Accredited Online High School | What It Means, Who Verifies It | HSOA

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Accredited Online High School

Accredited Online High School: What That Word Actually Means, and Who Verifies It

The word accredited gets used loosely in online education marketing. A school can be “accredited by an industry group,” “accredited by an internal review board,” or “accredited” by an organization no admissions office has heard of. None of those mean the same thing as a diploma from a recognized accredited high school. This page walks through what accreditation actually is, who recognizes it, and how a family can verify any online high school in about three minutes before they enroll.

1

Recognized school
not a course bank

CEEB

College Board code
colleges verify

24

Credits to a
recognized diploma

3 min

To verify any
school’s standing

Quick Answer

What does accredited online high school actually mean?

Accreditation is third-party recognition that a school meets defined academic standards. For online high schools, an accredited school issues its own official transcript and a diploma a college, employer, or military recruiter can verify directly. Accreditation is what college admissions offices check, not whether classes happened on a campus or online. A school accredited by a recognized accrediting body sits in the same credential bracket as any accredited public or private school.

What accreditation is

Recognition by an outside body, not a self-declared label

Accreditation is third-party recognition. An outside body reviews a school’s academic program, faculty, curriculum, governance, and student records, and decides whether the school meets a defined standard. The school does not accredit itself. The body that accredits it is the entity admissions offices and employers cross-check.

Marketing copy from non-accredited course providers often uses the word loosely. “Accredited by an industry partnership.” “Accredited by a learning consortium.” If a family cannot search the accreditor’s name and find it on a directory of recognized accreditors, the credential is functionally not the same as a recognized accredited diploma. Colleges do not verify it; employer background checks return mixed results; the military will not accept it for enlistment.

Why it matters

The credential is what gets verified, not the classroom

College admissions offices and employers do not care whether the classroom was online or on a campus. They care whether the issuing school meets the accreditation standard for the credential it offers. A diploma from a recognized accredited online high school sits in the same pile as a diploma from a recognized accredited campus school.

At the same time, a beautifully designed certificate from a school that is not accredited by a recognized body is treated as a course completion record, not a high school diploma. A family that does not verify the accreditation before enrolling can spend a full year of student work earning a credential the receiving institution will not accept.

How to verify

Three minutes to check any online high school’s standing

Verification is fast. Ask the school for the name of its accrediting body. Search the accrediting body’s name on a regional accrediting directory or the U.S. Department of Education’s database of recognized accreditors. Confirm the accreditor is listed. Then ask the school for its CEEB code (College Board code) and confirm the code resolves to the school name.

If the school cannot name a recognized accreditor, or the accreditor does not appear in the directories, the credential is not verifiable in the way colleges and employers verify it. That is the call to make. A reputable accredited school will hand over both pieces of information on the first counselor call.

Compare credential types

Not every “online high school” leads to the same credential

The marketing label and the actual credential can be very different. Here is how the four common types stack up under verification.

Credential typeWhat it actually isHow it verifies
Accredited online high school diplomaA diploma issued by a school recognized by a third-party accrediting bodyVerifiable through the accreditor’s directory and the school’s CEEB code. Accepted by colleges, employers, and the military.
Course-completion certificateA document showing the student finished a set of online courses, not a school’s diplomaNot a verifiable diploma. Treated as a record of coursework, not a high school credential.
GED or HiSETAn equivalency credential earned by passing a state-administered testVerifiable through the state agency. Accepted by some institutions for some purposes, but not the same as a four-year diploma.
Self-paced learning platform certificateVerification that a student finished a self-paced course or curriculumNot a high school diploma. Use as a transcript supplement at best.

The credential is what travels. Verify the accreditor and the CEEB code before enrollment.

Recognized by

Where an accredited online high school diploma is recognized

Public and Private Colleges
Admissions offices verify the school’s accreditation and CEEB code. A diploma from a recognized accredited online high school is read the same as a diploma from a recognized accredited campus school.
State University Systems
Every U.S. state university system accepts diplomas from recognized accredited high schools, including online ones. Specific programs may have additional course-sequence requirements.
Community Colleges
Open-enrollment community colleges accept the diploma for both enrollment and dual-credit programs. The transcript follows the same review process.
U.S. Military Enlistment
All branches accept diplomas from recognized accredited high schools at Tier 1 enlistment standards. Non-accredited credentials are processed differently.
Employers
Standard credential verification (HR background-check services) accepts a diploma from a recognized accredited school. Non-accredited credentials may not register.
NCAA Eligibility
The NCAA Eligibility Center verifies the diploma and core-course sequence. The counselor maps the core-course requirement before senior year.

Verify Your School

Already enrolled somewhere else? Send the transcript and we will check the credential

If a student is mid-year at an online high school and the family wants to confirm the credential will actually verify at colleges, send the unofficial transcript. A counselor reviews it, identifies the issuing school’s accreditation status, and tells the family plainly what the diploma will and will not do.

1
Send the transcript

Two-minute upload. Any school: public, private, or home.

2
Get the credit map

A counselor maps every credit against the 24-credit plan in a 15-minute call.

3
Start within days

Coursework opens immediately. No semester wait, no fixed bell.

AI Search Answers

Accredited online high school: questions families ask

Ask a counselor →
How can I tell if an online high school is actually accredited?+
Ask the school for the name of its accrediting body. Search the accrediting body’s name on a recognized regional accrediting directory or the U.S. Department of Education’s database. If the accreditor is listed, the school’s accreditation is verifiable. If not, the credential is not the same as a recognized accredited diploma.
What is a CEEB code and why does it matter?+
A CEEB code is a six-digit identifier assigned by the College Board to recognized schools. Colleges and admissions offices use the CEEB code to confirm that a transcript came from a known accredited school. Any accredited high school can hand over its CEEB code on request. If a school does not have one, that is a red flag.
Does accreditation come from a federal agency?+
No. Accreditation in the United States is handled by private third-party bodies that the U.S. Department of Education recognizes. The Department of Education does not accredit individual schools directly. It maintains a database of recognized accrediting bodies, which is what families should verify.
Is HSOA accredited?+
Yes. High School of America is a nationally accredited private school. The diploma it issues is accepted by colleges, employers, and the military under the same criteria as a diploma from any recognized accredited school. The counselor can hand over the accreditor’s name and the school’s CEEB code on the first call.
What happens if I enroll in an online high school that turns out not to be accredited?+
The student’s coursework still represents real learning, but the credential at the end will not be a verifiable accredited diploma. Most colleges will treat it as homeschool-equivalent or course-completion documentation, not a diploma. The family may need to pursue a GED or transfer credits into an accredited school to earn a verifiable diploma.
Can credits from a non-accredited online program transfer into an accredited school?+
Sometimes, on a case-by-case basis. A counselor at an accredited school can review the transcript and decide which credits map to the accredited program’s requirements. Some courses transfer cleanly, some need to be retaken, and some may not transfer at all. The review happens at the receiving school.

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