Youâve probably heard the phrase âSection 19â thrown around in forums or Facebook comments â usually when a childâs out of school with no plan. But what actually is it? And why is no one talking about it?
Letâs break it down.
âïž Section 19 â The Basics
Section 19 of the Education Act 1996 says that if a child canât attend school â because of illness, anxiety, SEND needs or any other reason â the local authority has a legal duty to arrange suitable education.
Not a favour.
Not “if they feel like it.”
A legal duty.
đš When Does Section 19 Apply?
If your child is of compulsory school age and has been out of school for 15 or more school days (either in a row or broken up), then technically, Section 19 kicks in.
And hereâs the part no one tells you:
It doesnât matter if youâre waiting for an EHCP.
It doesnât matter if youâre “in between placements.”
It doesnât matter if the school says âweâre still looking.â
The council still has a duty.
â But Theyâll Tell YouâŠ
- âThereâs no funding right now.â
- âWeâre waiting for a place.â
- âYou need medical evidence.â
- âItâs the schoolâs job.â
đĄ None of these override the law. The actual law says education must be full-time (or as much as your child can manage), suitable for their age, ability and needs â and arranged by the council.
đ§ So What Does ‘Suitable Education’ Mean?
It could be:
- 1:1 tutoring at home
- Online learning
- A temporary provision
- Specialist outreach
But whatever it is, it must start without delay. You shouldnât be stuck in limbo while âthey figure it out.â
đ ïž How AskEllie Can Help
Section 19 is exactly why we built Ellie. Most parents arenât lawyers â and they shouldnât have to be.
AskEllie can:
- Tell you if your child is likely eligible
- Help you write the right kind of letter
- Decode the LAâs response
- Explain what steps to take next
For free. 24/7. No appointments. Just head to AskEllie.co.uk
đŹ Final Word
If your childâs out of school and nothingâs happening, donât wait. Section 19 is the law, even if your LA pretends itâs optional.
Weâve seen it work. We’ve helped parents use it.
And you donât have to face it alone.
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