---
title: Best homeschool library software
Metadescription: A homeschool co-op lends curriculum and readers between families. The tools that actually handle circulation - what fits each need, and what each costs.
Display description: A homeschool co-op lends curriculum sets and readers between member families, so it needs real circulation, not just a catalogue. Here is the honest shortlist - what each tool fits, what it doesn’t, and what it costs.
author: Dan Edwards
author_role: Founder
author_url: https://danedwardsdeveloper.com
author_linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-edwards-developer
published: 2026-07-15
---

Token estimate: ~2,600

# Best homeschool library software

By **[Dan Edwards](https://yourbooknest.com/contact)**, Founder.

A homeschool lending library is a particular job. Member families share expensive curriculum sets and a pool of readers, and someone has to know which family has which set and when it comes back. Curriculum goes out for a term or a whole year; readers come and go in weeks. Popular titles exist in two or three copies. And it helps if a parent can check what their own family has out without ringing the organiser.

That is circulation, not cataloguing - which is where most of the tools a homeschooler finds online fall short. Home-library apps catalogue one family's shelf beautifully but never lend. Co-op management platforms handle enrolment and directories but never check a book in and out. The tools below are judged on the actual co-op job.

## What a shared homeschool library needs

-   Long loans for curriculum and short loans for readers, without a fight.
-   Several copies of the same title tracked separately, so three families on the same maths programme don't collide.
-   A borrower record per family, and ideally a way for that family to see its own loans.
-   More than one parent-volunteer able to sign in and run the desk.
-   A cost that a handful of families can split without it climbing every time someone joins.

## Your Book Nest

Built for 20-to-50-family volunteer libraries, so a co-op is squarely the intended size. It is free up to 100 items and 50 patrons, then a flat £45 | US$60 | €50 | CA$85 | A$85 | NZ$100 a year with no per-family and no per-seat charge, so the cost never climbs as more families join. Catalogue a curriculum set once and give it a copy for each set you physically own - three families sharing one programme are three copies under a single title, not three duplicate records to keep in step. Set the library's loan period long enough for a term or a year of curriculum, and extend an individual loan when a family needs longer.

Each borrowing family gets a read-only login that shows only its own loans and due dates, and each parent-volunteer signs in with their own login rather than a shared password. There is no barcode hardware to buy: every copy gets a generated three-word code printed on its label, read off the cover and typed. A self-checkout kiosk - any browser at an unstaffed desk - lets families check their own sets in and out, which suits a co-op where no one staffs a desk. A family is a single patron record today, usually the parent.

What it does not do: there is no public catalogue for families to browse without signing in - the read-only logins are the deliberate, more private trade-off - no holds queue to reserve a set that is already out, and automatic overdue emails are not sent yet. The home page is a live demo: add a book, give it two copies, and lend them to two different families, with no account and no card. If you want the fuller small-school picture, best small school library software covers the neighbouring case.

## TinyCat (LibraryThing)

The strongest direct incumbent for this vertical. TinyCat's schools page names homeschool libraries explicitly, and it does the things a co-op reaches for that Your Book Nest doesn't: student sign-in accounts (with room for a child to have emails in two households), reading-level tags, a holds queue, automatic overdue reminder emails, reports, and no cap on the number of students. It runs on LibraryThing's catalogue data, so records come in deep, and a public online catalogue lets families browse from home. Pricing starts at US$3 (source) - £2 | €3 | CA$4 | A$4 | NZ$5 a month and rises with collection size; personal LibraryThing accounts are free.

The catch is two systems to learn - you catalogue in LibraryThing and circulate in TinyCat, which is a real learning curve for a rota of volunteers. If a searchable public catalogue and automatic reminders matter more than simplicity, it is the most complete pick here.

## Libib

Cataloguing-first, with the cleanest interface of the bunch and genuinely good ISBN and UPC barcode scanning from a phone, plus mobile apps. [Lending and patrons](/articles/is-libib-good-for-lending) live behind the Pro tier at $9 a month or $99 a year, with an extra $24 a year for each additional manager beyond the first. The barcode scanning is the headline draw, but curriculum guides and older donated readers frequently have no scannable barcode, so a co-op ends up hand-entering much of the collection anyway. A reasonable choice if you want a polished catalogue and don't mind paying for the lending side.

## Librarika

A genuinely free browser-based library system - catalogue, circulation, member accounts and a public online catalogue families can search, with nothing to install. The interface is dated and cataloguing is mostly manual. The free tier caps at 2,000 records, and the caps count every copy rather than every title, so a co-op with several copies of popular sets fills it faster than a title count suggests; the first paid step is $139 a year. The best zero-budget pick if a public searchable catalogue matters more to you than a modern interface.

## LibraryThing

The free default a lot of homeschoolers already use - free up to 200 books, or a one-off payment for a lifetime account. It catalogues beautifully but has no real circulation: families end up tracking who has what in a record's comments box, a manual hack that falls apart once several sets are out at once. Fine as a shared catalogue, not as a lending system. Whether [you can use LibraryThing to lend books](/articles/can-i-use-librarything-to-lend-books) covers exactly where it stops.

## Google Sheets or a spreadsheet

Free, familiar and instant - columns for title, author, reading level, borrowed-by and due date get a new co-op going in an afternoon. It buckles at whole-co-op checkout: no overdue prompt, no per-family login, and duplicate copies of one set blur into a single row so returns become guesswork. Moving a small library off a spreadsheet is worth reading before it grows past the point of coping.

## MyCoop and other co-op admin platforms

Worth naming so you don't mistake them for the answer. MyCoop, AfterSchool HQ and Skipper run a co-op's administration - class enrolment, family directories, volunteer hours - but none of them checks a book in and out. They pair with a lending tool rather than replacing one, so a co-op that already uses one still needs something from the list above for the shelf itself.

## Which to pick

For a co-op that wants a searchable public catalogue and automatic reminder emails, and doesn't mind running two linked systems, TinyCat is the most complete. For the simplest possible desk - free to start, flat and predictable as families join, copies handled properly, and nothing to install or scan - Your Book Nest is built for exactly this size. [What library software really costs](/articles/what-library-software-really-costs) walks through the total-cost maths if price is the deciding factor.

## Q&A

**Q: What software do homeschool co-ops use to lend books?**
A: Most use one of four things: a purpose-built small-library tool like TinyCat or Your Book Nest, a free cloud system such as Librarika, a cataloguing app like Libib or LibraryThing with lending bolted on, or a spreadsheet. The split that matters is whether the tool does real circulation - check-out, due dates and returns - or only catalogues the books. Co-op admin platforms like MyCoop handle enrolment and directories but not book lending, so they sit alongside a lending tool rather than replacing it.

**Q: How do you track curriculum sets shared between several families?**
A: Catalogue the set once and record a separate copy for each physical set you own, then lend each copy to a family in its own right. That way returns close the correct loan and you can see at a glance which families still have a copy out. Tools built on a proper copies model - Your Book Nest among them - do this cleanly; a spreadsheet tends to collapse the copies into one row, which is where returns go wrong. Tracking multiple copies of the same book covers the structure.

**Q: Can parents and children see what their family has borrowed?**
A: It depends on the tool. TinyCat and Libib expose a public online catalogue and give patrons accounts to browse and check their loans. Your Book Nest gives each family a read-only login that shows only its own loans and due dates, without a public catalogue - a more private arrangement, and the deliberate trade-off for a small high-trust group. A spreadsheet gives families no view of their own borrowing at all.

**Q: Do I need a barcode scanner for a homeschool library?**
A: No. Curriculum guides and older readers often have no scannable barcode, so a scanner helps less than it does in a shop. Your Book Nest prints a three-word code on each copy's label that you read off the cover and type, so no scanner is needed; other tools let you type an identifier by hand too. Whether a small library needs a barcode scanner goes into the detail.

**Q: Is there free homeschool library software?**
A: Yes, with trade-offs. Librarika runs a free cloud library system with a public catalogue but a dated interface and a record cap that counts every copy. LibraryThing catalogues for free up to 200 books but has no real lending. Your Book Nest is free under its item and patron limits and does full circulation, then moves to a flat yearly price above them. Libib's free tier catalogues but does not lend - lending sits behind its paid plan - which catches out budget-zero co-ops.
