
Most families who've been homeschooling for a few years figure out the rhythm somewhere around third grade. Then their kid turns 12, and everything they thought they understood gets complicated again.
High school feels different. There are transcripts to think about, college applications on the horizon, and subjects that feel genuinely hard to teach at home. For families who've been doing this for years, it can feel like starting over. For families considering pulling their teenager from school, it can feel impossible.
It isn't. But it does require more planning than the earlier years — and front-loading that planning before 9th grade makes a real difference.
In every U.S. state, a homeschool parent can issue a diploma. There is no federal diploma standard — high school graduation requirements vary by state, and homeschool families generally set their own requirements as long as they meet (or exceed) state guidelines.
Colleges accept homeschool diplomas. Most selective institutions have been processing homeschool applications for decades, and many have explicit admissions policies for homeschool applicants. What they're evaluating is the transcript behind the diploma: what courses were taken, what grades were earned, how the coursework compares to a college-prep curriculum.
So the diploma is yours to issue. The transcript is what you need to build carefully.
Most states define a credit as 120 to 180 hours of instruction in a subject, though this varies. A typical college-prep high school transcript requires 22 to 24 credits across four years. The standard breakdown looks something like this:
The elective credits are where homeschool families have real flexibility. A kid who codes, writes fiction, or plays an instrument has coursework to show — it just needs to be documented and framed clearly on the transcript.
Build the four-year plan before 9th grade. You don't need to lock in every course, but knowing the credit targets prevents a scramble in 12th grade when you realize a math or language credit is missing.
Algebra I, most parents can manage. Precalculus, AP Chemistry, a second foreign language, or rhetoric-level composition is another matter.
This is the part of homeschool high school that stops some families before they start. It doesn't need to. Live online classes fill exactly this gap — a high schooler can take a rigorous Precalculus class with a credentialed teacher, get real-time feedback, and earn the credit, without the family needing to teach content they're not equipped to teach.
A few specific subjects worth planning for early:

The homeschool transcript is a parent-created document, and it carries the weight of the student's entire academic record. A poorly formatted or vague transcript can raise questions that a strong one would never invite.
For a thorough walkthrough of what to include and how to format it, see the homeschool transcript guide — it covers course naming conventions, GPA calculations (weighted vs. unweighted), credit hours, and how to handle courses taken through outside providers like co-ops or online programs.
A few things worth emphasizing for high school specifically:
Homeschool applicants often bring something to college applications that traditionally schooled students don't: a coherent narrative. When a teenager has spent four years going deep on a passion — writing a novel, building software, running a small business, competing in debate — that story is visible on an application in a way that a collection of clubs and AP classes isn't always.
Practically speaking, a few things to build into the high school plan:
Know your state's requirements. Most states have minimal homeschool high school regulations, but "minimal" varies. Some states require a portfolio review, an annual assessment, or notification to a local school district. A quick review of your state's homeschool laws before freshman year eliminates surprises.
Then build the four-year plan, document as you go, and don't try to teach everything yourself. The families who do homeschool high school well aren't the ones who know the most — they're the ones who find good resources for the gaps and treat the high school years as the most intentional stretch of the whole journey.
Browse online high school classes on Outschool to see what's available across subjects, grade levels, and formats — from weekly ongoing classes to one-time workshops.