval, and no record submission to the state. The legal foundation comes from A.R.S. §15-802, the compulsory attendance law.

Arizona also allows parents to delay formal instruction until age 8, giving families extra flexibility during the early childhood years. And unlike most states, Arizona requires public schools to allow homeschooler participation in sports and other interscholastic activities.

Good to Know

Arizona's traditional homeschool affidavit is a one-time filing. Once you file it with your county superintendent, you never need to file again unless you terminate homeschooling, move to a different county, or restart after stopping. This makes Arizona one of the simplest states for ongoing compliance.

Legal Framework

Arizona offers two completely separate legal paths for home education. You cannot use both simultaneously - if you choose the ESA, you are not legally classified as a "homeschooler" but rather as an "ESA student."

Requirement Traditional Homeschool ESA Program
Legal Basis A.R.S. §15-802 A.R.S. §15-2401 et seq.
Filing One-time notarized affidavit Annual ESA contract
Funding None ~$7,000-8,000/year
Required Subjects 5 subjects 5 subjects
Testing None None
Attendance No minimum No minimum
Oversight Minimal Expense tracking/audits
Record-Keeping Not required (recommended) Receipts required for all purchases

Path 1: Traditional Homeschool (Affidavit)

Under this path, you file a one-time notarized Affidavit of Intent with your county school superintendent within 30 days of starting homeschool. You must include a certified copy of your child's birth certificate. Once filed, you simply teach the five required subjects - no annual renewal, no testing, no record submission.

Path 2: Empowerment Scholarship Account (ESA)

Arizona's ESA is the largest universal school choice program in the nation, with over 100,000 students enrolled. All Arizona K-12 students qualify for approximately $7,000-8,000/year deposited into a ClassWallet account. Funds can cover curriculum, tutoring, testing fees, computers, educational therapy, and more. In exchange, you track expenses and submit receipts.

Important

You cannot use both paths simultaneously. If you choose the ESA, you are legally classified as an "ESA student," not a "homeschooler." If you have an existing affidavit and switch to ESA, you must withdraw the affidavit from your county superintendent.

Getting Started: Step by Step

How you start homeschooling in Arizona depends on which path you choose.

Path 1: Traditional Homeschool

  1. Prepare your notarized Affidavit of Intent. Include your child's name, date of birth, current school address (if applicable), and parent/guardian contact information. The affidavit must be notarized.
  2. Gather proof of birth. Certified copy of birth certificate (most common), baptismal certificate, or Social Security application.
  3. File with your county school superintendent within 30 days of starting homeschool. You can mail or hand-deliver the affidavit.
  4. Receive your date-stamped copy. Keep this as proof of filing.
  5. Begin instruction covering the five required subjects.

Path 2: ESA Program

  1. Create an account at the ESA online portal (esaonline.azed.gov).
  2. Submit your application with birth certificate, proof of Arizona residency, and parent/guardian documentation.
  3. Wait for processing (up to 30 days). Applications are accepted year-round.
  4. Sign the ESA contract.
  5. Receive funds quarterly in your ClassWallet account.

If Your Child Is Currently in Public School

Send a withdrawal letter to the school, then file your affidavit or ESA application. You do not need school or district approval to withdraw.

Tip

Maricopa County (Phoenix area) offers an online "Homeschool Connect" app for filing your affidavit - this is the most efficient method. Other counties accept mail or in-person delivery. Blue Folder can generate your withdrawal letter and help you track compliance. Try it free →

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Required Subjects

Arizona requires homeschools to cover five subjects under both the Traditional Homeschool and ESA paths. This is established in A.R.S. §15-802.

Reading Grammar Mathematics Social Studies Science

There is no curriculum approval process, no required lesson plans, and no specified hours for each subject. You choose the materials and methods for teaching each subject.

Not Required by Law (But Recommended)

Many Arizona families also cover additional subjects for a well-rounded education:

Foreign Language Physical Education Fine Arts Health Technology
Curriculum Freedom

Arizona places no restrictions on how you teach the five required subjects. You can use textbooks, online courses, unit studies, unschooling approaches, or any combination. No one reviews or approves your curriculum choices.

Attendance Requirements

Arizona does not require a minimum number of school days, instructional hours, or specific school calendar. You set your own schedule entirely under both the Traditional Homeschool and ESA paths.

Delaying Until Age 8

Arizona allows you to delay formal instruction until age 8. To do this, note on your affidavit that you do not wish to begin instruction until the child reaches age 8. The child must not have reached age 8 by September 1 of that school year.

Best Practice

Even though Arizona does not require attendance tracking, many experienced families keep basic attendance records for their own reference. This is especially helpful for college applications, transcripts, or if your child ever returns to public school (placement testing may be required under A.R.S. §15-745).

Assessment & Evaluation

Arizona does not require any standardized testing or assessment for homeschool students. This is explicitly stated in A.R.S. §15-745(A), which says that nothing in the testing article shall be construed to require testing of children in a home school program.

This applies to both the Traditional Homeschool and ESA paths. There are no portfolio reviews, no progress reports, and no mandatory evaluations.

Optional Testing

While not required, some families choose to administer standardized tests for their own purposes:

  • SAT/ACT - for college admissions
  • PSAT - for National Merit Scholarship eligibility
  • Iowa Test of Basic Skills - to benchmark progress
  • Stanford Achievement Test - another widely used benchmark

ESA funds can be used to cover testing fees if you are enrolled in the ESA program.

Record-Keeping

Record-keeping requirements depend on which path you choose.

Traditional Homeschool

Arizona has no legal requirement to keep records under the traditional homeschool path. You are not required to maintain a portfolio, keep attendance logs, save work samples, or document your curriculum.

ESA Program

If you use the ESA, you must keep detailed records of all expenses. Every purchase through ClassWallet requires a receipt. The Arizona Department of Education audits ESA accounts, and misuse of funds can result in account termination, repayment, or permanent removal from the program.

Recommended Records (Both Paths)

  • Copy of notarized affidavit (or ESA contract) - proof of legal compliance
  • Date-stamped copy from county - official confirmation of filing
  • Curriculum list - shows subject coverage
  • Work samples - progress documentation
  • Attendance log - useful if ever questioned
  • High school transcripts - essential for college applications
Organization Tip

Even in a state with minimal record-keeping requirements, staying organized makes your life easier. Use Blue Folder to track attendance, upload work samples, and build a compliance binder. Try it free →

Scholarships & Financial Resources

Arizona offers the most generous homeschool funding in the nation through its universal ESA program.

Empowerment Scholarship Account (ESA)

Student Category Annual Amount
Standard K-12 students ~$7,000-8,000/year
Students with disabilities Higher (varies by category)

What ESA Funds Cover

  • Curriculum - textbooks, workbooks, online programs
  • Tutoring - from credentialed providers
  • Educational therapy - speech, occupational, behavioral
  • Testing fees - SAT, ACT, AP exams
  • Computer hardware - laptops, tablets, calculators
  • Online courses - accredited programs
  • Educational supplies - curriculum-related materials
  • Postsecondary tuition - community college or university courses
Important Trade-Off

By accepting ESA funds, families with special needs children waive IDEA rights (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act). You lose access to IEP services and FAPE (Free Appropriate Public Education) from the public school. However, you can use ESA funds for private therapies and evaluations. Consider this carefully before choosing the ESA path for a child with disabilities.

Sports & Extracurricular Access

Arizona is one of the best states for homeschool sports access. Under A.R.S. §15-802.01, school districts are required by law to allow homeschool students to try out for interscholastic activities, including sports, band, academic competitions, and more.

Students must live within the school's attendance area, meet the same eligibility requirements as enrolled students, and pay the same fees.

Sports Access

Unlike most states, Arizona guarantees homeschooler access to public school sports and activities by law. You do not need special permission - districts must allow your child to try out.

Key Deadlines

Arizona has very few deadlines for homeschool families, especially under the traditional path.

When What Details
Within 30 days of starting File notarized affidavit Traditional path only. One-time filing with county superintendent. Include birth certificate.
June 20 (annually) ESA renewal contract ESA path only. Must sign renewal by this date each year.
Within 30 days Notify county if terminating Traditional path. Required if you enroll child in public/private school.
When moving counties File new affidavit Traditional path. Must file with the new county superintendent.
Compare to Other States

Most states require annual notification filings. Arizona's traditional path is a one-time filing - file it once, and you are set for the duration of your homeschool. The ESA path requires annual renewal by June 20, but applications are accepted year-round.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Arizona homeschool law is simple, but new families still run into avoidable problems.

  1. Not getting the affidavit notarized. The affidavit must be notarized to be valid. A standard letter will not suffice. Many banks, UPS stores, and some county offices offer free or low-cost notary services.
  2. Filing the affidavit with the wrong office. File with your county school superintendent, not the Arizona Department of Education, not your local school district. Each county has its own superintendent's office.
  3. Trying to use both paths simultaneously. You cannot hold a homeschool affidavit and an ESA contract at the same time. If switching to ESA, withdraw your existing affidavit from the county.
  4. Not understanding the ESA trade-off. The ESA provides significant funding but requires expense tracking, receipts for every purchase, and potential audits. For families with special needs children, it also means waiving IDEA rights.
  5. Forgetting the ESA renewal deadline. Unlike the one-time affidavit, the ESA contract must be renewed by June 20 each year. Missing this deadline can result in loss of funding.
  6. Not covering all five required subjects. Arizona requires reading, grammar, mathematics, social studies, and science. Make sure you address all five, even if informally.
  7. Thinking you need to wait for approval. For the traditional path, you can begin homeschooling immediately. The affidavit must be filed within 30 days of starting - you do not need to wait for approval before beginning instruction.
Critical

Keep your date-stamped copy of the notarized affidavit or your signed ESA contract in a safe place. This is your primary legal proof that you are educating your child in compliance with Arizona law.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I delay starting homeschool until my child is 8?

Yes. Arizona allows you to delay formal instruction until age 8. Note this on your affidavit. Your child must not have reached age 8 by September 1 of that school year.

How do I choose between the affidavit and ESA?

Choose the affidavit if you want minimal government involvement and maximum privacy. Choose the ESA if you want $7,000-8,000/year for education expenses and are comfortable tracking spending through ClassWallet.

Can my homeschooler play sports at the public school?

Yes. Arizona law (A.R.S. §15-802.01) requires districts to allow homeschool students to participate in interscholastic activities. Your child must live in the school's attendance area and meet the same eligibility standards.

Do I need to file annually with the traditional path?

No. The affidavit is a one-time filing. You only need to re-file if you terminate and restart homeschooling or move to a different Arizona county.

What happens if my child returns to public school?

Under A.R.S. §15-745, the student will be tested to determine grade placement. Notify the county superintendent within 30 days of terminating homeschool.

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Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Homeschool laws can change. Always verify current requirements with the Arizona Department of Education or consult a qualified attorney. Primary statute: A.R.S. §15-802. For more information, see ADE Home School, Arizona Families for Home Education (AFHE), and HSLDA Arizona. Last updated February 2026.

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