ESA for Curriculum & resource sellers
If you sell curriculum or educational products, Education Savings Account (ESA) funds are a fast-growing way to get paid. Here’s how Curriculum & resource sellers register as vendors, what you can bill, and where to start by state.
Reviewed June 2026. Rules differ by state — verify with your state’s official ESA program. Not legal advice.
Yes — Curriculum & resource sellers can be paid with ESA funds
Education Savings Accounts let families spend public education funds with approved private vendors. As a curriculum or resource business, you register as a vendor / service provider with your state’s program, get approved, and receive funds through the state’s payment rail. Universal-ESA programs are expanding fast across the US — providers who register early get listed before families start spending.
How Curriculum & resource sellers get paid with ESA — the basic flow
- Register as an approved vendor / service provider with your state’s ESA program (and its payment platform).
- Invoice the family with an itemised, compliant invoice that names the educational subject of each service.
- Get paid — the family approves the charge against their ESA balance and the rail deposits funds to your business bank account.
- Stay audit-ready — keep invoices, service records and credentials per student for program reviews and renewals.
What Curriculum & resource sellers can typically bill ESA for
Approved categories vary by state, but across ESA programs Curriculum & resource sellers commonly bill for tutoring and academic instruction, curriculum and instructional materials, supplemental educational services, and — where applicable — therapies and services for students with disabilities. Always confirm your state’s approved-expense list before you invoice; the exact wording on each line item is what gets an invoice approved or rejected.
Invoice without rejections
Build a compliant, itemised invoice for your state in minutes — and catch the fields that get invoices bounced before you submit.
Why Curriculum & resource sellers invoices get rejected (and how to avoid it)
The number-one reason a curriculum or resource business doesn’t get paid isn’t eligibility — it’s the invoice. ESA programs return invoices that miss a single required detail, and the money waits. The most common rejection triggers for Curriculum & resource sellers:
- A vague description (“tutoring”) instead of the educational subject (“Grade 4 mathematics”).
- Missing service dates, or a total that doesn’t add up to the line items.
- No provider credential or license where the service requires one.
- A Square / PayPal receipt submitted instead of an itemised invoice.
- Mixed expense categories on a single order, which some rails reject in full.
Staying audit-ready as a curriculum or resource business
ESA programs review vendors and renew funding on a schedule, so keep a clean record per student: the compliant invoice, a service or attendance log, the educational purpose of each session, and any required credential. Curriculum & resource sellers who keep these as they go breeze through audits and renewals; those who reconstruct them later lose days — and sometimes the funding. Our tools build the invoice and keep the records in one place.
ESA for Curriculum & resource sellers by state
Each state runs its program differently. Pick yours for the exact registration steps, payment rail, deadlines and invoice fields for Curriculum & resource sellers:
Texas
Odyssey
Curriculum & resource sellers in Texas →
Arizona
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in Arizona →
Florida
Step Up For Students
Curriculum & resource sellers in Florida →
Iowa
Odyssey
Curriculum & resource sellers in Iowa →
Utah
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in Utah →
Arkansas
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in Arkansas →
Tennessee
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in Tennessee →
West Virginia
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in West Virginia →
North Carolina
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in North Carolina →
Indiana
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in Indiana →
New Hampshire
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in New Hampshire →
Ohio
Merit (Other)
Curriculum & resource sellers in Ohio →
Georgia
Odyssey
Curriculum & resource sellers in Georgia →
Alabama
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in Alabama →
Louisiana
Odyssey
Curriculum & resource sellers in Louisiana →
Wyoming
Odyssey
Curriculum & resource sellers in Wyoming →
Missouri
Odyssey
Curriculum & resource sellers in Missouri →
South Carolina
ClassWallet
Curriculum & resource sellers in South Carolina →
Curriculum & resource sellers + ESA FAQ
Can Curriculum & resource sellers accept ESA funds?
Yes. In states with an Education Savings Account (ESA) or school-choice program, Curriculum & resource sellers can register as approved vendors / service providers and be paid from families' ESA funds. Each state runs its own program and approves its own vendors, so the exact steps depend on where you operate.
How do curriculum or resource business owners get paid with ESA?
You register as an approved vendor, send the family an itemised, compliant invoice, the family approves it against their ESA balance, and the state's payment platform (e.g. ClassWallet, Odyssey, or Step Up For Students) deposits the funds into your business bank account.
Do Curriculum & resource sellers need to register before billing ESA?
Yes — families can only spend their ESA on approved vendors, so registration is the gate between you and the money. Once approved, you're visible to every family in the program looking for a curriculum or resource business.
Which states let Curriculum & resource sellers use ESA funds?
Most universal-ESA states. Pick your state below for the exact registration steps, payment rail, deadlines and invoice fields.
How to become an ESA vendor (all states) → · ESA terms explained →