MicroschoolLaunchKit
Florida · 2026

How to start a microschool in Florida

Florida has one of the largest school-choice ecosystems in the country. Between the Family Empowerment Scholarship and the Personalized Education Program, family funds can pay your tuition — once you are set up correctly. Here is the path.

Get the free Florida checklist →

The short version

In Florida, a microschool usually operates as a private school or serves families using the Personalized Education Program. Unlike some states, Florida asks private schools that want scholarship students to register with the state (FLDOE) and file an annual survey. Your work is your legal structure, that registration, your building, insurance, records, and connecting with the scholarship funding organization.

1. Pick your legal structure. LLC or nonprofit, so the school is separate from you personally.
2. Register as a private school with FLDOE. Florida private schools file an annual database/survey with the Department of Education. This registration is what makes you eligible to enroll scholarship students.
3. Handle the building. Local zoning, occupancy, and fire-safety rules apply. This is city and county.
4. Carry insurance. General and professional liability plus abuse/molestation coverage; background checks usually bundled. Roughly $400–$1,200 a year.
5. Set up enrollment and records. Agreements, health/immunization records, attendance, and audit-ready storage.
6. Connect to the scholarship funding organization. Florida scholarships are administered through a funding organization (Step Up For Students). Full Florida scholarship walkthrough →

Why Florida is different

Florida's scholarships are huge, but the state expects more paperwork up front than Arizona or Texas — the FLDOE registration is a real gate. Get it right early and the large pool of scholarship families opens up.

Free: the Florida microschool starter checklist

Every step above plus current official links, in a printable checklist.

Sources to verify current requirements: the Florida Department of Education (fldoe.org) private-school pages, Step Up For Students, and your city/county for zoning and fire code. Requirements change; confirm before acting.

General educational guidance, not legal advice. Independent and not affiliated with the Florida Department of Education or Step Up For Students.