A homeschool lesson planner that plans every subject and tracks every milestone
Stop running a school out of a notebook and a gut feeling. Plan your week, reschedule in seconds, and keep audit-ready records — all from one organized view that moves with your family.
Most homeschool parents don't struggle because they lack dedication — they struggle because they're managing two or three different learning tracks in their head. A well-built homeschool lesson planner gives you the visibility, flexibility, and record-keeping to teach with intention instead of guesswork. Think less paper calendar, more living document of your child's education: what's been covered, what's coming up, and where each child needs more time.
What a homeschool lesson planner actually does
It's your teaching command center — the system that holds curriculum, schedule, attendance, and progress records together so nothing slips through a binder you'll never open again. Most homeschool burnout isn't from too much teaching; it's from too much managing. The planner takes the managing off your plate.
Manage multiple students without the chaos
One planning tool, completely different learners, zero juggling. A 6-year-old gets short visual blocks and a simple daily flow; a 10-year-old gets a weekly subject-by-subject layout and a reading tracker; a 14-year-old gets credit-hour tracking, elective planning, and transcript-ready records. Each child has their own profile and schedule — you switch between them from one parent dashboard, no separate logins.
Adapts as your child grows
The planner you start with in kindergarten should still be the one you're using at graduation — just with more depth layered in. Short check-off blocks for early learners, subject rotation and assessment tracking for elementary, independent-work logs for middle school, and credit hours plus transcript records for high school.
Attendance and records that build themselves
Attendance logs build automatically every time you mark a lesson complete, so your records stay clean and audit-ready — no separate spreadsheet, no end-of-year scramble to reconstruct October. Many states require documented attendance and subject hours; a good planner produces that record as a byproduct of teaching.
Works with your teaching style, not against it
Classical, Charlotte Mason, unschooling-adjacent, or eclectic — the system molds to you instead of forcing your day into someone else's template. Reschedule a Thursday lesson with a drag and drop when life gets in the way, and keep a printable quick-reference sheet on the desk while the full records live digitally in the background.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between a digital and a printable homeschool planner?
A free printable works for simple setups — but the moment your schedule changes, you're rewriting by hand. A digital planner lets you adjust, reschedule, and track progress without touching pen to paper, and many families keep a digital record as the source of truth while printing a quick Monday reference sheet.
Can I manage multiple children at different grade levels in one place?
Yes. Each child gets their own profile, schedule, and subject list, while you view and manage everything from a single parent dashboard — no separate apps or logins.
Does it work if I use an eclectic or non-traditional approach?
Absolutely. Build any structure you want — or almost none. The planner supports rigid daily schedules and loose, flexible daily flows alike, with custom subjects and adjustable pacing.
How does it handle attendance and state record-keeping?
Attendance logs every time you mark a lesson complete, so when it's time to report, your records are already clean and ready — no separate spreadsheet.
How long does setup take?
Under 20 minutes. Add your first student, choose subjects, and have your first week planned before your coffee cools.
Is there a free trial?
Yes — a genuinely free 7-day trial, no credit card required. Explore every feature and upgrade only when you're ready.
Ready to try it?
Free for 7 days. No credit card. Cancel any time.