Microschools in North Carolina

Last verified 2026-07-04

North Carolina families can put state education money toward learning outside the district system through Opportunity Scholarship (voucher) + ESA+ (disabilities). Here is how microschools operate legally here and how the funding actually works.

Legal pathways

North Carolina has no statute that names "microschools." Programs operate under existing law: Homeschool law limits enrollment to members of no more than two families; larger microschools register as nonpublic schools.

Which pathway fits depends on your enrollment, schedule, and whether parents remain the legal educators. Our founder's guide walks through choosing one.

ESA and scholarship funding

Program: Opportunity Scholarship (voucher) + ESA+ (disabilities)

Award amounts change year to year. Check the program site below for the current per-student amount.

Where the money lives: NCSEAA (MyPortal)

Two-family homeschool cap matters for microschool structure.

How to buy curriculum with Opportunity Scholarship (voucher) + ESA+ (disabilities)

Opportunity Scholarship pays private school tuition; ESA+ covers wider expenses for students with disabilities

  1. Confirm your family or program is enrolled and funds are available.
  2. Check the program's approved vendor list before buying.
  3. Buy through the platform or follow the reimbursement process exactly, and keep every receipt.

Browse the vendor directory for curriculum with ESA eligibility flagged, including Real Science 4 Kids for science.

North Carolina microschool FAQ

Are microschools legal in North Carolina?
Yes. North Carolina has no law that names "microschools," so programs operate under existing pathways. Homeschool law limits enrollment to members of no more than two families; larger microschools register as nonpublic schools. Confirm the details with your state before enrolling students.
Can families use Opportunity Scholarship (voucher) + ESA+ (disabilities) money for a microschool?
It depends on how your microschool is structured and what the program allows. Opportunity Scholarship (voucher) + ESA+ (disabilities) rules define eligible expenses such as tuition, curriculum, and tutoring. Opportunity Scholarship pays private school tuition; ESA+ covers wider expenses for students with disabilities Verify with the program before spending.
How do families buy curriculum with Opportunity Scholarship (voucher) + ESA+ (disabilities)?
Purchases run through NCSEAA (MyPortal). Families buy from approved vendors on the platform or follow the program's reimbursement process. Opportunity Scholarship pays private school tuition; ESA+ covers wider expenses for students with disabilities
Do I need a teaching license to run a microschool in North Carolina?
Requirements depend on which pathway you operate under (homeschool co-op, private school, or learning center), not on a microschool-specific rule. Read the pathway requirements in the sources below and verify with the state.
Where do I start if I want to open a microschool in North Carolina?
Read our step-by-step founder's guide, pick your legal pathway, then line up insurance, space, and curriculum. The guide links everything in order.

Sources

Keep going

See vendors that accept North Carolina ESA