EHCP Support Options
EHCP legal help: understanding your options
Navigating the EHCP process can feel overwhelming. Here is an honest look at what help is available — from free services to solicitors to AI-powered preparation tools — so you can choose what is right for your family.
What does a SEND solicitor do?
A SEND solicitor is a lawyer who specialises in the law governing special educational needs in England — primarily the Children and Families Act 2014 and the SEND Code of Practice. They can help with:
- Advising on whether your child is entitled to an EHCP and the strength of your case
- Drafting or reviewing EHC needs assessment requests and parental submissions
- Challenging a local authority decision to refuse to assess or to refuse to issue a plan
- Negotiating with the LA over the contents of the EHCP — particularly Sections B, F, and I
- Preparing for and representing parents at the SEND Tribunal, including instructing independent educational psychologists
- Judicial review for cases that fall outside the tribunal's jurisdiction
A good SEND solicitor brings expertise that no tool can fully replicate — particularly for complex cases, disputed placements, and tribunal hearings where cross-examination and legal argument are critical.
When you should consider a solicitor
Not every case needs a solicitor, but some do. Consider professional legal help if:
- Your case involves a disputed school placement (Section I) — particularly if naming an independent special school
- The LA has refused to assess or refused to issue an EHCP and you want to appeal to tribunal
- You are preparing for a tribunal hearing and the LA has instructed their own legal team
- Your child has complex needs spanning education, health, and social care
- You need to pursue judicial review (which is outside the tribunal's jurisdiction)
- You feel out of your depth and the stakes are high
If any of these apply, a SEND solicitor's expertise is genuinely valuable. Tools like Pathway can help you prepare before that conversation — but they are not a substitute for professional legal representation when you need it.
Why most parents cannot access solicitors
Legal aid for SEND cases was largely abolished in 2013 under the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act. It is now only available in very limited circumstances — primarily for judicial review, not tribunal appeals.
This means that in a system where local authorities defend their decisions — often with solicitors and barristers — most parents navigate complex legal proceedings alone. The SEND Tribunal welcomes litigants in person and the process is designed to be accessible, but the reality is that many families cannot afford professional help.
Free services available to you
Several charities and organisations provide free SEND advice in England:
- IPSEA (Independent Provider of Special Education Advice): a leading charity offering free legal advice on the rights of children with SEN. Provides telephone advice, template letters, and tribunal support. Waiting times are typically 8–12 weeks.
- SOS!SEN: a helpline offering advice for parents at any stage of the EHCP process. Useful for quick questions but limited in depth for complex cases.
- SENDIASS: every local authority in England is legally required to provide a free, impartial information, advice and support service. Quality varies by area, but many are excellent. Ask your LA for details.
- Disability Law Service: a legal charity offering free advice on disability law including SEND.
- Local Parent Carer Forums: every area has a parent carer forum. Experienced forum members often have detailed knowledge of specific LAs and schools.
- National Autistic Society, ADHD Foundation, RNIB: condition-specific charities that often have SEN helplines.
The honest limitation of free services is capacity. IPSEA and SOS!SEN are under-resourced relative to demand. With 25,000 tribunal appeals and over 100,000 new EHC needs assessments per year, the free advice sector cannot meet everyone's needs immediately.
SEND advocates and independent supporters
Between free charities and solicitors, there are SEND advocates and independent supporters. These are not legally qualified but have specialist knowledge of the EHCP system and can:
- Attend review meetings and LA meetings with you
- Help you draft letters and respond to LA communications
- Review draft EHCPs and identify weak or vague provision
- Support your preparation for tribunal
Advocates typically charge £50–120 per hour. Quality varies, and there is no formal accreditation. Word of mouth and local parent networks are the best way to find a good one.
What you can do without any professional help
The EHCP process is designed to be navigable by parents without legal representation. The following actions are within reach of any organised parent:
- Request an EHC needs assessment in writing, citing Section 36 of the Children and Families Act 2014
- Gather and organise evidence from the school, NHS services, and private therapists
- Write a detailed parental submission for the assessment
- Respond to a draft EHCP with specific, written amendments
- Register a tribunal appeal using the GOV.UK online form
- Prepare a witness statement and evidence bundle for the hearing
What makes the difference is being organised, persistent, and informed. Many LA decisions that are overturned at tribunal are overturned because the parent understood the law, gathered the right evidence, and documented everything.
How Pathway helps you prepare
Pathway is an AI-powered EHCP preparation tool designed for UK parents. It does not provide legal advice and it does not replace a solicitor. What it does is help you organise your case, understand the process, and prepare professional-quality documents:
- EHCP Quality Checker: review your EHCP against legal standards — flags vague provision, unmatched needs, and unenforceable language
- Evidence organiser: upload reports and documents; AI extracts key points and structures them for the assessment
- Application letter generator: structured letters citing the correct law for your child's specific situation
- LA Response Decoder: translate LA decision letters into plain English and understand your options
- Statutory deadline tracker: automatic alerts for every deadline in the EHCP process
- Tribunal preparation: witness statement framework, evidence bundle structure, case strength analysis
- Daily evidence diary: track sleep, mood, behaviour, attendance — build evidence over time
Pathway is not a solicitor, an advocate, or a replacement for professional legal advice. It is a preparation tool that helps you arrive at meetings, letters, and hearings better organised and better informed. For complex cases, we recommend working with Pathway alongside a solicitor or advocate — not instead of one.
Plans start from £12.99/month. See pricing →
Need professional help? We link to IPSEA, SOS!SEN, SENDIASS, and specialist SEND solicitors directly in the app. If your case is complex, please seek qualified legal advice. Pathway helps you prepare — it does not replace a solicitor.
Ready to get started?
Pathway puts the full weight of government data, AI-generated legal documents, and statutory deadline tracking behind every family — for less than the cost of an hour with a solicitor.