Find your people

Worldschooling groups and online communities

Worldschooling Facebook groups are where this movement actually talks: where hubs get announced, meetups form, and a question about visas or math curricula gets forty answers from families who have lived it. We curate a directory of 154 active groups, organized by region and topic so your family can find its people. Ten flagship communities are previewed below; members read the full directory.

Every group here is free to join. Member counts are approximate, taken at the time of our research, and they change constantly.

How to choose a worldschooling Facebook group

You do not need twenty groups. You need two or three good ones, added in this order.

Step 1

Start global

Join one large worldwide community first. That is where you absorb how worldschooling families actually think, travel, and learn, and where the big announcements land.

Step 2

Add your region

Then add the group for the place you are in or heading to. Regional and city groups are where advice turns practical: meetups this week, a trusted doctor, the good playground.

Step 3

Then your niche

Finally, add one or two groups that match your family specifically: teens, single parents, a learning philosophy, or a faith community. Niche groups are smaller and warmer.

Directory preview

Ten flagship worldschooling Facebook groups

A preview of the directory: the biggest global communities, plus flagship groups across Asia, Europe, and Latin America. Each is enough to get a family started today.

Members read the full directory.

The ten groups above are the short list. Membership unlocks the full curated directory of 154 worldschooling groups and online communities, organized by region and topic, with approximate sizes, join details, and direct links. It sits alongside the full hub directory: parent reviews, pricing, and website links for 600+ hubs and programs. A free account keeps you browsing the previews.

Already a member? Open the full groups directory in the app.

Groups are the conversation. The directory is the map.

We will be honest about what groups are and are not. They are the living room of the worldschooling community online: warm, fast, and generous with answers. They are also scattered. A hub gets announced in one group, reviewed in another, and the thread you need is three years deep in a feed that search barely reaches.

That is the problem the Edventures directory exists to solve: 600+ worldschooling hubs and programs around the world on a live map, in one structured place. Browse the map preview without an account, and keep browsing every hub with a free account. Membership unlocks the full directory: parent reviews, pricing, and direct links to each program, so you can compare hubs on what families actually experienced.

Join the groups. Stay for the conversation. And when you are ready to plan a season, the map is waiting.

Worldschooling group questions, answered

What parents ask when they start looking for their community online.

The largest communities in this directory are Homeschooling Unschooling Roadschooling Worldschooling (around 112,000 members), Worldschoolers (around 75,000), World School Home Swap / Sit / Rent / Trips (around 66,000), and WORLDSCHOOLING HUB (around 51,000). Member counts are approximate and shift constantly, so treat size as a signal of activity rather than a precise number.

Most worldschooling groups live on Facebook, and most are private: you tap Join, answer any membership questions the group asks, and wait for approval. Start with one large global group, add a group for the region you are heading to, then add one or two niche groups that match your family's approach. Two or three groups you actually read will serve you better than ten you skim.

Yes. Every group in this directory is free to join. Some communities also run paid programs, trips, or hubs alongside the free group. The group itself costs nothing and is a good place to get a feel for a community or an organizer before you commit to anything.

A group is an online community: a place to ask questions, find meetups, and follow what other families are doing. A hub is a place-based gathering, where families overlap in one destination for weeks or months so their children can learn and play together. Groups are usually where hubs get announced, which is why joining a few is the natural first step toward finding your family's hub.

If you are new, start with one large global community, such as Worldschoolers, to get a feel for how traveling families actually live and learn. Then add the group for your first destination or your home region, so the advice you read applies to your real plans. Niche groups (teens, single parents, a learning philosophy) come last, once you know what you are looking for.

Your people are already talking.

Somewhere in these groups, a family one year ahead of yours is answering the exact question you have been carrying. Join a group today, and when the conversation turns into a plan, the Edventures community and directory are here for the next step.

Worldschooling Facebook Groups: 150+ Communities to Join · Edventures