Homeschool by State
Homeschooling in Oregon: Requirements, Records & How to Get Started
Everything Oregon families need to homeschool with confidence — the one-time ESD notice and grade-level testing in plain English, plus the records to keep it easy.

Oregon homeschool law, summarized
Oregon families register once with their regional education service district
What Oregon actually requires
Oregon keeps homeschooling simple after a one-time step. When you begin (or move to a new ESD) you send a one-time notification to your regional Education Service District. There’s no annual re-registration and no required curriculum — you choose what to teach.
Your child takes a nationally normed standardized test administered by a qualified neutral tester at the end of grades 3, 5, 8, and 10. You keep the results, and the ESD only asks to see them in specific situations. Keeping your own attendance and test records organized is all it takes to stay in good standing.
Official Oregon resources
Always confirm current rules directly with the state. These are the authoritative sources:
Oregon Dept. of Education — Homeschooling oregon.gov ↗HSLDA — Oregon Homeschool Laws hslda.org ↗
The records smart Oregon families keep
Oregon keeps your test results in your own files — so staying organized is the whole job. Homeschool Reports makes attendance and records effortless.
Generate Oregon-ready records without the busywork
Enter your students once and produce attendance logs, report cards, and transcripts whenever your ESD or a future school asks — no spreadsheets, no formatting headaches.
Choosing a Oregon homeschool curriculum
Oregon doesn’t mandate a curriculum, so you can choose whatever fits your child. Keeping a simple record of what you cover makes your grade-level test records easy to maintain.
Common questions about homeschooling in Oregon
How do I start homeschooling in Oregon?
Send a one-time notification to your regional Education Service District (ESD) within 10 days of starting. There’s no annual re-registration.
Does Oregon require testing?
Yes — a nationally normed standardized test at the end of grades 3, 5, 8, and 10, given by a qualified neutral tester. You keep the results unless the ESD requests them.
Do I have to follow a set curriculum in Oregon?
No. Oregon does not mandate a curriculum, so you choose what to teach. Keeping simple records of what you cover is recommended.
Can my homeschooled student get a diploma in Oregon?
Yes. As the parent you can issue a homeschool diploma and maintain a transcript. Homeschool Reports generates professional versions of both.
Start homeschooling Oregon with confidence
Keep ESD-ready attendance and test records without the busywork — starting free, no credit card required.