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EBAU Accommodations for Students with Special Needs in Spain: The Complete Guide

The EBAU (Evaluación de Bachillerato para el Acceso a la Universidad) — commonly still referred to as the Selectividad — is Spain's university entrance examination. For students with ADHD, dyslexia, ASD, or other recognized learning differences, accommodations like extra time or modified formats can be the difference between a grade that reflects their knowledge and one that reflects their disability. But the process for securing those accommodations is rigorous, time-sensitive, and highly unforgiving of last-minute requests.

If your child is in Bachillerato (the two-year post-16 academic phase) and will be sitting the EBAU, here's what you need to understand — ideally two years before the exams, not two months.

What Accommodations Are Actually Available

Spanish EBAU regulations allow for a range of adaptations for students with NEAE (Necesidades Específicas de Apoyo Educativo), subject to formal approval by the regional university access authority. Common accommodations include:

  • 25% extra time — the most common accommodation, granted for ADHD, dyslexia, ASD, and other processing difficulties
  • Modified font size or format — larger text, sans-serif fonts for dyslexic students
  • Use of a computer — for students with significant writing difficulties (dyspraxia, dysgraphia)
  • Oral examination options — available in some regions for students where written format significantly disadvantages them
  • Separate room or specific seating arrangements — for students with ASD or severe anxiety
  • Rest breaks — for students with certain medical or psychiatric conditions
  • Reader or scribe — for students with severe visual impairments or motor difficulties

The specific accommodations available vary by Autonomous Community. Each regional university access authority sets its own protocols within the national LOMLOE framework.

The Non-Negotiable Prerequisite: Documented Bachillerato Accommodations

This is the most critical point for families to understand: EBAU accommodations are not granted based on a current private diagnosis. They are granted based on the formal adaptations your child received and documented during Bachillerato.

A student who has a private neuropsychologist's report but no formal adaptación curricular in their school records during Years 1 and 2 of Bachillerato will almost certainly be denied EBAU accommodations by the regional university access board.

The documentation pathway works like this:

  1. During Bachillerato, the school's orientador must formally document the student's NEAE categorization in the school's educational records
  2. The specific accommodations applied in Bachillerato (extra time, computer use, oral exams, etc.) must be recorded as part of the adaptación curricular no significativa
  3. At the end of Year 2 of Bachillerato, the school's orientation service submits a technical report (often called Anexo II or equivalent regional form) to the university access board, requesting that the same accommodations be applied in the EBAU
  4. The regional university access commission reviews the documentation and grants or denies the request

If the accommodations weren't formally applied and documented in school during Bachillerato, there is no basis for the request. Private diagnoses obtained late — even from highly reputable neuropsychologists — rarely carry sufficient weight on their own.

The Application Window: December to January

Most Autonomous Communities operate a strict application window for EBAU accommodation requests, typically December to January preceding the June examination sitting. Some regions also accommodate applications for the September resit session.

Miss this window, and your child sits the June EBAU without accommodations — full stop. There are no exceptions for late submissions in most regions.

This means:

  • If your child is in Year 2 of Bachillerato, the December before their exams is your deadline
  • If they don't yet have formal NEAE documentation in their school file, that needs to happen in Year 1 of Bachillerato at the latest — earlier is significantly better
  • The school's orientador should be submitting their Anexo II (or equivalent) report to the university access authority within the formal application window

Do not assume the school is tracking this. Many families — particularly expat families who joined the Spanish system late — discover the window has closed only when they try to submit. Put the date in your calendar and confirm with the orientador in October what the process looks like for your region.

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Regional Variations in the Application Process

Because each Autonomous Community manages its own EBAU, the specific forms, terminology, and submission process differ:

  • Madrid: The application form for EBAU adaptations is submitted through the school to the regional university access commission. The school's orientation service fills in the technical section.
  • Catalonia: Uses the PAU (Proves d'Accés a la Universitat). The EAP (regional assessment team) must have an active file on the student. Accommodations approved for Bachillerato are automatically reviewed for transfer to the PAU.
  • Valencia: Uses the PAU. Applications go through the school to the Comissió Gestora de Processos Universitaris.
  • Andalusia: The EBAU technical adaptation committee receives requests forwarded by the school. Andalusia has been relatively accessible about providing extra time accommodations to students with documented dyslexia and ADHD.

The Spain Special Education Blueprint includes a regional breakdown of the EBAU accommodation application process with the relevant contact authorities. Get the full guide here.

What If Your Child Was in International School Until Bachillerato?

This is one of the more complex situations. A student who was entirely educated in a private international school through secondary school and then enters Spanish Bachillerato for the university pathway faces a specific challenge: they may have a well-documented learning history in English but no formal NEAE designation in the Spanish system.

In this case:

  1. The student needs a formal evaluación psicopedagógica at the start of Year 1 of Bachillerato — as soon as possible after enrollment
  2. Foreign reports (apostilled and sworn-translated) should be submitted immediately to support the Spanish assessment
  3. The orientador must formally document the NEAE categorization and begin implementing documented accommodations in Year 1
  4. A rushed evaluation in Year 2 — especially if initiated in autumn of Year 2 — may not leave enough time to build the documentation required before the December/January EBAU application window

The practical message: if your child is entering Spanish Bachillerato with a history of learning differences, initiate the formal evaluation process on day one of Year 1. Do not wait to see how they do before requesting support.

University Provision After the EBAU

Securing EBAU accommodations is not the end of the process. Spanish universities also have their own student support services — typically called the SAED (Servicio de Atención al Estudiante con Discapacidad) or equivalent. To access academic accommodations within university, students typically need:

  • Official disability recognition from IMSERSO (certificado de discapacidad) — a separate administrative process
  • Or formal NEAE documentation submitted directly to the university's student services office

University support varies enormously between institutions and is not automatically transferred from EBAU documentation. Students should contact their prospective university's student support office (SAED or equivalent) before enrollment and submit documentation early.

The Bottom Line

The EBAU accommodation system works — but only if the documentation is built progressively through Bachillerato, the school's orientador is engaged and actively managing the process, and the application window is met without exception. Late-arriving diagnoses, informal conversations, or private reports without formal school documentation are rarely sufficient.

If your child is entering Bachillerato with any kind of learning difference, make the formal documentation process your first priority at the start of Year 1. The accommodations that make a real difference in June exams are only available if the paperwork has been built correctly over two years.

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