By Sarah Mitchell · Reviewed by Amanda Chen, Esq. · Last updated: January 2026

Maryland Homeschool Portfolio Requirements (2026)

Maryland doesn't formally require a portfolio, but most evaluators and colleges expect one. Here's exactly what to include and how it gets reviewed.

Quick answer

Maryland doesn't legally require a portfolio. However, families building toward college applications, planning to re-enroll in public school, or moving to a higher-regulation state should maintain one anyway. A standard annual portfolio includes attendance, work samples, reading log, and any evaluations.

What goes in a Maryland homeschool portfolio

How a Maryland portfolio review actually works

Local school officials may review the homeschool program twice yearly, OR you can enroll under an umbrella organization that oversees compliance.

The reviewer is looking for evidence of progress, not perfection. They want to see that the child is being instructed in the required subjects and is moving forward. Curated samples that show clear improvement beat a binder stuffed with everything you printed.

Building the portfolio without losing your weekends

The painless approach is to capture as you go: snap a photo of completed work as the child finishes it, drop it into a per-month folder (digital or physical), and add a one-line caption. At year's end, you select 3–8 pieces per subject. Tools like Homeschool Moment auto-tag photos by subject so the year-end portfolio assembly takes 30 minutes instead of two weekends.

Maryland-specific portfolio notes

Maintain a portfolio of materials and student work for review.

Frequently asked questions

Who can serve as a Maryland homeschool portfolio evaluator?

school district reviewer or umbrella school.

Can I submit a digital portfolio in Maryland?

Most evaluators accept a PDF portfolio, especially for review. Some prefer a physical binder for the in-person meeting. Ask your evaluator before assembling.

What if a Maryland evaluator finds the portfolio insufficient?

Most evaluators give parents a chance to add work and resubmit before issuing a non-approval. Keep open communication and address feedback promptly.

Document instantly. Skip the spreadsheets.

Snap a photo, get an AI caption, auto-tagged by subject. Free tier — no credit card.

Try Homeschool Moment

More Maryland guides

Other moderate-regulation states