SEND mediation can still be worth it when the dispute is clear, the evidence is organised, and the local authority sends someone with authority to agree a solution. It can sometimes resolve refusal-to-assess, refusal-to-issue, wording or provision disputes more quickly than Tribunal. But it is not always the best route, especially where the local authority position is fixed, the dispute is mainly about placement or cost, or the family needs a binding Tribunal decision.
Families should usually treat mediation as a strategic checkpoint, not a substitute for appeal preparation. Protect the appeal deadline first, get the mediation certificate where needed, and only mediate if there is a realistic outcome worth pursuing.
Families are increasingly sceptical about SEND mediation because the wider SEND system is under visible pressure.
Local authorities are managing rising EHCP numbers, tribunal appeals, specialist placement shortages, transport costs and high-needs deficits. Many are also working within Department for Education programmes such as Safety Valve or Delivering Better Value. These programmes are designed to address local authority high-needs deficits and improve sustainability, but families often experience them as a background pressure against agreeing more provision or higher-cost placements.
That context matters. A mediation meeting may feel constructive in theory, but families may find the local authority says it cannot agree more assessment, therapy, specialist placement, transport or quantified provision because of policy, budget, panel processes or local availability.
This is why mediation can feel like a “waste of time”. Families may attend, explain the same evidence again, and leave with no agreement.
However, that does not mean mediation is always pointless. It means the decision to mediate should be deliberate. The question should not be “Do we have to mediate?” but:
“What could realistically be agreed at mediation, and would that move the case forward?”
The evidence is mixed.
Official Department for Education data shows that mediation is used in significant numbers and that not every mediation is followed by a Tribunal appeal. In 2024, there were 10,500 mediations related to decisions not to carry out an EHC needs assessment, and 1,500 of those were later subject to Tribunal. There were also 2,100 mediations related to decisions not to issue an EHCP, with 500 later going to Tribunal, and 1,900 mediations about plan content, with 700 later going to Tribunal.
That does not prove every case avoiding Tribunal was a good outcome. Some families may have resolved the issue, some may have accepted a compromise, and others may not have appealed for different reasons. But the data does show that mediation is not always followed by appeal.
At the same time, Tribunal demand continues to rise sharply. HMCTS statistics recorded 25,000 registered SEN appeals in the 2024/25 academic year, an 18% increase on the previous year. DfE data for calendar year 2024 recorded 22,300 registered appeals, a 42.7% increase on the previous year using its new methodology.
So the fair answer is this: mediation can resolve some disputes, but it is not reducing the overall level of conflict in the SEND system. Families should not assume mediation will work, and they should not let it delay a well-prepared appeal.
Mediation sits within the Children and Families Act 2014 and the Special Educational Needs and Disability Regulations 2014. The SEND Code of Practice also gives guidance on mediation and disagreement resolution.
Parents and young people can usually consider mediation where they disagree with a local authority decision that could be appealed to the SEND Tribunal. This includes:
In many cases, a parent or young person must contact a mediation adviser and obtain a mediation certificate before registering an appeal. This is often called “mediation advice” or “considering mediation”.
This does not always mean attending a mediation meeting. It means receiving information and advice about mediation from the mediation adviser. If the parent or young person then decides not to mediate, the adviser should issue a certificate. That certificate is often needed before the SEND Tribunal appeal can be registered.
There is an important exception. If the appeal is only about the school, college or other institution named in Section I of the EHCP, or only about the type of school or institution, a mediation certificate is usually not required.
Deadlines are critical.
The usual SEND appeal deadline is two months from the date of the local authority’s decision letter or one month from the date of the mediation certificate, whichever is later.
Where a mediation certificate is needed, families should contact the mediation adviser within two months of the local authority’s decision. If the family does not want to mediate, the mediation adviser should issue the certificate quickly once advice has been provided and the family confirms they do not want mediation.
If the family does want mediation, the local authority or relevant health body must arrange it within the required timescale. The mediation should be arranged so that people with authority to resolve the issues attend. This matters because there is little value in a meeting where everyone is polite but nobody can agree anything.
Families should keep a clear record of:
A family should never wait for mediation to feel “finished” before thinking about appeal preparation. If the appeal may be needed, prepare both routes in parallel.
Mediation is most likely to help where the dispute is narrow, the evidence is clear and the local authority has room to move.
It may be useful where:
Where the dispute centres on Section B or F wording, this often overlaps with our EHCP amendments support, which can help structure the amendment case alongside mediation.
Mediation can also be useful where communication has broken down. A good mediator can help keep the meeting focused on the issues rather than the history.
The strongest mediation preparation usually includes a one-page issue summary, the outcome the family wants, the key evidence, and the exact wording or decision being requested.
For example:
“We are asking the local authority to agree to carry out an EHC needs assessment because the school’s evidence now shows that SEN Support is not enough and that specialist advice is needed.”
Or:
“We are asking for Section F to specify weekly speech and language therapy, because the current wording does not reflect the therapist’s recommendation and cannot be monitored.”
Mediation may be less useful where the local authority’s position is fixed or the dispute requires a binding decision.
It may not be the best use of time where:
This does not mean families should refuse mediation automatically. It means they should ask:
“What is the best possible outcome from mediation, and is it realistic?”
If the answer is “we only need the certificate so we can appeal”, that is a valid position. Families are not required to attend a mediation meeting in every case.
Before agreeing to mediation, families can ask practical questions.
Who will attend from the local authority?
Do they have authority to agree the requested outcome?
Will health or social care attend if the issue involves Sections C, D, G or H?
What issues will be discussed?
Can the family send a short issue summary in advance?
Will any agreement be recorded in writing?
How quickly will the local authority implement any agreement?
Will mediation affect the appeal deadline?
What certificate will be issued and when?
At the start of the meeting, it is reasonable to ask:
“Can the local authority confirm that the person attending today has authority to resolve the issues we have raised?”
If the answer is no, families should be careful. The meeting may still help communication, but it may not resolve the dispute.
Safety Valve and Delivering Better Value do not remove SEND rights or mediation duties.
However, they may affect the local authority’s behaviour in practice. If a council is under pressure to reduce high-needs spending, it may be more cautious about agreeing costly provision, out-of-area placements, specialist schools, therapy packages or transport. Families may feel that decisions are being made through a financial lens rather than an individual needs lens.
The Public Accounts Committee has described Safety Valve and Delivering Better Value as short-term responses that will not deliver enough savings on their own. The National Audit Office has also described the SEND system as financially unsustainable and not delivering better outcomes consistently.
For mediation, the practical point is this: families should be prepared for local authority resource arguments, but they should keep the focus on the child or young person’s needs, evidence and statutory tests.
A local authority’s financial position is not, by itself, an answer to a child’s need for assessment, provision or a suitable placement.
Navigate SEND helps families and professionals decide whether mediation is likely to be useful, and how to prepare if it is.
We can help by:
The aim is not to push every family into mediation. It is to help families use the process wisely. Sometimes mediation is a sensible opportunity. Sometimes the best strategy is to obtain the certificate quickly and prepare the appeal.
Not usually. In many SEND appeals, you must contact a mediation adviser and obtain a mediation certificate, but you do not always have to attend a mediation meeting. If the appeal is only about Section I placement, a certificate may not be needed.
If agreement is reached, it should be recorded clearly in writing. How it is enforced depends on what has been agreed and the type of issue. Families should make sure any agreement says exactly what will happen, who will do it and by when.
It can if families wait too long. The safest approach is to track the appeal deadline from the decision letter and mediation certificate, and prepare for appeal while mediation is being considered.
It can be, but families should be realistic. Financial pressure may make some authorities less flexible. Mediation is most useful where there is a clear evidence-based outcome the authority can agree without needing Tribunal.
Yes. Navigate SEND can help review the decision, clarify deadlines, organise evidence and decide whether mediation is likely to help or whether appeal preparation should be prioritised.
If you are unsure whether SEND mediation is worth it in your case, Navigate SEND can help you understand the decision, protect deadlines and prepare the strongest route forward.