Homeschool Laws in Alabama
Alabama law provides a church-school option that many homeschooling families use to operate outside the public-school system. Under Ala. Code § 16-28-1, a church school — which may include a home-based program organized under a bona fide church — is required to file a one-time notice with the state. Once that notice is on file, no annual renewal or ongoing approval from a local school district or state agency is required. The notice establishes the program's existence and satisfies the initial reporting obligation under the statute.
Alabama does not impose a state assessment or standardized-testing requirement on students enrolled under the church-school option. Church schools operating under Ala. Code § 16-28-1 are required to offer instruction in grades K–12, but the law does not specify the particular subjects that must be taught or describe the content or rigor of that instruction. Regarding parent qualifications, the statute does include requirements in that area, though the law does not set out a detailed credentialing standard comparable to those found in other states.
Homeschool statutes are subject to legislative amendment, and changes in Alabama — as in most states — commonly take effect on or around July 1 of the applicable year. Families should confirm the current requirements directly with the Alabama State Department of Education rather than relying solely on any secondary summary. This summary is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.
Requirement details
| Assessment — detail | No state assessment requirement under the church-school option. (Ala. Code § 16-28-1 et seq.) |
|---|---|
| Required subjects | Church schools must “offer instruction,” in grades K-12; no description of that instruction is included in the law |
| Parent qualifications | required_see_detail |
Statutory source
Ala. Code § 16-28-1
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Not legal advice. This page summarizes Alabama law in plain English, verified as of June 2026 against the cited statutes. Legislatures amend homeschool law (most changes take effect July 1) — confirm current requirements with the state department of education or a licensed attorney before acting. How we verify this.