New Hampshire Homeschool Recordkeeping Requirements
State-specific homeschool recordkeeping guidance for attendance, work samples, and annual evidence in New Hampshire.
Who This Page Is For
Parents homeschooling in New Hampshire who want the specific task page, not just the broad state overview.
What This Page Helps You Do
This page shows which records matter in New Hampshire, how to keep them current, and how to turn them into a sustainable weekly workflow.
This state expects families to think in advance about filings, recurring evidence, and annual review posture.
Recordkeeping requirements in New Hampshire
Maintain portfolio of materials This state expects families to think in advance about filings, recurring evidence, and annual review posture.
Minimum records most families should keep
- Attendance totals and dated instructional logs
- Work samples by subject and quarter
- Reading, assessment, and progress notes
- Any state-specific forms or periodic summaries that prove continuity
Weekly workflow that prevents year-end scramble
Use one short weekly recordkeeping pass to update attendance, archive work samples, and note what changed in pace or mastery. That single routine is usually more important than the specific storage tool you choose.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Pages
Sources
Last reviewed: 2026-02-19
Next Move
Take the next concrete step now while the workflow is still clear, then connect it to the rest of your homeschool system.