Compliance Checker States Free Tools Get Started Free

Utah Homeschool Requirements

Everything you need to know about homeschooling in Utah - a low-regulation state with one of the best ESA programs in the country. File a signed affidavit, teach 6 subjects, and access up to $8,000+ per student through the Utah Fits All Scholarship. Updated for the 2025-2026 school year.

Low Regulation
Ages 6-18 Compulsory
1 Compliance Path

Overview

Utah is a low-regulation state that combines homeschool-friendly laws with one of the most generous Education Savings Account programs in the nation. The legal requirements are simple: file a signed affidavit with your local school board annually and provide instruction in six broad subject areas.

There is no testing requirement, no curriculum approval, no specific hours or days mandated, and no parent qualifications needed. The governing statute is Utah Code § 53G-6-201 to 53G-6-204.

What makes Utah truly stand out is the Utah Fits All Scholarship, a universal ESA program that provides approximately $8,000+ per student per year with no income limits and no increased oversight requirements for homeschoolers.

Good to Know

Utah is one of the few states where you can receive significant public funding (~$8,000+/student) for homeschool expenses without sacrificing any homeschool freedom. The ESA program was specifically designed to not increase oversight requirements.

Legal Framework

Utah has a single, straightforward compliance path. Homeschools are defined separately from private schools under Utah law, with their own statutory provisions that emphasize parental rights and minimal government interference.

Requirement Utah Homeschool
Legal Basis Utah Code § 53G-6-201 to 204
Notification Signed affidavit to school board (annual)
Attendance No minimum days or hours
Teacher Qualification None required
Required Subjects 6 subjects
Curriculum Parent's sole discretion
Testing None required
Record-Keeping Affidavit only (no records submitted)

Parental Rights Protections

Utah law explicitly states that the parent is primarily responsible for education and has sole discretion over curriculum and methods. The state cannot impose additional requirements on homeschools beyond what is in the statute, and the ESA program was designed to preserve these protections even for participating families.

Key Legal Point

Utah law defines a "home school" as a school in which instruction is provided by a parent or guardian, or a person designated by the parent. This means you can delegate instruction to a tutor, co-op teacher, or online program while maintaining your homeschool status.

Getting Started: Step by Step

Starting homeschool in Utah is a simple process centered around filing your affidavit.

Step-by-Step Process

  1. Contact your local school district to obtain the homeschool affidavit form (some districts offer online submission)
  2. Complete and sign the affidavit including your child's name, birthdate, your name, address, and a statement that you assume responsibility for education
  3. Submit the affidavit to your local school board before beginning instruction
  4. Choose your curriculum covering the six required subject areas
  5. Apply for the Utah Fits All Scholarship (optional but highly recommended)
  6. Begin instruction

If Withdrawing from Public School

  1. File your homeschool affidavit with the school district
  2. Send a withdrawal letter to your child's current school
  3. Request student records
  4. Apply for the Utah Fits All Scholarship if desired
  5. Begin homeschooling
Important

File your affidavit before beginning homeschool instruction. If withdrawing from public school, complete the affidavit and withdrawal process before starting homeschool to avoid any gap in your child's educational status.

Tip

Keep a copy of your signed affidavit and any confirmation from the school district. Blue Folder can generate your withdrawal letter and track your compliance status automatically. Try it free →

Blue Folder handles this for you

Generate your withdrawal letter, track your curriculum, and stay organized automatically.

Track Utah Compliance

Notification Requirements

Utah requires a signed affidavit filed with your local school board. This is a notification, not a request for permission - the district cannot deny your right to homeschool.

Requirement Details
Document Signed affidavit
Submit To Local school board
Frequency Annual
Deadline Before beginning instruction (or by start of school year)

What the Affidavit Must Include

  • Child's name and birthdate
  • Parent/guardian name and address
  • Statement that the parent assumes responsibility for the child's education
  • Parent's signature

Most school districts provide their own affidavit form. Some offer online submission, which is the easiest option. Contact your local district to find out their preferred filing method.

Key Point

The affidavit is a notification, not a request for approval. The school board receives it but does not "approve" or "deny" it. You have a statutory right to homeschool in Utah.

Curriculum & Subjects

Utah requires instruction in six broad subject areas. Parents have complete discretion over curriculum, materials, and teaching methods.

Required Subjects

Language Arts Mathematics Science Social Studies Arts Health

These are broad categories, not specific courses. For example, "Language Arts" encompasses reading, writing, spelling, grammar, and composition. "Social Studies" can include history, geography, civics, and economics. Parents choose how to cover each area.

Utah does not mandate a specific curriculum. You may use any materials, any teaching method, and any educational approach. Religious curriculum is permitted. The state does not approve or review your curriculum choices.

Not Required by Law (But Recommended)

Foreign Language Technology Financial Literacy Career Education
ESA Tip

If you participate in the Utah Fits All Scholarship, you can use ESA funds to purchase curriculum materials, online courses, and educational resources for all subject areas. This can significantly offset the cost of homeschooling.

Attendance Requirements

Utah does not mandate specific hours, days, or a particular schedule for homeschool instruction. The law requires only that instruction be provided - parents have complete flexibility in how they structure their school year.

There is no requirement to track attendance or submit any attendance records to the state. You set your own schedule entirely.

Requirement Details
Daily Hours Not specified
Annual Days Not specified
Schedule Parent determines entirely
Tracking Required No
Best Practice

Even though Utah does not require attendance tracking, keeping a basic record of school days is helpful for your own reference - especially for high school transcripts, college applications, or if your family relocates to a state with stricter requirements. Blue Folder makes attendance tracking effortless. Try it free →

Assessment & Evaluation

Utah does not require any standardized testing, evaluations, portfolio reviews, or progress reports for homeschool students. Parents are the sole judges of their children's educational progress.

This remains true even if you participate in the Utah Fits All ESA program. Utah specifically designed the program to not increase oversight requirements for homeschoolers.

Optional Testing

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

  • ACT - the most common college entrance exam in Utah
  • SAT - for college admissions nationwide
  • PSAT - for National Merit Scholarship eligibility
  • Iowa Assessments - to benchmark academic progress
College Preparation

Utah colleges, including the University of Utah and Utah State University, accept homeschool graduates. Most require ACT or SAT scores, a parent-created transcript, and course descriptions. Plan ahead for college admissions by maintaining grade records and building a transcript during high school years.

Record-Keeping

The only required submission in Utah is the annual signed affidavit. Beyond that, no records need to be kept or submitted to the state.

Record Required? Submit?
Affidavit Yes Yes - to school board
Attendance No No
Curriculum Records No No
Progress Reports No No
Test Scores No No

Recommended Records

While not legally required, keeping organized records makes your life easier and is essential for certain situations:

  • Attendance log - helpful for transcripts and if you move to another state
  • Portfolio of student work - demonstrates progress over time
  • Grade records - essential for high school transcripts
  • Curriculum documentation - what materials you used each year
  • ESA expense receipts - if participating in Utah Fits All (keep for documentation)
Organization Tip

Even in a low-regulation state like Utah, staying organized pays off. Blue Folder tracks your attendance, stores work samples, and builds a compliance binder automatically. Try it free →

Special Programs & Financial Resources

Utah stands out for offering both strong homeschool freedoms and exceptional financial support through one of the nation's best ESA programs.

Utah Fits All Scholarship (ESA)

The Utah Fits All Scholarship is a universal Education Savings Account program that provides approximately $8,000+ per student per year.

Feature Details
Amount ~$8,000+ per student/year
Eligibility All Utah K-12 students (universal)
Income Limit None - universal eligibility
Increased Oversight No - same freedoms as non-ESA families

What ESA Funds Cover

  • Curriculum and textbooks
  • Online courses and programs
  • Tutoring services
  • Educational therapy and special education services
  • Art and music lessons
  • College courses (dual enrollment)
  • Standardized testing fees
  • Educational software and technology
Important ESA Benefit

Unlike some states, Utah's ESA program does not require additional testing, curriculum approval, or progress reporting. You maintain the same homeschool freedoms whether or not you accept ESA funds. This makes it one of the most homeschool-friendly ESA programs in the country.

Public School Sports Access (Guaranteed by Law)

Utah Code § 53G-6-702 guarantees homeschool students the right to participate in public school athletics and extracurricular activities. This includes:

  • All UHSAA-governed athletics - football, basketball, track, soccer, and more
  • Extracurricular activities - clubs, academic competitions, fine arts

Students must live in the school's attendance area, meet age and academic eligibility requirements, and comply with UHSAA regulations.

Special Education

Homeschoolers can request evaluations through their local school district. ESA funds can be used for private special education services, therapies, and specialized instruction, making Utah particularly advantageous for families with special needs children.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Utah's requirements are simple, but new families still encounter avoidable issues.

  1. Forgetting to file the annual affidavit. This is the one legal requirement that must be completed every year. File before you begin instruction, and renew annually. Missing it puts your legal standing at risk.
  2. Not knowing about the Utah Fits All Scholarship. Many new homeschool families are unaware that Utah offers ~$8,000+ per student with no strings attached. Apply early to take advantage of this significant benefit.
  3. Assuming ESA participation means more oversight. Utah specifically designed the program to not increase requirements for homeschoolers. Do not avoid the ESA out of fear of added regulation.
  4. Not covering all six required subjects. Utah requires six broad subject areas including arts and health, which are sometimes overlooked. Make sure you address all six in your curriculum.
  5. Not keeping any records for college-bound students. While not legally required, high school students need transcripts, grades, and course descriptions for college applications. Start building these early.
  6. Not taking advantage of sports access. Utah law guarantees public school sports participation for homeschoolers. Contact your local school early to register for the sports season.
  7. Believing you need approval to homeschool. The affidavit is a notification, not a request. The school board cannot deny your right to homeschool.
Critical

File your affidavit before you begin homeschool instruction. Keep a copy of your signed affidavit and any confirmation from the district. This is your primary documentation that you are legally homeschooling.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Utah Fits All ESA really available to all homeschoolers?

Yes. It is a universal program with no income limits and no prior public school enrollment requirement. All Utah K-12 students are eligible.

Does accepting ESA money mean more oversight?

No. Utah specifically designed the program to not increase requirements for homeschoolers. You maintain the same freedoms whether or not you participate.

Do I need a teaching degree or high school diploma?

No. Utah has no parent qualification requirements. Any parent or guardian can homeschool.

Can my homeschooler play sports at the public school?

Yes. Utah Code § 53G-6-702 guarantees homeschool students the right to participate in public school athletics and extracurriculars.

How many hours per day do I need to teach?

Utah does not specify hours or days. You have complete flexibility in scheduling your instruction.

What can I buy with ESA funds?

Curriculum, textbooks, online courses, tutoring, educational therapy, art and music lessons, testing fees, educational technology, college courses, and other approved educational expenses.

Don't make these mistakes

Blue Folder tracks every requirement and keeps your records organized automatically.

Track Utah Compliance

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Homeschool laws can change. Always verify current requirements with the Utah State Board of Education or consult a qualified attorney. For more information about the ESA program, see Utah Fits All. Last updated February 2026.

Ready to homeschool in Utah with confidence?

Blue Folder gives you a personalized compliance checklist, attendance tracker, and one-click binder export - built for Utah families.

Start Tracking Utah Free