Homeschool by State
Homeschooling in Nevada: Requirements, Records & How to Get Started
Everything Nevada families need to homeschool with confidence — the one-time notice in plain English, plus the records worth keeping.

Nevada homeschool law, summarized
Nevada asks for a one-time notice of intent, then leaves you to teach
What Nevada actually requires
Nevada makes it easy to start and stay homeschooling. You file a one-time notice of intent with your local school district, accompanied by an educational plan of instruction covering the required subject areas for your child’s grade. Once accepted, you don’t re-file each year.
The state does not require standardized testing or ongoing reporting. Because there’s no annual submission, keeping your own attendance and progress records is the simplest way to document a consistent education and stay ready for any future enrollment.
Official Nevada resources
Always confirm current rules directly with the state. These are the authoritative sources:
Nevada Dept. of Education — Homeschooling doe.nv.gov ↗HSLDA — Nevada Homeschool Laws hslda.org ↗
The records smart Nevada families keep
Nevada asks for nothing after the notice — but your own records are your best proof of a solid education. Homeschool Reports generates each one in minutes.
Generate Nevada-ready records without the busywork
Enter your students once and produce attendance logs, report cards, and transcripts whenever you need them — no spreadsheets, no formatting headaches.
Choosing a Nevada homeschool curriculum
Nevada asks for an educational plan but lets you choose the curriculum behind it. Keeping a simple record of what you cover documents the year with no extra effort.
Common questions about homeschooling in Nevada
How do I start homeschooling in Nevada?
File a one-time notice of intent with your local school district, along with an educational plan of instruction. You don’t re-file each year.
Does Nevada require testing?
No. Nevada does not require homeschooled students to take standardized tests or submit ongoing assessments.
What is the Nevada educational plan?
A short plan submitted with your notice of intent showing the required subject areas your child will cover for their grade level.
Can my homeschooled student get a diploma in Nevada?
Yes. As the parent you can issue a homeschool diploma and maintain a transcript. Homeschool Reports generates professional versions of both.
Start homeschooling Nevada with confidence
Keep effortless attendance and progress records and stay ready for anything — starting free, no credit card required.