How to Prepare for a SEND Tribunal Without a Solicitor
You can prepare for and win a SEND Tribunal appeal without a solicitor. Parents win approximately 98.7% of decided cases, and the Tribunal is specifically designed for self-representation — it's inquisitorial, not adversarial, meaning the judge actively explores the issues rather than expecting you to argue like a lawyer. What determines the outcome is the quality and organisation of your evidence, not whether a solicitor presented it.
Here is the complete preparation process, from the moment you decide to appeal through to the hearing itself.
Phase 1: Secure Your Right to Appeal (Weeks 1–2)
The clock starts ticking from the date on the LA's decision letter. You have two months from the date of the decision (or one month from the date of a mediation certificate, whichever is later) to register your appeal.
Step 1: Obtain a mediation certificate.
Before you can register most appeals, you must contact a Mediation Information and Advice Service (MIAS) to consider mediation. The sole exception: if your appeal is only about Section I (the named school placement), no mediation certificate is required.
You don't have to attend mediation — you just have to contact the MIAS and either attend or decline. The MIAS issues your certificate either way. Don't let this step consume more than a few days.
Step 2: Decide whether to actually mediate.
Mediation is worth attending only when you have a narrow dispute with strong evidence and need a quick resolution (e.g., adding one specific provision to Section F). Decline and proceed straight to Tribunal when the LA's position is fundamentally indefensible — vague provision across multiple sections, refusal to assess despite clear evidence of need, or a placement decision that ignores professional recommendations.
The critical rule: never agree to anything in mediation that trades a permanent legal entitlement for a temporary concession. If the LA offers "an additional TA for one term," that's not the same as "15 hours weekly of 1:1 support from a Level 3 TA, delivered across all core subjects" specified in Section F.
Step 3: Complete the SEND35 appeal form.
The Tribunal's SEND35 form is your registration document. It requires your grounds for appeal — a clear statement of what the LA decided, why it was wrong, and what you want instead. Be specific and reference the law. "The LA refused to conduct an EHC needs assessment in breach of Section 36(8) of the CFA 2014, despite evidence that my child has or may have SEN and it may be necessary for provision to be made via an EHCP" is far stronger than "the LA refused to help my child."
Phase 2: Build Your Evidence Bundle (Weeks 2–8)
The evidence bundle is the backbone of your case. The Tribunal panel — a legally qualified judge and specialist SEND members — bases its decision on documented evidence, not verbal persuasion.
What the bundle must contain:
- The LA's decision letter (the decision you're appealing)
- Your mediation certificate
- The completed SEND35 form with your grounds of appeal
- All professional reports (Educational Psychologist, Speech and Language Therapist, Occupational Therapist, paediatrician, CAMHS)
- School records: provision maps, IEP reviews, SENCO reports, incident logs, exclusion records
- Your correspondence with the LA (every email, letter, and response, chronologically ordered)
- Any independent assessments you've commissioned
- A chronological index so the panel can navigate the bundle efficiently
How to organise it:
Number every page. Create a table of contents. Organise chronologically within categories (professional reports, school records, correspondence). The panel reads dozens of bundles — an organised one immediately signals a credible case.
The one piece of evidence that matters most:
If you can afford it, an independent professional assessment is the single strongest piece of evidence you can submit. An independent Educational Psychologist report that specifies exactly what provision your child needs — in quantified, enforceable terms — often determines the outcome. If you can't afford an independent assessment, the clinical reports you already have (NHS assessments, school EP reports) still carry weight, especially when you translate vague recommendations into specific provision requests.
Phase 3: Audit Your EHCP (If Appealing Contents)
If your appeal involves the contents of Sections B and F, you need to create a working document — an electronic version of the EHCP where you mark up your proposed amendments.
The Section F audit process:
For every line of provision in Section F, ask four questions:
- What is the provision? (Not "access to support" — but "direct 1:1 speech therapy")
- Who delivers it? (Not "a familiar adult" — but "an HCPC-registered Speech and Language Therapist")
- How long are the sessions? (Not "regular" — but "45 minutes")
- How often is it delivered? (Not "as appropriate" — but "twice weekly during term time")
Any provision that fails one or more of these tests is legally unenforceable under paragraph 9.69 of the SEND Code of Practice. Flag it, cross out the LA's vague wording, and insert your specific, quantified replacement in bold.
Common weasel phrases to flag:
"Access to," "opportunities for," "as appropriate," "regular support," "embedded in the curriculum," "will benefit from," "support from a familiar adult," "as required." Every one of these is legally meaningless and practically unenforceable.
The England SEND Tribunal Playbook includes a complete Section F Audit Matrix and a Clinical Report Translation Guide that automates this process — showing you exactly how to convert each professional recommendation into enforceable Section F wording.
Free Download
Get the England SEND Dispute Letter Starter Kit
Everything in this article as a printable checklist — plus action plans and reference guides you can start using today.
Phase 4: Prepare Your Witness Evidence (Weeks 6–10)
Your own witness statement:
Write a factual, chronological account of your child's needs and the LA's failures. Avoid emotional narrative — the panel is sympathetic but needs evidence, not anger. Structure it as: what your child's needs are, what provision has been requested, what the LA decided, why that decision fails the legal test, and what the impact on your child has been.
Professional witness statements:
If any of your child's professionals (EP, SALT, OT, teacher) are willing to provide a witness statement or attend the hearing, their evidence carries significant weight. Ask them to state their qualifications, their assessment findings, and their specific recommendations for provision — quantified and specified.
Preparing for questions:
The Tribunal judge will ask you questions about your evidence. They may also question the LA's witnesses. You won't be cross-examined in the courtroom drama sense — the judge directs the questioning. But be prepared to explain your proposed Section F amendments, why the LA's provision is inadequate, and what the impact of unmet needs has been on your child.
Phase 5: Hearing Day Preparation (Final Week)
Logistics:
SEND Tribunal hearings are typically held in person at a local venue or via video link. They last between 2 and 5 hours. You can bring a supporter — a friend, family member, or SEND advocate — who can take notes and provide emotional support (but they cannot speak for you unless they're a registered representative).
Your opening statement:
Prepare a 5-minute opening statement that summarises your case: what you're appealing, what the key evidence shows, and what outcome you're asking for. Keep it factual and structured. The panel has already read your bundle — the opening statement directs their attention to the strongest evidence.
What to expect in the room:
The panel consists of a judge (who leads proceedings) and one or two specialist members with SEND expertise. The atmosphere is formal but not hostile. The judge will introduce everyone, explain the process, and invite your opening statement. They'll then work through the disputed issues systematically, asking questions of both you and the LA. You'll have the opportunity to respond to anything the LA says.
Practical tips:
Bring two copies of your evidence bundle (one for reference, one in case). Bring water. Dress professionally but don't wear a suit unless you want to — the Tribunal is not a crown court. Address the judge as "Sir" or "Madam" or by name. If you don't understand a question, ask for clarification. If you need a break, ask for one.
The Complete Toolkit Approach
Each phase above requires specific tools: template letters for Phase 1, an evidence checklist for Phase 2, an audit matrix for Phase 3, and a hearing guide for Phase 5. You can assemble these from multiple free sources (IPSEA letters, Tribunal guidance documents, SEND Code of Practice), or you can use a single preparation system like the England SEND Tribunal Playbook that integrates all of these tools into one linear workflow.
The Playbook includes the evidence bundle checklist, Section F Audit Matrix, Clinical Report Translation Guide, Mediation Strategy Framework, template letters for every stage, and a complete hearing day preparation guide — everything above in one place, ready to use.
Who This Is For
- Parents who've received a refusal to assess, inadequate EHCP, or unsuitable placement and want to appeal without spending £5,000+ on a solicitor
- Organised, methodical parents who are willing to do the preparation work themselves with clear guidance
- Parents whose two-month appeal deadline is approaching and who need to start immediately rather than waiting for a solicitor's availability
- Families in the 90%+ of cases where the law is clear and the LA's position is legally weak — standard refusals, vague provision, or unsupported placement decisions
Who This Is NOT For
- Parents whose case involves Judicial Review, complex cross-agency funding disputes, or novel legal arguments — these benefit from solicitor involvement
- Families who qualify for Legal Aid — apply first, as Legal Help covers solicitor preparation costs
- Parents who are unable to manage administrative work due to their own health conditions — consider asking a family member, SEND advocate, or charity volunteer to assist
Frequently Asked Questions
What percentage of parents self-represent at the SEND Tribunal?
Exact figures aren't published, but Tribunal practitioners estimate that the majority of parents are self-represented or supported by non-legal advocates. The Tribunal's procedures are specifically designed to accommodate lay representation, and judges actively ensure self-represented parents can present their case effectively.
Will the judge treat me differently if I don't have a solicitor?
The Tribunal has a legal obligation to ensure fairness regardless of representation status. Judges routinely assist self-represented parents by explaining procedures, asking clarifying questions, and ensuring they have the opportunity to respond to all evidence. You will not be disadvantaged for self-representing.
What if the LA sends a barrister to the hearing?
This happens occasionally, particularly in expensive placement disputes. The LA's barrister presents their case — but the evidence is the same regardless of who presents it. If the LA's Section F provision is vague, a barrister cannot make it specific. If the professional evidence supports your position, a barrister cannot contradict it. The judge ensures the process remains fair.
How do I know if my case is strong enough to self-represent?
If the LA's decision contradicts the professional evidence on file — EP reports recommending provision the LA didn't specify, SALT assessments identifying needs the EHCP doesn't address, or school records showing unmet needs — your case is likely strong. The 98.7% parental success rate reflects the systemic weakness of LA positions, not the legal sophistication of parent representatives.
What's the biggest mistake self-representing parents make?
Submitting disorganised evidence. A strong case with scattered, unindexed documents is harder for the panel to follow than a moderate case with a clear bundle, numbered pages, and a working document that precisely tracks the disputed provisions. Organisation is the single most important factor you can control.
Can I use a McKenzie Friend at the hearing?
Yes. A McKenzie Friend (any supportive person you bring — friend, family member, advocate) can sit with you, take notes, and quietly advise you. They cannot address the Tribunal directly unless the judge gives permission, but their presence provides practical and emotional support during the hearing.
Get Your Free England SEND Dispute Letter Starter Kit
Download the England SEND Dispute Letter Starter Kit — a printable guide with checklists, scripts, and action plans you can start using today.