Chapter 4: The local offer
Every local authority must publish a clear, comprehensive account of what support is available for children and young people with SEN in their area. This is the local offer and families have the right to challenge it when it is inadequate.
View Children and Families Act 2014
§ 4.1 to 4.6 What is the local offer
What the law says
Section 30, Children and Families Act 2014. Code of Practice § 4.1 to 4.6
Local authorities must publish a local offer, setting out in one place information about provision they expect to be available across education, health and social care for children and young people in their area who have SEN or are disabled, including those who do not have EHC plans.
The local offer has two key purposes. First, to provide clear, comprehensive, accessible and up to date information about available provision and how to access it. Second, to make provision more responsive to local needs by directly involving disabled children, those with SEN, their parents, and service providers in its development and review.
The local offer should not simply be a directory of existing services. It should include provision the local authority expects to be available, even if currently being commissioned or developed.
In plain English
Think of the local offer as the menu of support your local authority is legally obliged to publish. It must be accessible and up to date, not a broken PDF from 2018. It applies to all children with SEN, not just those with EHCPs.
What to watch out for
- Local offer buried or inaccessible
- Services listed that no longer exist
- Only covering EHCP holders
What you can do
Search your local authority name and local offer and read it like a checklist. If services are missing, out of date, or inaccessible, you can comment formally. The local authority must publish your comments and respond publicly under SEND Regulations 2014 Regulation 4.
§ 4.17 to 4.36 What must be included
What the law says
Section 30, SEND Regulations 2014 Part 4. Code of Practice § 4.17 to 4.36
The local offer must include information about education, health and social care provision, transport, preparing for adulthood, EHC needs assessment, IASS access, and dispute resolution and appeals.
In plain English
It should be a one stop guide to what is actually available locally and how you get it. If key areas like transport, IASS, or post 16 support are missing, that is a compliance issue, not just a design problem.
What to watch out for
- Transport info missing
- No IASS details
- Thin 16 to 25 and preparing for adulthood content
What you can do
Use the legal content list above as a checklist and submit specific comments about what is missing. This creates a public accountability trail and makes it harder for them to pretend it is fine.