Kindergarten Cutoff Date in New hampshire
Last updated May 2026. Always verify with the linked state agency before acting.
The specifics in New hampshire
Child must be 5 by September 30. Districts may vary.
New Hampshire's September 30 cutoff is set by the New Hampshire Department of Education, but districts have substantial authority and several use earlier dates. Compulsory attendance starts at age 6, so families have flexibility around kindergarten timing. New Hampshire does not fund universal Pre-K; preschool access varies by district.
What Kindergarten Cutoff Date actually is
The kindergarten cutoff is the calendar date by which a child must turn 5 years old to start kindergarten in a given school year. In US public schools, cutoffs vary from late July all the way to January 1 of the following year, depending on the state. The cutoff effectively splits the calendar in two: a child born one day before the cutoff is eligible this fall; a child born one day after waits another year. That single date can mean a 12-month difference in your child's school starting age, which compounds across years.
Cutoffs are set at the state level but districts often have authority to override or modify them within state limits. Some states (California, Colorado) have "transitional kindergarten" or pre-K bridges for fall birthdays that miss the cutoff. Some allow early-entry assessments where a younger child can test in. A handful of states (Connecticut, New York) push the cutoff late into the calendar year, meaning kids can start kindergarten while still 4 years old. Earlier cutoff states (Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky at August 1) tend to have older-on-average kindergarten classes.
"Redshirting" — deliberately holding a child back a year so they're among the older kids in class — has become more common, especially for late-summer-birthday boys. Research on whether redshirting helps long-term is genuinely mixed; the short-term effects are usually positive, the long-term effects often fade. Your state's cutoff is the floor, not a ceiling: you can almost always start a child later than the cutoff allows. Starting earlier than the cutoff is harder and usually requires a formal early-entry petition.
How to claim or invoke this right
To check or contest a cutoff decision, start with your local school district's enrollment office (not the state). Bring your child's birth certificate or passport. If your child misses the cutoff by a few days or weeks, ask whether the district has an early-entry pathway: some require a written request, a developmental screening, and a teacher recommendation. If you're considering redshirting, ask the district about it openly — most won't penalize the decision but you may need to enroll for a half-day pre-K or do nothing and re-enroll the next year. Private schools and charter schools set their own cutoff rules and may differ from your public district's.
Common misconceptions
- The cutoff is not the same as compulsory school age — your state may not require attendance until 6 or 7, even if kindergarten is offered at 5.
- Cutoffs don't apply to homeschooling, but reporting and assessment requirements still do.
- Districts can usually override the state cutoff within reason; ask your specific district.
- A "late" cutoff state lets a 4-year-old start school; an "early" cutoff state means classes skew older.
- Transitional kindergarten in some states is a real grade with its own funding, not a daycare program.
Questions to ask
- What is my exact district's cutoff and does it match the state default?
- Does the district offer an early-entry assessment, and what does that process look like?
- Is transitional kindergarten or a pre-K bridge available for my child's birthday window?
- If I redshirt this year, what enrollment paperwork do I need next year?
- How are class placements made for borderline-age children — homeroom, ability grouping, or both?
Sources
NH DOE · Education Commission of the States; state Departments of Education; local school districts