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Homeschooling high school

Homeschooling High School in Texas

Graduating a homeschooler in Texas means setting your own requirements, tracking credits and GPA, and building a transcript colleges accept. Here's how it works — and how to keep the records straight.

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Texas at a glance

Required hours
No state minimum
Required subjects
5 subjects
Notice
Not required
Testing / evaluation
Not required
Recordkeeping
Recommended

Jump to the full Texas requirements for plain-English detail on each of these.

Graduation requirements in Texas

Texas does not issue homeschool diplomas, so as the parent-administrator you set the graduation requirements and award the diploma yourself. A common college-prep plan covers 4 years of English, 3–4 of math, 3 of science, 3 of social studies, 2 of a foreign language, plus electives — typically around 24 credits total. Check any Texas-specific expectations for your situation, and align with the admissions requirements of the colleges your student is targeting.

Credits and GPA

A standard high-school credit (a Carnegie unit) represents roughly 120–180 hours of instruction in a subject over the year, or about a full-year course. Half-credit courses are common for semester-long electives. Track grades per course and compute a weighted or unweighted GPA on a 4.0 scale. Our free GPA calculator can do the math, and Homeschool Fox tracks credits and grades for you as you log coursework.

Try the free GPA calculator

Testing and assessment

No, Texas does not require standardized testing or formal assessments for homeschooled students. However, many families choose to use assessments voluntarily to track progress.

Building a college-ready transcript

Selective colleges expect a clean, professional transcript listing courses, credits, grades, and GPA, often alongside a school profile and course descriptions. You can build one in Texas yourself — a standard transcript is included with Homeschool Fox, and the $29 official transcript add-on generates AI-drafted course descriptions and a school profile that admissions readers expect.

See the transcript builder

Keeping records through high school

Keep coursework, reading lists, grades, and work samples organized from 9th grade on — reconstructing four years at application time is painful. Even though Texas is relatively hands-off, strong high-school records are what colleges and scholarship programs ask for.

What Homeschool Fox tracks for Texas

Everything Texas expects you to keep, in one place — no spreadsheets, no lost notebooks.

  • Required hours or days
  • Required subjects & core hours
  • Daily activity logs
  • Attendance records
  • Notes & portfolio records
  • Printable PDF reports
  • High school transcripts
  • State-specific progress tracking
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Track credits and grades as you go, then generate a college-ready transcript when it's time to apply.

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