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How to Open an Online High School in Ontario

A practical guide to opening an online high school in Ontario: registering the school, meeting the secondary-school requirements, and earning OSSD credit-granting authority so students can graduate through you.

4 min readUpdated July 6, 2026Reviewed by SchoolConex Academic Operations

Opening an online high school in Ontario is a specific version of starting a private school — the version with the highest bar, because a high school's whole purpose is to move students toward the Ontario Secondary School Diploma (OSSD). That single fact shapes every requirement below.

This guide is general information, not legal or regulatory advice. Requirements, deadlines, and fees change. Confirm the current process with the Ontario Ministry of Education before acting.

The milestone that defines a high school: credit-granting authority

For an online high school, the goal is not just to exist — it is to grant credits that count toward the OSSD so students can graduate through you. And here is the part almost every "how to open a high school" article gets wrong:

A registered private high school cannot grant OSSD credits. Registration (the Notice of Intention and your BSID number) tells the Ministry your school exists. To issue OSSD credits, your school must apply for a Ministry inspection and be granted credit-granting authority. Only inspected private schools can grant OSSD credits. The complete registration-to-inspection journey is laid out in our pillar guide on how to start an online private school in Ontario — this guide zooms in on the secondary-school specifics.

What a credible online high school needs

Because a high school's output is diploma credits, the requirements are the strictest of any private school:

  • Ontario Certified Teachers for credit courses. Every course that counts toward the OSSD must be taught by a member of the Ontario College of Teachers (OCT), and the school needs a principal responsible for academic decisions. There is no online exception to this. If building a full teaching department before you have enrolment isn't realistic, Ontario teacher facilitation support can extend your staff.
  • OSSD-aligned courses across Grades 9–12. Each credit course has to be built around the Ministry's curriculum expectations, with Ontario's assessment and evaluation practices (for example, the principles in Growing Success). This is the substance an inspector reviews. A ready library of OSSD-aligned course shells means this exists on day one instead of taking a year to build.
  • A learning platform that works as a high school. Your branded LMS is where students attend, submit, and are assessed, and where teachers supervise and give feedback — all under your school's name.
  • Secondary records: the OSR and OST. You must maintain the Ontario Student Record and produce the Ontario Student Transcript, and report through the Ministry's systems. For an online school, keeping these clean and inspection-ready is a systems problem your operations and compliance setup has to solve.
  • A way to enrol students. An OSSD school website and storefront lets families find your courses and register, feeding straight into the LMS.

The steps, in order

  1. Decide your scope — Grades 9–12, credit-granting, fully online. That commits you to the inspection path.
  2. Register — file the NOI on the Ministry's annual schedule and receive your BSID.
  3. Build the academic foundation — OSSD-aligned courses, OCT teachers, a principal, assessment and reporting practices, and record systems.
  4. Stand up the platform and enrolment path — a branded LMS and a website families can enrol through.
  5. Apply for inspection and earn credit-granting authority. From that point you are an inspected private school and can grant OSSD credits — subject to ongoing inspection to keep the authority. We cover this milestone in depth in how to become an OSSD-granting school in Ontario.
  6. Enrol and grow honestly — with compliant, accurate recruitment that never overpromises visa or university outcomes you don't control.

Timeline and cost, honestly

Registering is fast; becoming inspected is not, because you cannot pass an inspection until the courses, staff, records, and policies are genuinely in place. Budget several months to first inspection. On cost, be skeptical of any single number — your real spend depends on staffing and, above all, on whether you build or license your courses and platform. We break this down in the cost to start a private school in Ontario guide.

Get the full high-school launch roadmap

Everything above — the phases, a checklist, a realistic timeline, and a cost worksheet — is packaged in our free OSSD School Launch Kit. It is the fastest way to see the entire path for an online high school in one document.

Where SchoolConex fits

SchoolConex provides the infrastructure behind an online high school under your brand: OSSD-aligned course shells, a branded LMS, Ontario teacher support, and inspection-ready operations, so your team can focus on running the school. Your principal keeps academic authority; we stay invisible. See how it works in a 30-minute walkthrough, or explore the new private schools path built for launching from scratch.

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Get the OSSD School Launch Kit

The step-by-step roadmap to opening an OSSD-granting online school in Ontario — every phase, a readiness checklist, a realistic timeline, and a fixed-vs-variable cost worksheet, in one PDF. Free, delivered instantly.

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This guide is general information, not legal or regulatory advice. Requirements change; confirm the current process with the Ontario Ministry of Education before acting. Talk to SchoolConex about running the platform, courses, and inspection-ready operations for your school.

Frequently asked questions

Only if it is an inspected private school with credit-granting authority. A registered private high school cannot grant OSSD credits until it passes a Ministry of Education inspection and is granted that authority. The Ontario Secondary School Diploma is issued on the basis of credits from an inspected school, so credit-granting authority is the milestone that lets students graduate through you.

For courses that count toward the OSSD, yes. Credit courses must be taught by Ontario Certified Teachers — members of the Ontario College of Teachers — and the school needs a principal responsible for academic decisions. This is a core requirement an inspector checks.

Secondary schools that grant OSSD credits carry the inspection and credit-granting obligations, OCT-taught credit courses, and OST record-keeping. Elementary programs have different, lighter expectations. If your goal is students earning an Ontario diploma, you are on the secondary, inspected path.

See it running for your school.

In a 30-minute walkthrough we show the branded LMS, OSSD course shells, Ontario teacher support, and the inspection-ready records behind a real partner school.

No prep needed. No obligation.