$0 South Carolina Homeschool Quick-Start Checklist

South Carolina Homeschool Association: Which One Is Right for Your Family?

Joining an accountability association is a legal requirement for most South Carolina homeschoolers — but not all associations work the same way, and if you are running a micro-school or learning pod, the choice matters more than most families realize.

South Carolina gives families three legal pathways to homeschool (§§59-65-40, 59-65-45, 59-65-47). Two of those three paths run through associations. Here is what each association actually offers, what it costs, and how to choose the right one.

How the Three Homeschool Options Use Associations

Option 1 (§59-65-40): No association required. You report directly to your local school district, which approves your curriculum and can conduct annual reviews. This is the most restrictive path and the least popular among micro-school families.

Option 2 (§59-65-45): You must join an approved association — specifically, the South Carolina Association of Independent Home Schools (SCAIHS). SCAIHS is the only approved provider for Option 2. Annual membership is $385 per family. SCAIHS reviews your curriculum, requires portfolio submissions or test scores, and provides a degree of accountability that some families find reassuring and others find burdensome.

Option 3 (§59-65-47): You join an independent accountability association that has at least 50 members. The association keeps your records and verifies compliance, but it does not review or approve your curriculum. This is the most flexible path and the one most micro-school families choose.

The Major Option 3 Associations in South Carolina

SC Thrive Opportunities for Parents (SC TOP) SC TOP is one of the largest Option 3 associations in the state. It charges a low annual membership fee (typically under $40 per family), keeps records centrally, and requires no curriculum approval or testing. Families submit a notice of intent, a basic educational plan, and an attendance log. SC TOP is popular with micro-school families because it accommodates multiple families under one umbrella without requiring each family to prove individual curriculum compliance.

Carolina Homeschooler Carolina Homeschooler is a well-established statewide association. It offers record-keeping services, template documents for compliance, and a community network. Membership fees are comparable to SC TOP. It is a practical choice for families who want an active support community alongside their legal compliance wrapper.

Tri-County Satellite of Christian Home Educators of South Carolina (TSCHAA) TSCHAA serves families in the Lowcountry and surrounding counties with a Christian educational philosophy. It operates as an Option 3 association and includes community events, group activities, and curriculum guidance. Membership fees are modest. Families outside the stated faith basis typically look elsewhere.

Other Option 3 Associations SC has dozens of Option 3 associations, many of them regional, faith-based, or curriculum-specific. The SC Department of Education does not publish a definitive list, but SCAIHS and SC TOP both maintain informal directories. When evaluating a smaller association, confirm it has at least 50 current members and that it issues proper membership documentation — your proof of enrollment if a school district ever inquires.

What SCAIHS Offers (and When It Makes Sense)

SCAIHS (Option 2) is worth considering when:

  • You want structured accountability and someone to review your records before you do it yourself
  • Your child participates in public school extracurriculars (some districts require SCAIHS membership for athletic eligibility under Option 2)
  • You are new to homeschooling and want curriculum guidance and a clear compliance checklist

The $385 annual fee covers one family regardless of the number of children. SCAIHS provides curriculum consultation, portfolio review, and test score evaluation (SCAIHS accepts standardized tests in lieu of portfolios). It is the more expensive and more structured choice.

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Option 3 Associations and Micro-Schools: The Important Distinction

If you are running a micro-school with multiple families, each family enrolls in an Option 3 association individually. A micro-school of eight students means eight separate family memberships. The association does not enroll your micro-school as a unit — it enrolls the families.

This is fundamentally different from operating as a private school, which is a separate legal structure in South Carolina. Private schools are exempt from state registration, licensing, and teacher certification requirements, but they operate under a different framework than homeschool associations. Micro-schools that want to accept ESTF scholarship funds ($7,634 per student in 2026-2027) must be structured as private schools, not homeschool co-ops — the law explicitly disqualifies students in home-based personalized learning programs from ESTF funding.

If you are building a paid micro-school where families pay tuition, you need to decide early whether you are operating as a homeschool co-op (each family joins an association independently) or as a private school (you are the school, families are your clients). That choice affects your legal structure, your eligibility for state funding, and your documentation requirements.

The South Carolina Micro-School and Pod Kit walks through both paths — including the specific documents, association enrollment steps, and ESTF eligibility decisions — so you can set up the right structure from the start rather than untangle a compliance problem later.

What Documents You Will Need Regardless of Association

Under all three Options, South Carolina homeschoolers must:

  • Provide 180 days of instruction annually
  • Cover core subjects: reading, writing, math, science, and social studies (literature and composition added in grades 7-12)
  • Maintain an attendance record
  • Keep a record of materials and curricula used

Under Option 3, your association holds your annual progress report. Under Option 2, SCAIHS reviews it. Under Option 1, the school district does. The record-keeping requirements are similar across all three — the difference is who receives and approves the records.

Choosing the Right Association

For most SC micro-school families, Option 3 through SC TOP or Carolina Homeschooler is the right default. It is inexpensive, non-prescriptive about curriculum, and widely accepted. SCAIHS makes sense when structured accountability is a feature you want, not a constraint you are tolerating. And if you are building something more formal — paid tuition, a dedicated facility, multiple unrelated families — the private school route may serve you better than any association.

Start by checking whether the families in your group are already members of an association. If several are already with SC TOP, consistency across your group simplifies record-keeping. If everyone is starting fresh, choose the association that matches your operating model and budget, then document everything from day one.

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