Know Your Rights

Your legal rights at each stage of the EHCP process, with specific references to the SEND Code of Practice 2015 and Children and Families Act 2014.

This is general legal information, not legal advice. For specific advice about your situation, contact IPSEA or your local SEND IASS.

refused assessment

The LA has refused to carry out an EHC needs assessment. You have the right to appeal this decision to the SEND Tribunal.

Right to written reasons for refusal

If the LA decides not to assess, they must notify you in writing, giving reasons, and inform you of your right to appeal.

What you can do

Request the full written reasons for the refusal decision.

Right to appeal refusal to assess

You can appeal a refusal to assess to the First-tier Tribunal (SEND). You do NOT need to mediate first for this type of appeal.

What you can do

Register your appeal within 2 months of the refusal.

Low legal threshold applies

The LA must assess if the child MAY have SEN and it MAY be necessary to make provision via an EHC plan. Many LAs apply too high a threshold.

What you can do

Check the LA's reasons against the low legal threshold and challenge if appropriate.

Cross-cutting rights

Some rights apply across the whole EHCP journey, not just at one stage.

Key Legislation

Children and Families Act 2014

The primary legislation establishing the EHCP system, rights to assessment, and the SEND Tribunal.

Read on legislation.gov.uk →

SEND Code of Practice 2015

Statutory guidance that LAs, schools, and health bodies must follow when supporting children with SEN.

Read on gov.uk →