New York
New York homeschool laws & record-keeping (2026)
New York asks for the most paperwork: a letter of intent by July 1, an annual home instruction plan, four quarterly reports on dates you set, and a year-end assessment.
- Regulation level
- High
- Notice or filing
- Letter of intent by July 1; IHIP and four quarterly reports each year.
- Instruction hours
- 900 hours (grades 1-6) / 990 hours (grades 7-12).
Required filings in New York
Common questions about homeschooling in New York
Do I have to notify the state to homeschool in New York?
Letter of intent by July 1; IHIP and four quarterly reports each year.
How many days or hours do I have to homeschool in New York?
New York measures homeschool instruction in hours: 900 hours (grades 1-6) / 990 hours (grades 7-12).
Is standardized testing required in New York?
New York 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 York?
Keep the documents New York asks for, such as letter of intent, home instruction plan (ihip), four quarterly reports, year-end assessment. Homeschoolio builds these from what you log.
How Homeschoolio helps in New York
Homeschoolio logs your day in seconds, tracks your days and hours, and generates the actual records and filings New York expects, as review-ready PDFs built from data you already logged. Everything works offline, and your records are always yours to export.
Compare nearby states
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.