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Delaware Homeschool Requirements

Everything you need to know about homeschooling in Delaware - a low-regulation state with simple annual enrollment, 180 school days, and no testing or curriculum approval. Updated for the 2025-2026 school year.

Low Regulation
Ages 5-16 Compulsory
1 Compliance Path

Overview

Delaware is a low-regulation state for homeschooling with a straightforward compliance process. Under 14 Del. C. Section 2703A, parents must file an annual enrollment form with the Delaware Department of Education, provide 180 days of instruction, and maintain attendance records. That covers the essentials.

There is no standardized testing, no curriculum approval, no portfolio reviews, and no teacher qualification requirements. Delaware gives homeschool families significant freedom while maintaining basic registration oversight.

One notable feature: Delaware's compulsory education age ends at 16, which is younger than most states. This means students who turn 16 are no longer required to be enrolled in school or homeschooled.

Good to Know

Delaware's annual enrollment is a simple registration - not an approval process. You file the form and begin homeschooling. The state does not approve or deny your program. The July 31 deadline is the key date to remember each year.

Legal Framework

Delaware has a single homeschool compliance path. Parents register with the Delaware Department of Education and provide regular instruction for 180 days per year.

Requirement Details
Legal Basis 14 Del. C. Section 2703A
Enrollment Annual enrollment with Delaware DOE by July 31
Attendance 180 days of instruction per year
Teacher Qualification None required
Required Subjects None specified (regular and thorough instruction)
Curriculum Approval Not required
Testing None required
Record-Keeping Attendance records required (keep at home)

The Enrollment Process

Delaware's enrollment is a simple registration, not an approval. You submit the Home School Annual Enrollment form to the Delaware DOE, which includes your contact information, your child's name and grade level, and a certification that your program meets requirements. There is no review or approval step - filing the form satisfies the requirement.

No Specific Subjects Mandated

Unlike many states, Delaware does not list specific required subjects. The law requires "regular and thorough instruction" but leaves the subject matter to parents. Most families cover core academics (reading, writing, math, science, social studies) but you have complete flexibility in what and how you teach.

Getting Started

Starting to homeschool in Delaware is a simple three-step process.

Step 1: Complete the Annual Enrollment Form

Obtain the Home School Annual Enrollment form from the Delaware Department of Education. Submit it by July 31 for the upcoming school year, or before you begin homeschooling if starting mid-year.

Step 2: Withdraw from Public School (If Applicable)

If your child is currently enrolled in public school, send a withdrawal letter to the school. This formally removes your child from enrollment and prevents truancy concerns.

What to Include in Your Withdrawal Letter

  • Statement of intent to homeschool under 14 Del. C. Section 2703A
  • Effective date of withdrawal
  • Child's name and current grade
  • Request for transfer of student records

Step 3: Begin Instruction

Start your homeschool program. You need to provide 180 days of instruction per year and maintain attendance records. Choose your own curriculum, set your own schedule, and teach at your own pace.

Important

Make sure your enrollment form is filed before you begin homeschooling. The July 31 deadline applies to the upcoming school year. If you are starting mid-year, file the enrollment form before your first day of homeschool instruction.

Tip

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Subjects & Curriculum

Delaware does not mandate specific subjects. The law requires "regular and thorough instruction" but does not enumerate which subjects must be covered. This gives Delaware homeschool families complete flexibility in designing their educational program.

Commonly Taught Subjects

While not legally required, most Delaware homeschool families cover these core areas:

Reading Writing Mathematics Science Social Studies Language Arts

Additional Subjects (Recommended)

Many families also include these subjects for a well-rounded education and college preparation:

Foreign Language Physical Education Fine Arts Health Computer Science

Curriculum Freedom

You choose your own curriculum materials and teaching methods. There is no state approval or review of what you use. Options include textbooks, online programs, unit studies, unschooling, classical education, or any combination that works for your family.

Tip

For college-bound students, covering a well-rounded set of subjects is highly recommended regardless of what the law requires. The University of Delaware and Delaware State University expect transcripts that include English, math, science, social studies, and foreign language.

Attendance Requirements

Delaware requires 180 days of instruction per year. This is the primary compliance metric for Delaware homeschool families. There is no minimum hourly requirement per day - just the total number of days.

You set your own schedule entirely. There is no requirement to follow the public school calendar. You can school year-round, take breaks whenever you want, or use a non-traditional schedule.

Requirement Details
Days Required 180 per year
Hours Per Day Not specified
Attendance Records Required - keep at home
Submit Records No - keep for your files
Best Practice

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Annual Evaluation

Delaware requires no annual evaluation, testing, or assessment of homeschool students. There are no standardized tests, no portfolio reviews, no progress reports, and no evaluations to submit to anyone.

Your primary compliance obligations are the annual enrollment form and the 180-day attendance requirement. Beyond that, you are the sole judge of your child's educational progress.

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 recognized benchmark
Simple Compliance

Delaware's compliance requirements are among the simplest in the country: file your annual enrollment by July 31, provide 180 days of instruction, and keep attendance records. That is the entire legal obligation.

Records & Portfolio

Delaware requires you to maintain attendance records, but these are kept at home and do not need to be submitted to anyone. Beyond attendance, there are no other record-keeping requirements mandated by law.

Required Records

  • Attendance log - documenting your 180 school days (required)

Recommended Records to Keep

  • Enrollment form copy - proof you filed with the DOE
  • Withdrawal letter copy - if you withdrew from public school
  • Curriculum documentation - what materials you used each year
  • Work samples - examples of student work showing progress
  • Grades and transcripts - essential for high school students planning to attend college
Organization Tip

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For High School Students

If your child is college-bound, detailed records become essential. Parents create their own transcripts in Delaware. Include courses, grades, credits, and GPA. The University of Delaware and Delaware State University accept homeschool graduates with parent-created transcripts and standardized test scores.

Financial Resources

Delaware currently offers no financial assistance programs for homeschool families. There are no ESAs, vouchers, tax credits, or tax deductions available.

Program Available?
Education Savings Account (ESA) No
Vouchers No
Tax Credits No
Tax Deductions No

Typical Costs

Category Estimated Range
Curriculum $300-$1,500/year
Testing (optional) $25-$75/test
Co-op Fees $0-$500/year

College Preparation

Delaware homeschool graduates are accepted at colleges throughout the state and nation. Key Delaware institutions include:

  • University of Delaware
  • Delaware State University
  • Wilmington University
  • Delaware Technical Community College

Requirements vary by institution - contact admissions directly for homeschool graduate policies.

Key Deadlines

Delaware has one critical annual deadline for homeschool families. Mark it on your calendar and set a reminder.

When What Details
July 31 Annual enrollment due Submit Home School Annual Enrollment form to Delaware DOE. This is the most important deadline of the year.
Before starting (mid-year) Enrollment form If starting homeschool mid-year, file enrollment form before beginning instruction.
Before withdrawing Send withdrawal letter Required only if child is currently enrolled in public school. Begin homeschool immediately after.
Throughout the year Track 180 school days Maintain attendance records to document your 180 days of instruction.
When you decide Graduation Parents determine when the student has met graduation requirements and issue the diploma.
Don't Miss This

The July 31 enrollment deadline is the single most important date for Delaware homeschool families. Set a reminder for early July so you have plenty of time to complete and submit the form. Blue Folder sends automatic deadline reminders so you never miss a filing date.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Delaware homeschool law is straightforward, but new families sometimes run into avoidable problems. Here are the most common ones.

  1. Missing the July 31 enrollment deadline. This is the single most important compliance date. If you miss it, file as soon as possible - but aim to file on time every year. Set a reminder for early July.
  2. Not tracking attendance days. Delaware requires 180 days and expects you to maintain attendance records. If you do not track days, you have no way to demonstrate compliance. Start logging from day one.
  3. Not sending a withdrawal letter when leaving public school. If your child is enrolled, formally withdraw before beginning homeschool. Without a withdrawal letter, the school may mark your child as truant.
  4. Thinking you need curriculum approval. Delaware does not approve or review your curriculum. You choose what to teach and how to teach it. Do not wait for permission that is not required.
  5. Not keeping any records beyond attendance. While only attendance records are legally required, keeping no other documentation can cause problems if your child wants to attend college or return to public school. Maintain a portfolio and transcripts for high school years.
  6. Forgetting that compulsory age ends at 16. Delaware's compulsory education age is 5-16, shorter than most states. After age 16, your child is no longer required to be in school. However, most families continue education through high school graduation.
  7. Not filing enrollment for each child separately. If you have multiple children, make sure each one is listed on your enrollment form. Do not assume that one filing covers all children.
Critical

Your annual enrollment form is your primary legal protection. Keep a copy of every form you submit and any confirmation from the Delaware DOE. This documentation proves that you are a registered homeschool family operating within the law.

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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 Delaware Department of Education or consult a qualified attorney. For more information, see the Delaware Department of Education. Last updated February 2026.

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