Home › History › Best Timeline of History for Homeschool
If you only have time to read one line: the Timeline of World History is our top pick for most homeschool families — it's beautifully made, genuinely comprehensive, and works across all ages and curricula. Keep reading to find out which one fits your setup best, because the right answer does depend on your goals.
A good history timeline isn't a decoration — it's a teaching tool that helps kids build an actual mental framework for history. Done right, it connects events across civilizations, shows cause and effect, and gives kids a sense of scale that textbooks alone just can't deliver. Done wrong, it's a wall poster that gets ignored. Here's what we found when we looked closely at the three best options available right now.
This is the one I'd buy first if I were starting over. It's a large, high-quality book-format timeline that spans from prehistoric times to the modern era, with parallel tracks showing what was happening in different civilizations simultaneously. The visual design is genuinely excellent — it reads clearly without feeling cluttered, and kids can actually browse it on their own.
What sets it apart is that it works without being tied to any specific curriculum. Whether you're using Sonlight, Bauer's Story of the World, Ambleside, or something totally eclectic, this fits in naturally. It's also durable enough for daily use — not something you'll be handling with white gloves.
If integrating biblical history with world history is a priority for your family, this is the one to get — and it does that job really well. It's a large spiral-bound circular timeline (yes, circular — more on that below) that places Bible events alongside Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and other ancient civilizations. The research behind it is solid, and the connections it draws are genuinely eye-opening for kids and adults alike.
The format takes some getting used to. The circular/spiral design is meant to show generations and how history "turns," but it can feel disorienting if you're used to a left-to-right linear timeline. Once kids get it, they often love it — but plan to spend some time introducing it. It's a conversation starter more than a quick reference tool.
This one is purpose-built to go alongside TAN Books' Story of Civilization curriculum, specifically Volume I (Ancient). If you're using that curriculum, it's an obvious buy — the timeline matches the content directly, which makes it genuinely useful as a teaching tool rather than a supplement you have to adapt. For families not using Story of Civilization, it's a harder sell because the scope is intentionally limited to the ancient world.
It's a poster format, which means it's visually accessible for younger kids and easy to hang in your school room. The art style fits the Catholic classical tradition and is engaging without being overwhelming. Just know that it covers ancient history only — you'd need additional volumes as your child progresses.
There's no single "best" for every family — but there is a best for your situation. Here's the short version:
If you want one comprehensive, curriculum-neutral timeline that grows with your child from elementary through high school, this is it. The visual quality is excellent and it covers the full sweep of history without a doctrinal filter. Most families will be happiest here.
If your homeschool weaves biblical history into everything else and you want a visual that shows how Scripture and world events connect, this is worth every penny. It's dense, it's fascinating, and it'll generate real conversations. Just budget time to introduce the format.
If you're actively using TAN's Story of Civilization curriculum Vol. I, add this without overthinking it. If you're not using that curriculum, start with one of the options above instead.
You can introduce a simple timeline as early as 6 or 7 years old — kids this age love seeing "where things go" even before they fully grasp chronology. At this stage, something visual and picture-rich works best. By 9 or 10, most children can begin using a more detailed reference timeline meaningfully, and by middle school they should be using it regularly to anchor what they're reading. The key is keeping it visible in your school space so it becomes a natural reference point, not something that only comes out during a lesson.
Both are valid, and many experienced homeschool moms actually use both. A DIY timeline — whether a notebook timeline or a long paper roll on the wall — is fantastic for building the habit of placing events as you learn them. But a purchased reference timeline like the ones reviewed above serves a different purpose: it gives kids (and you) a complete, professionally researched overview they can consult at any time. They're not in competition with each other. If budget is a concern, prioritize the DIY notebook approach and add a reference timeline when you can.
Not necessarily — and in most cases, a good general timeline will serve you better across the years precisely because it doesn't. The Story of Civilization poster is the exception here, since it's specifically tied to one curriculum. But the Timeline of World History and the Amazing Bible Timeline work alongside virtually any history program. The more important thing is that the timeline gets used consistently, not that it perfectly mirrors your textbook's chapter order.