Free Tool · Kansas
Low regulationHow to withdraw your child from public school in Kansas.
Yes — homeschooling is legal in Kansas. Register as a non-accredited private school with the Kansas State Board of Education. Provide ~186 days of planned instruction with a competent instructor. No specific subjects mandated.
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We don't store your child's information. PDFs are generated in memory and discarded. We are not your attorney; for edge cases call HSLDA or a local attorney.
Yes — homeschooling is legal in Kansas. Register as a non-accredited private school with the Kansas State Board of Education. Provide ~186 days of planned instruction with a competent instructor. No specific subjects mandated.
Who are you withdrawing in Kansas?
Add every child you're pulling from school. We'll list them on the letter and produce one packet for the whole family. Use the legal name on school records.
Child 1
What happens after you withdraw in Kansas
Kansas requires registration as a non-accredited private school via the State Board of Education's online portal. Choose a school name, designate a principal, and submit. The registration is one-time per name change.
By day 1
Deliver this withdrawal letter to your principal in person, by certified mail, or by email with read receipt. Save the confirmation.
By day 7
File Kansas's required notice of intent with the appropriate state or district office. Verify the official form on Kansas's Department of Education website.
By day 14
Set up a daily attendance log and start tracking from day one. Use the printable log we generated, or HomeschoolOS does this automatically.
By day 30
Confirm in writing that the school has removed your child from the roll and that Kansas has acknowledged your notice (where applicable).
By day 60
Pick a curriculum spine for each required subject and create a simple weekly rhythm. Resist the urge to over-buy in the first month.
By day 90
Build a portfolio shelf — even if Kansas doesn't legally require one. Save 3–5 work samples per subject per quarter; you will be glad you did at year-end.
Frequently asked questions about Kansas withdrawals
Is homeschooling legal in Kansas?
Yes — homeschooling is legal in Kansas. Register as a non-accredited private school with the Kansas State Board of Education. Provide ~186 days of planned instruction with a competent instructor. No specific subjects mandated.
Do I need to file a Notice of Intent in Kansas?
Kansas requires registration as a non-accredited private school via the State Board of Education's online portal. Choose a school name, designate a principal, and submit. The registration is one-time per name change.
What does Kansas require beyond the withdrawal letter?
In Kansas, beyond the withdrawal letter you'll need to file a notice of intent (or equivalent declaration) with the state or your district. Verify the current procedure on the Kansas Department of Education website before filing.
What records do I need to keep in Kansas?
Kansas expects 186 days of instruction and 1,116 hours of instruction per year. The attendance log we generate is sized to that requirement; keep it filled in by hand or use Homeschool OS to track automatically.
Can I generate one letter for multiple kids in Kansas?
Yes. The wizard supports up to 10 children per family. The letter lists each child by name, grade, and date of birth; one packet covers the entire withdrawal.
Official sources
Want this all tracked automatically going forward?
Homeschool OS handles the Kansas attendance log, compliance deadlines, and portfolio for you — pre-configured for your state. Free for 21 days, no card.
Start your free trialWe’re not your attorney. Always verify Kansas-specific requirements with your Department of Education before filing. For edge cases — religious exemption, IEP/504 disputes, custody contests — call HSLDA or a local attorney.