Free New York IHIP template (2026–2027)
Homeschooling in New York comes with paperwork: an Individualized Home Instruction Plan filed with your district by August 15 — or within 14 days of beginning home instruction — then four quarterly reports on the dates your IHIP sets, and an annual assessment with the fourth (8 NYCRR §100.10). Below is a free, printable, blank IHIP template with the required subjects for your child's grade already listed. Pick a grade, print it, fill it in. No account needed.
Eformogi can fill this in from your student's record — capture is free forever. See it filled in →
How to fill it in, step by step
An IHIP has five parts. The regulation text (8 NYCRR §100.10) is always the source of truth; this is the plain-language version of what each part asks for.
1. Student information
Name, age, and grade level. Grade matters twice: it selects the required subject list New York expects for the year, and it sets the annual hour equivalent (900 hours for grades 1–6, 990 for grades 7–12) that your quarterly reports will aggregate toward.
2. Who is providing instruction
List the parent(s) or other person(s) who will provide instruction. New York does not require the instructor to hold teaching certification for home instruction.
3. Your four quarterly report dates
You choose them — the regulation leaves the four dates to the family, and the dates you write here govern when each quarterly report is due for the rest of the year. Many families use July–September, October–December, January–March, and April–June; the template pre-prints those as editable defaults.
4. A plan of instruction for each required subject
For each subject on the grade’s list: the syllabus, the curriculum materials, or a plan of instruction — any one of the three. A few plain sentences per subject is normal ("Saxon Math 5/4, four lessons a week, tested per chapter"). The recurring topics (patriotism and citizenship, substance abuse, traffic safety, fire prevention) need to appear somewhere across K–12, and the template lists them so nothing is missed.
5. File it with your district
By August 15, or within 14 days of beginning home instruction if you start mid-year. The district reviews the IHIP for compliance with the regulation; if it finds a deficiency, you are notified and given the opportunity to revise. Keep a copy — the quarterly reports that follow are written against this document.
The quarterly reports that follow
The IHIP is the first of five filings in a New York home-instruction year: after it come four quarterly reports, each due on a date your IHIP set. A quarterly report states the hours of instruction for the quarter, describes the material covered in each subject, and gives a grade or a short written narrative per subject — with a written explanation if less than 80 percent of the planned material was covered. The annual assessment is filed with the fourth report.
The hours and per-subject descriptions are exactly the things a running record already contains. Families who keep their student's record on Eformogi have hours aggregate by subject on their own, and each quarterly report drafts itself from the record — see the quarterly builder. Capturing the record is free forever; generating the clean, filing-ready document is part of Family Pro.
Frequently asked questions
When is the New York IHIP due?
New York families file an IHIP with their district by August 15, or within 14 days of beginning home instruction (8 NYCRR §100.10). Four quarterly reports follow on the dates set in the IHIP, and an annual assessment is filed with the fourth quarterly report.
What goes in an IHIP?
The student's name, age, and grade level; the name of the person(s) providing instruction; the syllabus, curriculum materials, or plan of instruction for each required subject for that grade; and the dates for submitting the four quarterly reports. This template pre-prints the required subject list for the grade you choose, with ruled space for each plan.
Is this template really free? Do I need an account?
Yes, and no account. Pick a grade, print it, fill it in by hand or on a typewriter of your choosing. It is a blank form built from the subject lists and hour minimums in New York's home-instruction regulation (8 NYCRR §100.10) — the regulation text is always the source of truth.
Which subjects does New York require for my child's grade?
The required subjects differ by grade band: grades 1–6 include arithmetic, reading, spelling, writing, English language, geography, United States history, science, health education, music, visual arts, and physical education; grades 7–8 and 9–12 have their own lists. The template shows the list for the grade you select, plus the recurring topics (patriotism and citizenship, substance abuse, traffic safety, fire prevention) taught at least once across K–12.
How many hours of instruction does New York require?
The regulation sets the annual equivalent at 900 hours for grades 1–6 and 990 hours for grades 7–12 (8 NYCRR §100.10). The IHIP itself does not report hours — the four quarterly reports do, and they aggregate to the annual figure.
What goes in each New York quarterly report?
On each of the four dates your IHIP sets, the quarterly report states the hours of instruction during that quarter, a description of the material covered in each subject, and either a grade or a written narrative evaluation in each subject — plus a written explanation if less than 80 percent of the planned material was covered (8 NYCRR §100.10). The annual assessment is filed with the fourth report.
Can Eformogi fill this in for me?
Eformogi families keep a living record of what their student reads, makes, and completes — and that record can fill in compliance documents like this one. Capturing the record is free forever. Filled-in document generation is part of Family Pro.