Your first step.
Deregistration.
The school system doesn't make it obvious. But the law is remarkably clear — and almost always in your favour.
"Most parents spend weeks preparing for a battle. The school has no legal right to refuse."
There's a moment — usually around 11pm, search bar open, heart going — when a parent first types "how do I deregister my child from school." What comes back is a tangle of forum posts, council websites with contradictory guidance, and general noise that makes the whole thing feel impossibly complicated.
It isn't. In England and Wales, the legal right to educate your child at home is well-established and relatively straightforward to exercise. The process rarely requires more than a single letter. What makes it feel harder than it is, is a combination of school culture, local authority inconsistency, and a simple lack of clear information.
Why it feels so much harder than it is
Schools don't advertise the deregistration process. Why would they? Losing a pupil affects funding, headcount, and — in some cases — inspection ratings. That's not a conspiracy; it's just an institutional reality worth understanding.
Some headteachers will ask for meetings. Some will express concern. Some will suggest you reconsider. None of this is legally binding. You are not required to attend a meeting before deregistering. You are not required to justify your reasons. You are not required to have an alternative education plan already in place before you write the letter.
⚠️ Worth knowing
Schools will sometimes tell parents that they need to "apply" to deregister, or that there is a waiting period, or that local authority approval is needed first. In almost all circumstances, none of this is true. A written notification is all that's required.
What the law actually says — in plain English
Section 7 of the Education Act 1996 places the duty to provide education on parents — not on schools, and not on local authorities. The school place exists as a mechanism for meeting that duty, not as an obligation in itself.
When you deregister, you are not removing a right from your child. You are exercising your right to fulfil your legal duty in a different way — one that the law explicitly permits. The school is required to remove your child from the register upon written notification. There is no appeal process on their side.
There are some nuances — children with an EHCP, children at special schools, and children in certain other categories have slightly different rules that are worth understanding before you write your letter. The full deregistration guide covers each of these clearly.
The questions almost every family has
Do I need to tell the local authority first?
No — you notify the school, and the school notifies the local authority. You do not need to seek permission from, or even contact, your local authority before deregistering. Some families choose to notify them simultaneously; most don't need to.
What happens after the letter is sent?
The school removes your child from the register. The local authority will usually be notified and may make contact — this is normal and not something to be alarmed by. What that contact looks like, what you're required to provide, and what your rights are at that stage...
📚 That's where the full guide picks up
The complete deregistration guide covers the letter itself (with a template), what to expect from the school, how to respond to local authority contact, and what the rules are if your child has an EHCP or attends a special school.
The takeaway
What this page covers
- The legal right to home educate rests with parents under the Education Act 1996
- Schools cannot refuse a deregistration request — they can only delay one, briefly
- No local authority approval is required before you deregister
- Children with EHCPs follow slightly different rules — worth reading before you write
- A single written letter is almost always all that's required
Ready to read the full guide?
The complete deregistration guide includes a letter template, step-by-step walkthrough, and guidance for families with EHCPs — free to read, no sign-up required.
Read the Deregistration Guide →Keep reading
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