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EHCP Compass · Case law

3 new SEND cases every parent should know

Recent decisions from the Upper Tribunal and the Court of Appeal that strengthen your position when challenging a Local Authority — in plain English, with practical takeaways.

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Why case law matters

When a Court or Tribunal decides a SEND case, the reasoning becomes binding on future cases. It can shift the law in your favour without any Act of Parliament. Three recent decisions from 2025–2026 are particularly useful for SEND parents.

Case 1 of 3

Hampshire CC v GC [2026] EWCA Civ 20

Your EHCP doesn't end just because your family moves abroad temporarily

What happened

A Royal Navy family on temporary deployment to Dubai. Hampshire County Council tried to cease the child's EHCP, arguing the family was no longer in their area.

What the Court decided

The LA was wrong. "Ordinary residence" — the legal test for which LA is responsible — is not lost simply because a family is temporarily abroad. The LA can pause the IMPLEMENTATION of provision during the absence, but cannot END the plan.

Why this matters for you

  • Military families, diplomatic families, families on secondment abroad — your child's EHCP continues
  • Families travelling for medical treatment abroad — same principle applies
  • The LA cannot use a temporary absence as a reason to cease the EHCP
  • The statute being interpreted is section 45 Children and Families Act 2014 (cease to maintain), and section 24 (responsible LA)

Practical takeaway

If your family is temporarily abroad, your child's EHCP remains in force. The LA can pause delivering provision, but it cannot end the plan.

Decision date: January 2026 (Court of Appeal). Upheld an earlier Upper Tribunal decision.

Case 2 of 3

East Riding v Bowers [2026] UKUT 31 (AAC)

Every item of Section F provision must link back to a Section B need

What happened

A dispute over whether golf coaching and gym training could be included as Section F provision.

What the Court decided

Section F provision must have a "necessary nexus" with the special educational needs set out in Section B. Provision that targets a child's strengths rather than identified needs is an error of law.

Why this matters for you

  • When writing an appeal — clearly explain how each piece of requested provision links to a documented need in Section B
  • When challenging a Final EHCP — provision that doesn't link to a need is arguably an error
  • The reverse is also true — prepare your nexus argument carefully

Practical takeaway

Check every item in Section F against Section B. If there is no clear link, that provision may be challengeable — and if you are requesting provision, spell out the nexus explicitly.

Read the judgment

Decision date: 26 January 2026 (Upper Tribunal, Judge Citron)

Case 3 of 3

R & RK v Hertfordshire [2025] UKUT 381 (AAC)

Therapy in Section F vs Section G — the difference matters

What happened

The parents argued that occupational therapy, physiotherapy and speech and language therapy should be in Section F (educational provision) rather than Section G (health provision).

What the Court decided

Tribunals can move provision from Section G to Section F where it "educates or trains" the child. The test is whether the provision is closely connected to the delivery of education.

Why this matters for you

  • Section F (educational) provision is the LA's absolute duty under section 42(2) Children and Families Act 2014
  • Section G (health) provision is the NHS's responsibility under section 42(3) — much weaker enforcement
  • If your child's OT, physio or SALT is in Section G and the NHS doesn't deliver, you have limited remedies. If the same provision is in Section F, the LA is on the hook.
  • This case confirms tribunals have the power to reclassify provision from G to F where it educates or trains

Practical takeaway

When appealing your child's EHCP, argue that therapies which directly support learning belong in Section F.

Read the judgment

Decision date: Late 2025 (Upper Tribunal, Judge Jacobs)

How to actually use these cases

You don't need to be a lawyer to use case law in a SEND dispute. The phrases that matter are:

  • Pursuant to East Riding v Bowers [2026] UKUT 31 (AAC), Section F provision must have a necessary nexus to a Section B need...
  • In R & RK v Hertfordshire [2025] UKUT 381 (AAC) the Upper Tribunal confirmed that therapy which educates or trains belongs in Section F...
  • As clarified by the Court of Appeal in Hampshire CC v GC [2026] EWCA Civ 20, a child remains ordinarily resident in an LA's area even when temporarily abroad...

Drop these citations in letters to your council, in your tribunal Working Document, and in your Stage 1 / Stage 2 complaints.

Need help making the most of these?

  • Our Annual Review Copilot prompts you to consider Section F vs Section G classification
  • Our Tribunal Preparation Guide walks through citing case law
  • Free, multilingual support across 25+ languages

Last verified: 29 June 2026. Case citations and rulings verified against gov.uk Upper Tribunal Decisions. This is information, not legal advice — for case-specific guidance please contact IPSEA or a SEND solicitor.